- Home
- Prelims
- Mains
- Current Affairs
- Study Materials
- Test Series
Latest News
Examine the entitlement theory of justice. (UPSC CSE Mains 2022 - Political Science and International Relations, Paper 1)
Rawls’s liberal-egalitarian conception of justice has been subjected to a rigorous libertarian critique by his colleague. For Nozick, progressive taxation is like bonded labour and it goes against the principle of non aggression. Like Hayek, he also believes that so called social justice programs only result into corruption. Nozick’s two central claims in his book "Anarchy, State and Utopia" are
a. The minimal state is the most extensive state that can be justified
b. Any state more extensive than the minimal state violates people’s rights
2. Nozick’s argument against a more extensive, redistributive state
a. The typical justification for a redistributive state rests on some patterned principle
b. But, patterned principles should be rejected, because
i. “liberty upsets patterns”
ii. “taxation of income from labor is on a par with forced labor”
3. Nozick’s Entitlement Theory of distributive justice:
a. Nozick’s Entitlement Theory is not patterned, but “historical”: the justice of people’s holdings – i.e., whether what people have, they have justly – “depends upon what has actually happened”
b. The theory consists of three principles
i. First principle specifies how unowned things can come to be owned justly
ii. Second principle specifies how (justly owned) things can be transferred justly
iii. Third principle says what to do about unjust acquisitions & unjust transfers
c. According to the theory:
i. A thing is owned justly if it was originally acquired justly & always transferred justly
ii. A person is “entitled” to the resources he or she possesses if and only if he or she acquired these resources through
1. a just original acquisition (as specified by the first principle) OR
2. a just transfer (as specified by the second principle) OR
3. as compensation for previous injustice (as specified by the third principle)
iii. A given “distribution” of resources is just if everyone is entitled to the resources they possess under the distribution
State does not have any role in distributive justice (welfare state) according to Nozick. The state’s role in property has to be limited only to the extend that state has to see
1) Property is acquired by right means.
2) Property is inherited or transferred in the right manner.
Thus he gives the concept of regulatory state. He admits that there may be historical injustices. However past should not be stretched too far in the present. If we stretch past too far in the present, it will create more problems. However there is only one situation where Nozick allows state to intervene in man’s property. When a person asserts his right in a way that puts the life of large number of people in danger.
Criticisms
- The first criticism of Nozick could be said to emphasize procedural justice, but he, like John Rawls, failed to universalize procedural justice. His theory of justice is suitable only for the capitalist state. He has over-simplified his theory of justice, which has made his theory less effective. On this basis, he becomes a supporter of privatization and capitalism by separating the state from the political and the general public, over which State has no control. Critics refer to Nozick as a ''devotee of oddity''.
- It is said that Nozick is a ruthless thinker because he says that one who is poor, is poor because his fate is poor, they are worth that. Critics say that poverty is not someone''s hobby. Therefore, poverty alleviation is the duty of the state. Necessary steps should be taken by the state to break the vicious cycle of poverty. That is why critics consider this principle of Nozick inhuman and immoral.