Abstract
Understanding the relationship of democracy and property ownership is one of the most important tasks for contemporary political philosophy. In his concept of property-owning democracy John Rawls explores the thesis that property in productive means has an indirect effect on the formation of true or false beliefs and that unequal ownership of productive capital leads to distorted and deceived convictions. The basic aspect of Rawls's conception can be captured by the claim that for securing the fair value of the political liberties a widespread dispersal of property in productive resources is required that minimizes the formation of delusions and therefore improves the conditions of deliberative democracy. © 2013, Lucius & Lucius, Stuttgart.
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CITATION STYLE
Wesche, T. (2013). The concept of property in Rawls’s property-owning democracy. Analyse Und Kritik, 2013(1), 99–111. https://doi.org/10.1515/auk-2013-0109
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