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IDEA OF JUSTICE: BY AMARTYA SEN

The Idea of Justice is a 2009 book by Nobel Laureate Amartya Sen. The book has been
described by The Economist as "commanding summation of Mr Sen’s own work on
economic reasoning and on the elements and measurement of human well-being".[1] Sen
delivered a lecture based on the book (The Penguin Annual Lecture) in Kolkata on August 5
which was followed by a discussion with Barkha Dutt.
Sen's book is principally a critique and revision of John Rawls' basic ideas in A Theory of
Justice. Sen was a student of Rawls and the book is dedicated to his memory.
One of Sen's main arguments throughout the book is that the project of social justice should
not be evaluated in binary terms, as either achieved or not. Rather, he claims that justice
should be understood as existing to a matter of degree, and should correspondingly be
evaluated along a continuum. Furthermore, he argues that we do not need a fully established
abstract ideal of justice to evaluate the fairness of different institutions. He claims that we can
meaningfully compare the level of justice in two institutions without positing an ideal,
transcendental idea of justice. He names the opposite position institutional transcendentalism.
Sen defends one of Rawls' most fundamental theoretical concepts: justice as fairness.
Although this is a vague notion fraught with difficulties in any particular case, he
nevertheless views it as one of Rawls' strongest insights while rejecting the necessity of
Rawls' two principles of justice emerging from the Original position thought experiment in
A Theory of Justice.
Sen also draws heavily on Adam Smith and his first major work The Theory of Moral
Sentiments, arguing that it is Smith's most important and unduly overlooked work.

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