What a body of work this is, and what an accomplishment.Collected Papers affords an opportunity to step back and see [Rawls's] work as a whole, as the elaboration of a single powerful and abiding idea . . . The other thing these papers show--and for this we should be grateful to Freeman's persistence in having them republished--is how hard-won Rawls's achievement has been . . . This volume of Collected Papers stands as an inspiration to the next generation of theorists.
John Rawls's work on justice has drawn more commentary and aroused wider attention than any other work in moral or political philosophy in the twentieth century. Rawls is the author of two major treatises, A Theory of Justice (1971 ) and Political Liberalism ( 1993); it is said that A Theory of Justice revived political philosophy in the English-speaking world. But before and after writing his great treatises Rawls produced a steady stream of essays. Some of these essays articulate views of justice and liberalism distinct from those found in the two books. They are important in and of themselves because of the deep issues about the nature of justice, moral reasoning,and liberalism they raise as well as for the light they shed on the evolution of Rawls's views. Some of the articles tackle issues not addressed in either book. They help identify some of the paths open to liberal theorists of justice and some of the knotty problems that liberal theorists must seek to resolve.A complete collection of John Rawls's essays is long overdue.
Editor's Preface
Outline of a Decision Procedure for Ethics
Two Concepts of Rules
Justice as Fairness
Constitutional Liberty and the Concept of Justice
The Sense of Justice
Legal Obligation and the Duty of Fair Play
Distributive Justice
Distributive Justice: Some Addenda
The Justification of Civil Disobedience
Justice as Reciprocity
Some Reasons for the Maximin Criterion
Reply to Alexander and Musgrave
A Kantian Conception of Equality
Fairness to Goodness
The Independence of Moral Theory
Kantian Constructivism in Moral Theory
Social Unity and Primary Goods
Justice as Fairness: Political not Metaphysical
Preface for the French Edition of A Theory of Justice
The Idea of an Overlapping Consensus
The Priority of Right and Ideas of the Good
The Domain of the Political and Overlapping Consensus
Themes in Kant's Moral Philosophy
The Law of Peoples
Fifty Years after Hiroshima
The Idea of Public Reason Revisited
Commonweal Interview with John Rawls
Credits
Index