--- name: political-philosophy description: "Master political philosophy - justice, rights, liberty, democracy, state legitimacy. Use for: justice, political authority, rights, freedom, social contract. Triggers: 'justice', 'political', 'rights', 'liberty', 'freedom', 'democracy', 'Rawls', 'social contract', 'state', 'legitimacy', 'authority', 'equality', 'libertarianism', 'distributive justice', 'liberalism', 'communitarianism', 'republicanism'." --- # Political Philosophy Skill Master the fundamental questions of political life: What justifies the state? What is justice? What are our rights? ## Core Questions | Question | Issue | |----------|-------| | Why obey the state? | Political obligation | | What is justice? | Distributive principles | | What are rights? | Nature and basis of rights | | What is freedom? | Liberty, positive/negative | | Who should rule? | Democratic theory | --- ## State Legitimacy ### Social Contract Theories ``` SOCIAL CONTRACT TRADITION ═════════════════════════ HOBBES (1588-1679) ├── State of nature: War of all against all ├── Life: "Solitary, poor, nasty, brutish, short" ├── Contract: Give up freedom for security └── Result: Absolute sovereign (Leviathan) LOCKE (1632-1704) ├── State of nature: Peace with inconveniences ├── Natural rights: Life, liberty, property ├── Contract: Limited government to protect rights └── Result: Liberal constitutional state ROUSSEAU (1712-1778) ├── State of nature: Noble savage, corrupted by society ├── Problem: How to be free yet bound by law? ├── Solution: General will (not will of all) └── Result: Direct democracy, civic virtue ``` ### Contemporary Social Contract **Rawls**: Hypothetical contract behind veil of ignorance **Gauthier**: Bargaining among rational self-interested agents **Scanlon**: Principles no one could reasonably reject --- ## Justice ### Rawls's Theory ``` RAWLSIAN JUSTICE ════════════════ ORIGINAL POSITION ├── Hypothetical choice situation ├── Veil of ignorance: Don't know your place ├── Rational, self-interested choosers └── What principles would you choose? TWO PRINCIPLES 1. LIBERTY PRINCIPLE └── Equal basic liberties for all └── Speech, conscience, association, etc. 2. DIFFERENCE PRINCIPLE └── Inequalities only if they benefit worst-off └── With fair equality of opportunity PRIORITY: Liberty > Fair opportunity > Difference principle ``` ### Alternative Theories | Theory | Key Thinker | Principle | |--------|-------------|-----------| | Utilitarianism | Mill | Maximize total welfare | | Libertarianism | Nozick | Minimal state, property rights | | Communitarianism | Sandel, MacIntyre | Community shapes justice | | Capabilities | Sen, Nussbaum | Ensure capabilities for all | ### Nozick's Entitlement Theory ``` LIBERTARIAN JUSTICE ═══════════════════ JUSTICE IN ACQUISITION ├── How did you originally get it? └── Must be legitimate JUSTICE IN TRANSFER ├── Voluntary exchange └── Gift, sale, etc. RECTIFICATION ├── Correct past injustices └── Compensation, restitution MINIMAL STATE ├── Only protection services ├── No redistribution └── "Taxation is forced labor" ``` --- ## Liberty ### Negative vs. Positive Freedom **Negative** (Berlin): Freedom FROM interference - You're free if no one stops you - Liberal tradition **Positive**: Freedom TO achieve goals - You're free if you can realize your potential - May require resources, support ### Republican Liberty **Non-Domination** (Pettit): - Freedom as absence of arbitrary power over you - Not just non-interference - Slave with kind master is still unfree --- ## Rights ### Nature of Rights **Natural Rights**: Pre-political, inherent in persons **Legal Rights**: Created by law, conventional **Moral Rights**: May or may not be legal ### Rights as Trumps (Dworkin) Rights override utilitarian calculations Individual rights > Collective good ### Will Theory vs. Interest Theory **Will Theory**: Rights protect choices **Interest Theory**: Rights protect interests --- ## Democracy ### Justifications | Justification | Claim | |---------------|-------| | Intrinsic | Democratic participation is valuable in itself | | Instrumental | Democracy produces best outcomes | | Epistemic | Collective wisdom (Condorcet) | | Procedural | Fair procedure regardless of outcome | ### Problems - Tyranny of majority - Voter ignorance - Special interests - Minority rights --- ## Key Debates ### Liberty vs. Equality - Trade-off or compatible? - Economic liberty vs. economic equality - Formal vs. substantive equality ### Individual vs. Community - Liberal: Individual prior to community - Communitarian: Community shapes individuals - Identity, tradition, solidarity ### Multiculturalism - Cultural rights - Recognition - Integration vs. assimilation --- ## Key Vocabulary | Term | Meaning | |------|---------| | Legitimacy | Rightful authority | | Sovereignty | Supreme power | | Social contract | Agreement creating state | | General will | Common good (Rousseau) | | Veil of ignorance | Not knowing one's place | | Difference principle | Benefit worst-off | | Negative liberty | Freedom from interference | | Positive liberty | Freedom to achieve | | Natural rights | Pre-political rights | | Distributive justice | Fair distribution | --- ## Integration with Repository ### Related Themes - `thoughts/morality/`: Justice, rights - `thoughts/free_will/`: Political freedom