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Deleted member 159002
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So I've been reading Rawls...
Most people, even those who support minimalist government, seem to support equality of opportunity. Why? Because it strikes us as unfair for people's circumstances -- things they have no control over -- to determine their economic fate... Instead, we have a notion that people's economic fate should be the product of their choices, their effort. But what about differences in talent? Does one person deserve to have an IQ of 140, and someone else an IQ of 80 any more than one person deserves to be born black and one white, or one person male and one female?
Someone of average or below average intelligence doesn't have the same opportunity to acquire wealth as a brilliant person, and it has nothing to do with their effort or choices. Given that it strikes us as immoral for people's ability to acquire resources to be determined by arbitrary factors, to what extent do you think economic inequality is justified?
Most people, even those who support minimalist government, seem to support equality of opportunity. Why? Because it strikes us as unfair for people's circumstances -- things they have no control over -- to determine their economic fate... Instead, we have a notion that people's economic fate should be the product of their choices, their effort. But what about differences in talent? Does one person deserve to have an IQ of 140, and someone else an IQ of 80 any more than one person deserves to be born black and one white, or one person male and one female?
Someone of average or below average intelligence doesn't have the same opportunity to acquire wealth as a brilliant person, and it has nothing to do with their effort or choices. Given that it strikes us as immoral for people's ability to acquire resources to be determined by arbitrary factors, to what extent do you think economic inequality is justified?