Notes on Contributors ix
Introduction 1
Jon Mandle and David A. Reidy
Part I Ambitions 7
1 From Philosophical Theology to Democratic Theory: Early
Postcards from an Intellectual Journey 9
David A. Reidy
2 Does Justice as Fairness Have a Religious Aspect? 31
Paul Weithman
Part II Method 57
3 Constructivism as Rhetoric 59
Anthony Simon Laden
4 Kantian Constructivism 73
Larry Krasnoff
5 The Basic Structure of Society as the Primary Subject of
Justice 88
Samuel Freeman
6 Rawls on Ideal and Nonideal Theory 112
Zofia Stemplowska and Adam Swift
7 The Choice from the Original Position 128
Jon Mandle
Part III A Theory of Justice 145
8 The Priority of Liberty 147
Robert S. Taylor
9 Applying Justice as Fairness to Institutions 164
Colin M. Macleod
10 Democratic Equality as a Work-in-Progress 185
Stuart White
11 Stability, a Sense of Justice, and Self-Respect 200
Thomas E. Hill, Jr
12 Political Authority, Civil Disobedience, Revolution 216
Alexander Kaufman
Part IV A Political Conception 233
13 The Turn to a Political Liberalism 235
Gerald Gaus
14 Political Constructivism 251
Aaron James
15 On the Idea of Public Reason 265
Jonathan Quong
16 Overlapping Consensus 281
Rex Martin
17 Citizenship as Fairness: John Rawls’s Conception of Civic
Virtue 297
Richard Dagger
18 Inequality, Difference, and Prospects for Democracy 312
Erin I. Kelly
Part V Extending Political Liberalism: International Relations 325
19 The Law of Peoples 327
Huw Lloyd Williams
20 Human Rights 346
Gillian Brock
21 Global Poverty and Global Inequality 361
Richard W. Miller
22 Just War 378
Darrel Moellendorf
Part VI Conversations with Other Perspectives 395
23 Rawls, Mill, and Utilitarianism 397
Jonathan Riley
24 Perfectionist Justice and Rawlsian Legitimacy 413
Steven Wall
25 The Unwritten Theory of Justice: Rawlsian Liberalism versus
Libertarianism 430
Barbara H. Fried
26 The Young Marx and the Middle-Aged Rawls 450
Daniel Brudney
27 Challenges of Global and Local Misogyny 472
Claudia Card
28 Critical Theory and Habermas 487
Kenneth Baynes
29 Rawls and Economics 504
Daniel Little
30 Learning from the History of Political Philosophy 526
S.A. Lloyd
31 Rawls and the History of Moral Philosophy: The Cases of Smith
and Kant 546
Paul Guyer
Index 567
Jon Mandle is Professor in the Philosophy Department at the University at Albany (SUNY). He has published two books on the work of John Rawls and one on global justice. His work engages in political philosophy, ethics, the philosophy of social science, and their histories.
David A. Reidy is Professor and Head in the Department of Philosophy at the University of Tennessee. He works in political and legal philosophy with special attention to the work of John Rawls and to issues of global justice and human rights. With Rex Martin he co-edited (and contributed to) a volume on Rawls's "The Law of Peoples" recognized by the American Library Association with a "Choice Award."
"This is one of those volumes that every university library should own. Summing Up: Highly recommended. Upper-division undergraduates, graduate students, and researchers/faculty." ("Choice," 1 October 2014)"The editors aim to produce "not so much a summary of past scholarly work as a serviceable roadmap for current and future work on Rawls" (1). It is a high ambition which raises high expectations which are, happily, lived up to." - Dialogue"This Companion to Rawls is a rich collection of stimulating and critical essays, which provides us with more than a state of the art volume. The textual interpretations, contextual elucidations and illuminating connections with diverse disciplines invite the reader to explore new paths and perspectives. For students of (political) philosophy the volume will be more than a thorough introduction to the philosophy of Rawls. For well-grounded scholars, who are fully acquainted with Rawls's works, it will open up new insights and subtleties and offer them inspiration for future research. The Companion to Rawls is a welcome contribution to Rawls scholarship, which looks beyond A Theory of Justice and does justice to the versatility and ingenuity of Rawls's works and thoughts" - Dialogue
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