Response to my commentators

IF 0.5 3区 哲学 Q4 ETHICS Ethics & Global Politics Pub Date : 2019-11-29 DOI:10.1080/16544951.2019.1702453
David Ingram
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Before responding to my commentators, I would like to thank each of them for having taken time out of their busy lives to read a long and at times densely argued book. I chose them as my interlocutors because their reflections on selected topics had already served me well in composing my book. I expected quality commentary from them and have not been disappointed. Gottfried Schweiger’s research has pioneered new territory in the field of applied recognition theory, and his comments here and elsewhere have made me more aware of the complications associated with using recognition as one foundational category (along with discourse, which he does not discuss) for theorizing the injustices and pathologies associated with poverty and social marginalization. In prefacing his comments, Schweiger himself notes several features that seem to recommend recognition theory as at least a necessary supplement to standard liberal theories of distributive (in)justice, namely, its attempt to ascertain injustice by appeal to the ordinary experiences of indignation suffered by those who claim to be victims of injustice and its understanding that a part of justice concerns the psychology of human relationships, which is not a good or resource that can be measured and distributed in any straightforward way. All of this stands in stark contrast to liberalism’s concern with distributing basic primary goods, resources, and capabilities that individuals need (taken separately and abstractly as rational agents) according to general principles that have been constructed on the basis of what are taken to be widely (perhaps universally) accepted fixed judgements. The important and difficult challenge for recognition theory, as Schweiger makes clear in his comments, is whether its starting point in experience suffices to generate a theory of injustice and social pathology apart from an elitist theory of objective human development and/or a liberal theory of distributive justice. In other words, does recognition theory’s counter-intuitive approach to framing poverty as a psychological harm really provide an alternative or needed supplement to a liberal theory of distributive justice? Schweiger’s critical engagement with my book centres around two major theoretical claims I make in chapter one, specifically about the contribution recognition theory makes to understanding poverty as a form of injustice, and an example that I use to
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对我的评论员的回应
在回复我的评论之前,我想感谢他们每一位从忙碌的生活中抽出时间来阅读这本冗长且有时争论激烈的书。我选择他们作为我的对话者,因为他们对所选主题的思考已经在我的书中得到了很好的帮助。我期待他们的高质量评论,也没有让我失望。Gottfried Schweiger的研究开创了应用认知理论领域的新领域,他在这里和其他地方的评论让我更加意识到,将认知作为一个基本范畴(以及他没有讨论的话语)来理论化与贫困和社会边缘化相关的不公正和病态,是多么复杂。在他的评论的前言中,Schweiger自己指出了几个特征,这些特征似乎推荐承认理论至少是对标准自由主义分配正义理论的必要补充,即,它试图通过呼吁那些声称是不公正受害者所遭受的愤怒的普通经历来确定不公正,并且它理解正义的一部分涉及人类关系的心理,这不是一种可以直接衡量和分配的好资源。所有这一切都与自由主义所关注的分配个人所需的基本商品、资源和能力(作为理性行为者单独和抽象地加以考虑)的问题形成鲜明对比,而自由主义所关注的分配是根据普遍原则构建的,这些原则是建立在被广泛(也许是普遍)接受的固定判断的基础上的。正如Schweiger在他的评论中明确指出的那样,承认理论面临的重要而困难的挑战是,它的经验起点是否足以产生一种不公正和社会病理学的理论,而不是客观人类发展的精英理论和/或分配正义的自由理论。换句话说,认知理论将贫困定义为一种心理伤害的反直觉方法,是否真的为分配正义的自由主义理论提供了一种替代或必要的补充?施威格对我的书的批评集中在我在第一章中提出的两个主要理论主张上,特别是关于承认理论对理解贫困作为一种不公正形式的贡献,以及我用的一个例子
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
9
审稿时长
22 weeks
期刊最新文献
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