Aristotle on Justice
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In this paper, I shall address two central contemporary criticisms of Aristotles conception of justice. These criticisms of Aristotles account of specific justice have focused on two central problems. First, Aristotles insistence that all specifically unjust actions are motivated by pleonexia
Pleonexia can be understood as the desire to have more of some socially availablegood, and is usually translated as greed or acquisitiveness.
Close . Second, Aristotle does not identify a deficient vice with respect to justice. This violates his “golden mean” doctrine with respect to virtue. Without the identification of the deficient vice with respect to justice, then justice must not be a virtue of character. Due to considerations of time and length of this paper, I shall confine myself to addressing the initial criticism.
I address both criticisms at length in Chapter 2 of my dissertation, entitled Just Friends: anInvestigation into the Social Theories of Aristotle and Epicurus on Friendship and Justice. Also,an extended version of this paper has been submitted to Journal of Value Theory.
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The criticism I am concerned with here challenges the notion that specific justice is a moral virtue. I shall argue that the solution to this challenge is to carefully distinguish between the results arising from mis-distributions of these social goods, the concern of specific distributable justice, and the resulting harm to others. I shall argue that there is an objectively specific unjust feature to these mis-distributions that requires rectificatory justice. In response to the first criticism, I shall argue that this criticism, in effect, fails to do justice to Aristotles distinction between general and specific justice. In cases where an agent commits an act of general injustice, rectificatory justice is needed to address the resulting imbalance in the distribution pattern of social goods
I define “social goods” as that subsection of the natural goods that are available fordistribution in a society, namely: wealth, honor, and safety.
Close . Hence, if this criticism is intended to undermine Aristotles account of specific justice, by requiring another species of specific justice to rectify these imbalances, it fails accordingly.
In order to address these criticisms, it will be necessary to clearly and briefly work out Aristotles notions of general and specific justice and their relationship to one another. In this next section, I shall address Aristotles discussion of general justice. Since general justice promotes virtuous behavior by means of the laws pedagogical role, it will be necessary to understand this claim. It is my position that general justice holds members of a community accountable to standards of mutual obligation. These standards of mutual obligation, the virtues of character, establish recognized and accepted forms of behavior that form the basis of law. Failing to act in light of these standards results in harm to others and justifies the use of punishment. This aspect of general justice is important because it directly bears on the first criticism.
Next, I shall examine specific justice and its relation to the social goods. Thereafter, I shall address the main criticism of Aristotles theory of specific justice and draw out the implications of this reading.
Section 1: Forms of Justice: General and Specific
In general, justice is defined as the state that makes us doers of just actions, that makes us do justice and wish what is just (NE 1129a8). There is one immediate difference between justice and the other virtues of character. Justice is spoken of in two ways: the lawful and the fair. Because there are two different ways in which someone can be just, there are two different virtues being analyzed. Aristotle distinguishes between these two virtues by first specifying general justice as the lawful, and by referring to it as complete virtue in its fullest sense because it is the actual exercise of complete virtue (NE1129b30). Specific justice is concerned with having ones fair share either in some distributable good, in rectifying harms done to one by receiving less than ones fair share of a distributable good, or in obtaining ones fair share in an exchange. Specific justice is a part of the whole of general justice. Terence Irwin has correctly indicated that the two types of justice are homonymous not only by having the name in common. They also have connected definitions.
Terence Irwin. Aristotle, Nicomachean Ethics. Hackett Publishing Co. IndianapolisIN. 1985. p. 331.
Close The fair is not the same as the lawful, but they are related to one another in a Ðparts to the whole relationship. General justice is concerned with the whole of virtue, and this concern guides the discussion of the lawful found below. Specific justice is concerned with the distribution of honors or wealth or anything else that can be divided among members of a community who share in a political system (NE1130b33). Hence, the lawless person and the pleonektic
A person is pleonektic when one is motivated by the desire to have more of somesocially available good, and is usually translated as greed or acquisitiveness.
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For Aristotle, there is a distinct value to human actions when the virtues are expressed in the actions of individuals in relation to each other. This view can be understood in two contexts. Learning to be courageous, one must use fear and confidence in different contexts. Being courageous also entails acting for the right end, toward the right people, in the right way, about the right things. Defending ones home, fighting against invaders, when they are attacking the state to preserve ones family and friends is an example of the application of these qualifications on the virtue of courage. Considering how this action affects the overall well being of others, we are considering how the action is generally just. In sum, the distinction being made here is that the same virtue can be seen all by itself, as a part of the character of an individual only, and where the virtue is in relation to another person in a particular political community, and its effects on the well being of others in that political community. We have the same state considered from different perspectives.
Aristotle says that justice is spoken of in two ways: as lawful and as fair. I will