Hostname: page-component-8448b6f56d-wq2xx Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-23T22:00:07.468Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Why We Should be Negative about Positive Egalitarianism

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 July 2019

Shlomi Segall*
Affiliation:
The Hebrew University of Jerusalem
*
*Corresponding author. Email: shlomi.segall@mail.huji.ac.il

Abstract

The article assesses recent attempts to deflect two persistent objections to Positive Egalitarianism (PE), the view that equality adds to the goodness of a state of affairs. The first says that PE entails bringing into existence individuals who are equal to each other in leading horrible lives, such that they are worth not living. I assess three strategies for deflecting this objection: offering a restricted version of PE; biting the bullet; and pressing a levelling out counter-objection. The second objection points out that for any world A containing many individuals all leading very satisfying lives, and in perfect equality, PE prefers a much larger, perfectly equal population Z with much lower (yet positive) well-being. I review two main strategies for avoiding this Repellent Conclusion: a Capped Model and making egalitarianism sensitive to welfare levels. Both solutions, I show, are worse than the problems they are meant to solve.

Type
Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2019 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

1 Temkin, Larry S., Inequality (Oxford, 1993)Google Scholar. Persson, Ingmar has defended this view under the title of ‘anti-inegalitarianism’. See his ‘Equality, Priority, and Person-Affecting Value’, Ethical Theory & Moral Practice 4 (2001), pp. 2339CrossRefGoogle Scholar. Another endorsement is found in Segall, Shlomi, Why Inequality Matters (Cambridge, 2016), pp. 73–8Google Scholar.

2 Arrhenius, Gustaf, ‘Egalitarian Concerns and Population Change’, Inequalities in Health: Concepts, Measures, and Ethics, ed. Eyal, Nir, Hurst, Samia A., Norheim, Ole F. and Wikler, Daniel (Oxford, 2013), pp. 7492CrossRefGoogle Scholar, at 85.

3 Temkin, Inequality, pp. 181–3.

4 Arrhenius, ‘Egalitarian Concerns and Population Change’, p. 84.

5 Persson, Ingmar, ‘Why Levelling Down Could be Worse for Prioritarians than for Egalitarians’, Ethical Theory & Moral Practice 11 (2008), pp. 295303CrossRefGoogle Scholar, at 298.

6 Arrhenius, ‘Egalitarian Concerns and Population Change’, p. 85 n. 25.

7 Gustaf Arrhenius and Orri H. Steffanson, ‘Population Ethics under Risk’, unpublished.

8 Parfit, Derek, ‘Future People, the Non-Identity Problem, and Person-Affecting Principles’, Philosophy and Public Affairs 45 (2017), pp. 118–57CrossRefGoogle Scholar, at 154.

9 See Segall, Why Inequality Matters, pp. 28–33.

10 Holtug, Nils, Persons, Interests, and Justice (Oxford, 2010), p. 196CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

11 Speaking of Conditional Egalitarianism, proponents of PE might employ here a strategy made famous by people like Thomas Christiano and Andrew Mason and say the following. (I am grateful to Patrick Tomlin for pressing me on this.) Restricting the positive value of equality to people with lives that are worth living is not ad hoc, because the value of egalitarianism (positive or negative), to begin with, only applies to positive welfare. Now, there are grave reservations about conditional egalitarianism, especially, as mentioned, about its ultimate ad hoc nature and also the intransitivity it leads to. But even setting those aside, we may observe the following weakness. It is one thing to suggest that the value of equality is conditional on improvements in welfare (Christiano's suggestion). Improvement, after all, could occur also from a negative level of welfare. It is quite another to suggest that the value of equality does not at all obtain below the zero welfare line. That suggestion, for example, would be committed to saying that the move from (−10, −2) to (−2, −2) has nothing to recommend it, from an egalitarian perspective. This strikes me as deeply implausible. For more on conditional egalitarianism see Christiano, Thomas, The Constitution of Equality: Democratic Authority and its Limits (Oxford, 2008), ch. 1CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Mason, Andrew, ‘Egalitarianism and the Levelling Down Objection’, Analysis (2001), pp. 246–54CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

12 Gustaf Arrhenius and Julia Mosquera, ‘The Value of Equality: A Reply to Segall’, unpublished.

13 I am grateful to a referee for this journal for helping me lay out the different strategies in this manner.

14 Temkin, Larry S., ‘Equality, Priority, and the Levelling Down Objection’, The Ideal of Equality, ed. Clayton, Matthew and Williams, Andrew (Basingstoke, 2000), pp. 126–61Google Scholar.

