The Moral Significance of the Common School

  • Bidwell C
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Abstract

The notion that people should be rewarded proportionately to how hard they work is a common one, and has recently been supported, e.g., by James Sterba on Rawlsian grounds. Such arguments involve the difficulty that inequality of outcome is to be justified by a supposed equality of opportunity, yet it is obvious that, if the gap between winners and losers in a game becomes too wide, then the person in a Rawlsian original position (or any other objective observer) would not consider equality of opportunity sufficient to justify the change of losing so severely; moreover, he might prefer not to play that particular game for such high stakes.

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Bidwell, C. E. (1966). The Moral Significance of the Common School. History of Education Quarterly, 6(3), 50. https://doi.org/10.2307/367621

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