Virtues/Justice

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Introduction:

Justice is the virtue of fairness.

The concept of symmetry is at the core of most theories of justice.

Many informal calls for justice are appeals for symmetry. For example: “an eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth”, “settling the score”, “getting even”, “turnabout is fair play”, “its only fair”, and the scales of lady justice all seek to restore a balance. The idea that a fair exchange is just is also an appeal to symmetry.

Abusing power—an asymmetrical relationship—is typically the cause of injustice. A shift in power, including state sponsored sentencing or home-grown revenge is often used in an attempt to restore justice.

Preventing and Remediating Loss

Many legal constructs are intended to prevent loss. For example, traffic regulations help to prevent traffic accidents, contracts help to clarify expectations and avoid misunderstandings about an impending transaction.

When a loss occurs, steps are taken to remedy the loss. Returning stolen goods, paying fines, or imposing some pain or suffering on the offender intended to be equivalent to the pain inflicted on the victim.

The Virtues of Justice

The symmetry demanded by justice affirms the inherent equality of all people.

John Rawls claims that "Justice is the first virtue of social institutions, as truth is of systems of thought."[1]

Theories of Justice

Efforts to provide universal rules for determining justice have resulted in several theories of moral justice. These include:

  1. The formula of Universal Law: “Act only on that maxim whereby you can at the same time will that it could become a universal law.”
  2. The formula of Humanity as End: “Act in such a way that you always treat humanity, whether in your own person or in the person of any other, never simply as a means, but always at the same time, as an end.”
  3. [I have to find this]
  1. Motive: The only moral motive is duty, not an inclination.
  2. Will: The only moral will is autonomous choice, not heteronymous acquiescence.
  3. Reason: The only moral reason for acting is a categorical imperative, not a hypothetical imperative.

While compelling logic supports each of these theories, troublesome examples demonstrate their limitations.

Assignment

Part 1: Study each of the theories of justice listed above.

Part 2: Which theory comes closest to describing your own intuitive sense of justice? Why?

Part 3: Choose a case from this list of thought provoking cases or some other documented and difficult case to study. Apply the theory of justice you identified in part 2 to this case. What outcome would that theory of justice arrive at? Is that the outcome the courts arrived at? Comment on your intuitive sense of justice in this case and how that agrees with or differs from the theoretical and actual outcomes.

Part 4: What mechanisms, if any, work to align legal justice with moral justice?

Further Reading

Students interested in learning more about the virtues of justice may be interested in the following materials:

References

  1. John Rawls, A Theory of Justice (revised edn, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1999), p. 3
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