Friday, March 27, 2020
Unjust People Rectification Essays - Deontological Ethics, Justice
  Unjust People Rectification    Robert Nozick, in his essay Rights and the Entitlement Theory, discusses the  rights of individuals and just acquisition. He makes it clear that these rights  and/or acquisitions cannot be taken away by anyone, either by an individual or  by a collective identity such as the state. Individual people and the state have  an obligation to not interfere with one's rights or just acquisitions. As long  as one does not interfere with another's life and intrinsic rights then no one  else shall interfere with another's life, it is a reciprocal obligation.    Furthermore, the government should be involved minimally in the life of the  individual. According to Nozick, the state should be "...limited to the narrow  functions of protection against force, theft, fraud, enforcement of contracts,  and so on..."(p. 210). Also, according to Nozick each individual has the right  to choose what to do with what one has, as long as it was acquired justly.    Therefore, if a freely organized group of people owned a (communal) house,  assuming they acquired it justly, what would give anyone else the right to take  it away and redistribute it? (And moreover, in this specific instance what other  rights and/or just acquisitions are violated?) In 1993 the administration at    Denison University decided to make the fraternity houses non-residential.    Fraternity members that had acquired the houses justly would no longer be able  to live in them. I believe the acquisition of the houses from one generation to  the next was just because initially someone financed the house, and then through  initiation to the fraternity, and thus through a belief in the fraternity's  ideals, they "earned" residency in the house. Moreover, they paid for  utilities, upkeep, and basic needs of the house. Despite this just acquisition  the school, or government in this example, according to Nozick unjustly"took" back the houses. This leads to the essay A Theory of Justice, by John    Rawls. In his essay Rawls discusses the principles of justice and equality in  society. Rawls wants everyone to start in a specific hypothetical situation with  two principles of justice, among other things. The first principle is as  follows: "each person is to have an equal right to the most extensive basic  liberty compatible with a similar liberty for others" (p. 551). And, the  second principle is as follows: "social and economic inequalities are to be  arranged so that they are both (a) reasonably expected to be to everyone's  advantage, and (b) attached to positions and offices open to all" (p. 551).    According to the first principle everyone has the right to basic liberties;  included in these liberties is "...freedom of the person along with the right  to hold (personal) property; and freedom from arbitrary arrest and seizure..."  (p. 551). The dilemma arises again, how does the University account for the  seizure and redistribution of an organization's private property? For Rawls,  the first principle comes before the second, "[T]his ordering means that a  departure from the institutions of equal liberty required by the first principle  cannot be justified by, or compensated for, by greater social and economic  advantages" (p. 551). Here, I believe it is evident that the University, out  of benefit of better social and economic advantages, unjustifiably seized the  fraternity houses. The University benefited economically because they could use  the fraternity houses to accommodate students; and they benefited socially  because "frats" were no longer a central theme in Denison society. According  to both Rawls and Nozick the school had no right in seizing the houses.    Moreover, according to Nozick the state, Denison University Administrators, is  supposed to be protecting against such unjust acts. This is the most evident  violation of basic rights within this example, however there is a more serious  violation of basic rights that many seem to overlook. In Nozick's theory of  rights and entitlement is the notion of side constraints. "Side constraints  upon action reflect the underlying Kantian principle that individuals are ends  and not merely means; they may not be sacrificed or used for the achieving of  other ends without their consent" (p. 210). In terms of my example I believe  the University was exploiting the fraternities as "ends and not merely  means," because they used the fraternities for their own means without  consent. While at the same time they deprived the fraternities of the means by  which they had been working towards some end. Yet another aspect of Nozick's  essay comes to the surface here, the notion that each person is free from any  interference concerning the pursuit of one's own life (p. 209). It seems,  according to the above-mentioned    
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.