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Habilitation, Health, and Agency - A Framework for Basic Justice (Hardcover)
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Habilitation, Health, and Agency - A Framework for Basic Justice (Hardcover)
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Lawrence C. Becker introduces an unconventional set of background
ideas for future philosophical work on normative theories of basic
justice. The organizing concept is habilitation -- the process of
equipping a person or thing with functional abilities or
capacities. The specific proposals drawn from the concept of
habilitation are independent of any particular set of distributive
principles. The result is a framework for theory that includes a
metric for the pursuit of basic justice, but not a normative theory
of it.
The basic idea is that receiving and providing habilitation is a
lifelong necessity for human beings, from their nearly helpless
newborn state through their struggles to survive and thrive
thereafter, even into the most severe diminishments of old age.
This lifelong human necessity underlies all questions about basic
justice, and the possibilities for habilitation define the
circumstances under which those questions arise.
Focusing on the circumstances of habilitation calls attention to
the central role of physical and psychological health. Without
basic good health in both domains, it is not possible to cope with
the habilitative demands of one's physical and psychological
endowments, and one's physical and social environments. And for
human beings, a particular aspect of human health effectively sums
up these matters: namely human agency; the nature and extent of the
ability to act effectively.
The book proposes, specifically, that normative theories of basic
justice adopt the habilitation framework. What then appears to
follow is that the most plausible comprehensive metric for
assessing progress toward basic justice will be the level and
distribution of basic good health. Moreover, achieving robustly
healthy agency will be the most plausible tactical target for
making progress toward basic justice -- no matter what one's
favored distributive principles might be.
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