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Prioritarianism
The prioritarian holds that there is greater reason to help people, the worse off they would otherwise be.
Richard J. Arneson (Author)
9781108730693, Cambridge University Press
Paperback / softback, published 2 June 2022
75 pages
22.9 x 15.2 x 0.4 cm, 0.123 kg
Prioritarianism holds that improvements in someone's life (gains in well-being) are morally more valuable, the worse off the person would otherwise be. The doctrine is impartial, holding that a gain in one person's life counts exactly the same as an identical gain in the life of anyone equally well off. If we have some duty of beneficence to make the world better, prioritarianism specifies the content of the duty. Unlike the utilitarian, the prioritarian holds that we should not only seek to increase human well-being, but also distribute it fairly across persons, by tilting in favor of the worse off. A variant version adds that we should also give priority to the morally deserving – to saints over scoundrels. The view is a standard for right choice of individual actions and public policies, offering a distinctive alternative to utilitarianism (maximize total well-being), sufficiency (make everyone's condition good enough) and egalitarianism (make everyone's condition the same).
1. The Priority Idea
2. Some Clarifications and Further Questions
3. Priority for the Deserving
4. Utilitarianism, Sufficiency, and Leximin
5. Egalitarianism versus Prioritarianism.
Subject Areas: Ethics & moral philosophy [HPQ], Philosophy [HP]