Suchergebnisse
Suchergebnisse:
rary Feminist movement emphasizes equality of opportunity, but this actually justifies a sharply inegalitarian system. Socialist Feminists, viewing persons as social by nature, introduce a sense of equality of. respect and treatment that goes beyond the privatized person, formal. rights perspective, Elshtain suggests.
27. März 2001 · 1. Defining the Concept. 2. Principles of Equality and Justice. 2.1 Formal Equality. 2.2 Proportional Equality. 2.3 Moral Equality. 2.4 Presumption of Equality. 3. Conceptions of Distributive Equality: Equality of What? 3.1 Simple Equality and Objections to Equality in General. 3.2 Libertarianism. 3.3 Utilitarianism. 3.4 Equality of Welfare.
In general, economic inequality is an uneven distribution of something – from incomes, resources, goods and states of being through to people’s opportunities to do things, such as to vote in an election or to take care of a child. Discover More. The Gini-coefficient: How do we measure inequality?
14. Okt. 2022 · The Idea of Equality. Living reference work entry. First Online: 14 October 2022. pp 1–8. Cite this living reference work entry. Altan Heper. 44 Accesses. Download reference work entry PDF. Introduction. On the term: Equality – Greek isotes, Latin aequitas, aequalita s, French égalite, German Gleicheit.
- Altan Heper
- altan.heper@ozyegin.edu.tr
27. März 2001 · 1. Defining the Concept. 2. Principles of Equality and Justice. 2.1 Formal Equality. 2.2 Proportional Equality. 2.3 Moral Equality. 2.4 Presumption of Equality. 3. Conceptions of Distributive Equality: Equality of What? 3.1 Simple Equality and Objections to Equality in General. 3.2 Libertarianism. 3.3 Utilitarianism. 3.4 Equality of Welfare.
16. Aug. 2002 · 1. Preliminary Distinctions. 2. Equality of Opportunity. 3. Equality of Condition: Equality of What? 3.1 Lockean Rights. 3.2 Karl Marx on Equal Rights. 3.3 Income and Wealth. 3.4 Capabilities. 3.5 Resources. 3.6 Welfare and Opportunity for Welfare. 3.7 Conclusion: A Test Case. 4. Relational Equality. 5. Equality among Whom? 6.
Two central issues for ethical analysis of equality are: (1) Why equality? (2) Equality of what? The two questions are distinct but thoroughly interdependent.