The Robust Demands of the Right

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Abstract

In The Robust Demands of the Good Pettit claims that the three goods he takes to be central to the good, namely attachment, virtue and respect, share a common structure: they are robustly demanding in that they require the provision of an associated benefit not just under actual but across various possible circumstances. The aim of this paper is to show that the unified account of the good misconstrues the nature of respect. First, I argue that Pettit’s account of respect as robust non-interference cannot account for the particularly robust kind of robustness that respect requires and fails to clarify the relation between respect and freedom. Second, drawing on Pettit’s earlier work, I propose to reconceive of respect as the robust provision of discursive address. This account solves the ambiguities of Pettit’s account of respect. However, it suggests that the particularly robust demands of respect are demands of the right, not the good.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)29-47
JournalMoral Philosophy and Politics
Volume5
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jun 2018
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • respect
  • non-domination
  • robustness
  • freedom
  • discursive address

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