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    LoyalLoyalJusticeJustice
    Made withinDC&Austin
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    Rawls explicitly rejects utilitarianism as a theory of ju... — Carmelics
    Home/Justice & Punishment
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    Supports→The principles selected in the original position must be recognizable as principles of justice, not merely utility-maximizing principles.

    Rawls explicitly rejects utilitarianism as a theory of justice.

    ConsequentialismJustice & Punishment
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    Justice & PunishmentConsequentialism

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    Related propositions within the same area of thought.
    If parties simply maximized the weighted sum of primary goods averaged across al...Rawls aims to derive principles of justice from what parties would choose in an ...The principles selected in the original position must be recognizable as princip...

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    The problem for Rawls, however, is to show that the principles that would be selected in such an original position are in fact recognizable as principles of justice. One might expect the parties to calculate how to weigh the primary goods (which Rawls catalogues as ‘rights and liberties, opportunities and powers, income and wealth’) against each other, and then to choose as their social principle ‘maximise the weighted sum of primary goods, averaged across all persons’. This, however, would brin

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