Self-Respect and the Importance of Basic Liberties
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/30462Dato
2023-05-18Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Forfatter
Stensen, VegardSammendrag
This article discusses the self-respect argument for basic liberties, which
is that self-respect is an important good, best supported by basic liberties, and that
this yields a reason for the traditional liberty principle. I concentrate on versions of
it that contend that self-respect is best supported by basic liberties for reasons
related to the recognition that such liberties convey. I first discuss the two standard
approaches loosely associated with John Rawls and Axel Honneth. Here self-respect
pertains to traits and conduct (Rawls) or to one’s personhood (Honneth). It is
argued that these approaches fail to show why self-respect is better supported by
the liberty principle than certain alternatives worth taking seriously – unless
(in the case of personhood self-respect) self-respect is construed in such a narrow
way that it is not a condition for autonomy or welfare in any plausible sense. I then
identify a self-attitude that I call “a sense of competence”, which at least shows that
the liberty principle is more important to autonomy than what we might otherwise
have reasons to believe.
Forlag
De GruyterSitering
Stensen V. Self-Respect and the Importance of Basic Liberties. Moral Philosophy and Politics. 2023Metadata
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