Veil Of Ignorance

The veil of ignorance is a concept introduced by John Rawls in A Theory of Justice. It is a method of determining the morality of a certain issue (e.g. slavery) based upon the following principle: imagine that societal roles were completely re-fashioned and redistributed, and that from behind your veil of ignorance you do not know what role you will be reassigned. Only then can you truly consider the morality of an issue. For example, whites in the pre-Civil War south did indeed condone slavery, but they most likely would not have done so had there been a re-fashioning of society because of which they would not know if they would be the ones enslaved. An important feature of this thought-experiment is that you don't get to keep any aspects of your current role, even aspects that are an integral part of your self. As put by John Rawls himself ..."no one knows his place in society, his class position or social status; nor does he know his fortune in the distribution of natural assets and abilities, his intelligence and strength, and the like" (Rawls, A Theory of Justice). For example, in the imaginary society, you might not be intelligent, nor would you have a good sense of humor. Rawls believes that you currently possess these gifts is no more than good luck, which you must be willing to relinquish when building the society from behind the veil. One could argue that society needs to promote some desirable qualities, even if that increases the disparity between roles (for example, hard work). On the other hand, it's the natural inclination of the world (and of markets in particular) to reward these qualities, and all reasonable efforts to help the disadvantaged won't raise their roles higher than the roles with natural advantage. The veil of ignorance is part of the long tradition of thinking in terms of a social contract. See Thomas Hobbes, John Locke, Jean Jacques Rousseau, Thomas Jefferson and The Federalist Papers for examples of this tradition.

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
politicized issues
1781 in science
le parcq
vincenzo scamozzi
pas en artois
le portel
2004 in pakistan
1892 in science
saint pol sur ternoise
permissive society
yuri bandazhevsky
sains en gohelle
sallaumines
list of soviet and russian submarine classes
1818 in science
samer
souchez
dele
vitry en artois
spooks
eloquence
hollinger international
wingles
hollinger inc.
throuanne
the seduction of mimi
charles brantley aycock
red book
ikurria
carbonic anhydrase
zdeno chara
william drummond
ironwood
minus
tass
cristiano farinelli
information telegraph agency of russia
zachary taylor (power rangers character)
kenneth searight
uss vallejo
thomas oliver
primordial sea
nguyen cao ky
salal