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Why We Should be Negative about Positive Egalitarianism

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  • Segall, Shlomi

Abstract

The article assesses recent attempts to deflect two persistent objections to Positive Egalitarianism (PE), the view that equality adds to the goodness of a state of affairs. The first says that PE entails bringing into existence individuals who are equal to each other in leading horrible lives, such that they are worth not living. I assess three strategies for deflecting this objection: offering a restricted version of PE; biting the bullet; and pressing a levelling out counter-objection. The second objection points out that for any world A containing many individuals all leading very satisfying lives, and in perfect equality, PE prefers a much larger, perfectly equal population Z with much lower (yet positive) well-being. I review two main strategies for avoiding this Repellent Conclusion: a Capped Model and making egalitarianism sensitive to welfare levels. Both solutions, I show, are worse than the problems they are meant to solve.

Suggested Citation

  • Segall, Shlomi, 2019. "Why We Should be Negative about Positive Egalitarianism," Utilitas, Cambridge University Press, vol. 31(4), pages 414-430, December.
  • Handle: RePEc:cup:utilit:v:31:y:2019:i:4:p:414-430_4
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