Liberalism and the Limits of Justice

Liberalism and the Limits of Justice (1982; second edition 1998) is a book about liberalism by the philosopher Michael Sandel. The work helped start the liberalism-communitarianism debate that dominated Anglo-American political philosophy in the 1980s.

Liberalism and the Limits of Justice
Cover of the first edition
AuthorMichael Sandel
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
SubjectLiberalism
PublisherCambridge University Press
Publication date
1982
Media typePrint (Hardcover and Paperback)
Pages231
ISBN978-0521567411

Summary

Sandel discusses liberalism, the work of the philosopher Immanuel Kant, and utilitarianism. He criticizes the philosopher John Rawls, evaluating his ideas as advanced in A Theory of Justice (1971), Political Liberalism (1993), and other works. He also criticizes the philosopher Robert Nozick, and his ideas as advanced in Anarchy, State, and Utopia (1974).[1]

Publication history

Liberalism and the Limits of Justice was first published in 1982 by Cambridge University Press. In 1998, Cambridge University Press published a second edition.[2]

Reception

Liberalism and the Limits of Justice received a positive review from Mark Sagoff in the Yale Law Journal. Sagoff endorsed Sandel's "criticism of contemporary utilitarian and Kantian conceptions of the good". He expressed agreement with Sandel's views of liberalism and the nature of the self. He also agreed with Sandel's criticisms of Rawls's view of the origins of the principles of justice and of "the idea of a social contract dependent on possessive individualism." He compared Sandel's views to those of the philosophers F. H. Bradley, Thomas Hill Green, and Bernard Bosanquet, but believed that his work was open to criticism in that it did not advance sufficiently beyond them and left some questions unresolved.[3]

The philosopher Sheldon Wolin called the book "the best political critique of Rawls from a communitarian and participatory perspective."[4] The philosopher Richard Rorty described the book as "clear and forceful". He credited Sandel with providing "very elegant and cogent arguments against the attempt to use a certain conception of the self, a certain metaphysical view of what human beings are like, to legitimize liberal politics."[5] The philosopher Jonathan Wolff wrote that Sandel provides the fullest development of the argument that Rawls bases his political philosophy on an untenable metaphysics of the self.[6] The philosopher Will Kymlicka wrote that Liberalism and the Limits of Justice is Sandel's best-known book, and helped start the liberalism-communitarianism debate that dominated Anglo-American political philosophy in the 1980s.[7]

References

  1. Sandel 2006, pp. 1–218.
  2. Sandel 2006, p. iv.
  3. Sagoff 1983, pp. 1065–1081.
  4. Wolin 2004, p. 725.
  5. Rorty 1990, p. 286.
  6. Wolff 1991, p. 121.
  7. Kymlicka 1995, p. 788.

Bibliography

Books
Journals
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