Course Hive
Search

Welcome

Sign in or create your account

Continue with Google
or
21. Equality
Play lesson

Yale Courses : Philosophy ... - 21. Equality

5.0 (3)
31 learners

What you'll learn

This course includes

  • 22.5 hours of video
  • Certificate of completion
  • Access on mobile and TV

Summary

Keywords

Full Transcript

Philosophy and the Science of Human Nature (PHIL 181) The discussion of the legitimacy of government is continued with an introduction to a major 20th century work of political philosophy, John Rawls' A Theory of Justice. Professor Gendler explores John Rawls' central claims: that "justice is the first virtue of social institutions," and that the just society is that which rational and self-interested individuals would choose for themselves from behind a "veil of ignorance" (that is, not knowing what role in society they would occupy). The lecture concludes with an exploration of two substantive principles of justice which Rawls derives from his framework: the equal liberty principle, and the difference principle. 00:00 - Chapter 1. Justice as the First Virtue of Social Institutions 11:33 - Chapter 2. Rawls on Justice 28:09 - Chapter 3. Testing Rawls in the Classroom Complete course materials are available at the Open Yale Courses website: http://oyc.yale.edu This course was recorded in Spring 2011.

Course Hive

Continue this lesson in the app

Install CourseHive on Android or iOS to keep learning while you move.

Related Courses

FAQs

Course Hive
Download CourseHive
Keep learning anywhere