Justice and solidarity
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In this second reading, it comes closer to Kant’s categorical imperative in its second
formulation, as quoted in the previous chapter (cf. Kant 1785, 36). Let us note that,
properly understood, these principles regard relations between individual persons,
not communities or polities. It is therefore an unduly simplification to apply them
directly to political relationships, except we are determined to deny any autonomy
to politics and want it to be – as Kant wanted – an application of moral laws to a
field whose nature can however be deemed to be very different from morality.
Let us now look at another classification of justice:
commutative/retributive and
dis-
tributive. The first elements of this distinction were laid down by Aristotle in Book V
of
Nicomachean Ethics.
Commutative justice tells us to burden people (with a fine, or
a prison term) in a way proportional to their wrongdoing; or to compensate them
for the harm they suffered or the commendable acts they performed in a measure
that matches their loss or performance. This type of justice is aimed at regulating
the exchange between evils or goods. As such, it does not entail an entire scheme
of political cooperation for society, but addresses primarily two cases of such an
exchange: civil and criminal justice (tort law and penal law) and the wage system.
In the first case we speak of retributive justice if the justice system focuses on the
retribution for the wrong done that can be claimed by both victims and the state.
It is, however, known that a justice system based only or primarily on retribution
fills prisons to the utter limit, as in the USA since the mid 1990s, but is unlikely to
lead to a permanent crime reduction; re-education – or rehabilitative justice – as
the primary aim of the sentence works better.
As to the wage system, the point rather regards the capitalist system as presum-
ably the cause of an unjust distribution of the goods produced by social coop-
eration, or exploitation. This used to be, and still is, a widespread feeling, but its
classical formulation was given some 150 years ago by Karl Marx (1867) in the first
book of
Das Kapital, Chapter 4, §3. What appears to be a fair exchange between
the wage-labourers offering their labour-power and the capitalist rewarding them
with an amount of money corresponding to what the labourers and their family
need to survive is only illusion, because, in fact, the capitalist lets the workforce toil
for a much longer time and makes a profit out of this. In the sphere of produc-
tion, in the factory, the illusion of a fair exchange born in the sphere of circula-
tion on the job market vanishes. This classical explanation, meanwhile abandoned
by most economists, was presented by Marx as a further development within the
labour theory of value initiated by Adam Smith (1723–1790) and David Ricardo
(1772–1823). It found an extension in Arghiri Emmanuel’s (1911–2001) theory of
the
unequal exchange between developed and developing countries in the capitalist
world economy. The political outcome of these theories of social and international
injustice were revolutionary and anti-imperialistic movements.
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