15 E.g. Temkin, ‘Equality, Priority, and the Levelling Down Objection’; Segall, Why Inequality Matters, esp. ch. 2.

16 Temkin, Larry S., ‘Egalitarianism Defended’, Ethics 113 (2003), pp. 762–84CrossRefGoogle Scholar, at 781.

17 Anderson, Elizabeth, ‘What is the Point of Equality’, Ethics 109 (1999), pp. 287337CrossRefGoogle Scholar, at 313. I am grateful to Zofia Stemplowska for invoking Relational Egalitarianism in this context.

18 I am grateful to a referee for this journal for pressing me on this.

19 Anderson, Elizabeth, ‘The Fundamental Disagreement between Luck Egalitarians and Relational Egalitarians’, Canadian Journal of Philosophy 40 (2010), pp. 123CrossRefGoogle Scholar, at 5.

20 I am grateful to Tom Sinclair for pressing this on me at a talk I gave at Worcester College, Oxford, and for Gideon Elford for elaborating this objection in an extensive written exchange.

21 This has been observed already in Parfit, Derek, ‘Equality and Priority’, Ratio 10 (1997), pp. 202–21CrossRefGoogle Scholar, at 204–5.

22 See also Segall, Why Inequality Matters, p. 30.

23 Arrhenius, ‘Egalitarian Concerns and Population Change’, p. 88; see also Temkin, Inequality, pp. 218–30.

24 Temkin, Larry S., Rethinking the Good: Moral Ideals and the Nature of Practical Reasoning (New York, 2012), pp. 328–35CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

25 See also Temkin, Inequality, p. 225.

26 Temkin, Inequality, p. 227; Temkin, Rethinking the Good, p. 339.

27 Arrhenius, ‘Egalitarian Concerns and Population Change’, p. 89.

28 Arrhenius and Mosquera, ‘The Value of Equality’, p. 13.

29 Temkin, Inequality, ch. 6.

30 Crisp, Roger, ‘Equality, Priority, and Compassion’, Ethics 113 (2003), pp. 745–63CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

31 Arrhenius, ‘Egalitarian Concerns and Population Change’, pp. 79–80. This is of course also Temkin's canonical view. See Temkin, Inequality, pp. 158–60.

32 Arrhenius, Private communication, 13 October 2017.

33 Parfit, ‘Equality or Priority’, p. 206.

34 Temkin, Inequality, ch. 6.

35 Rabinowicz, Wlodeck, ‘The Size of Inequality and its Badness: Some Reflections around Temkin's Inequality’, Theoria 69 (2003), pp. 6084CrossRefGoogle Scholar, at 71.

36 Julia Mosquera, ‘Disability, Equality, and Future Generations’ (PhD thesis, University of Reading, 2017).

37 To be fair, this was acknowledged by egalitarians well before Temkin. For example, the same trait could be found in Atkinson's measure of inequality. See Atkinson, Anthony B., ‘On the Measurement of Inequality’, Journal of Economic Theory 2 (1970), pp. 244–63CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

38 Temkin, Inequality, p. 158.

39 Parfit, Derek, ‘Equality or Priority?’, The Ideal of Equality, The Ideal of Equality, ed. Clayton, Matthew and Williams, Andrew (Basingstoke, 2000), pp. 81125Google Scholar, at 86.

40 Narveson, Jan, ‘Moral Problems of Population’, Monist 57 (1973), p. 80CrossRefGoogle Scholar. See also his ‘Utilitarianism and New Generations’, Mind 76 (1967), pp. 62–86, at 62–72. Temkin has a good discussion of this in Inequality, pp. 206–7.

41 Julia Mosquera is the first to my knowledge to discuss this asymmetry between eliminating inequalities and creating individuals who are equal. See Mosquera, ‘Disability, Equality, and Future Generations’, pp. 187–8.

42 I am grateful to Gustaf Arrhenius, Gideon Elford, Iwao Hirose, Ofer Malcai, Nathan Milikovsky, Julia Mosquera, Tom Sinclair, Patrick Tomlin, Zofia Stemplowska, and two anonymous referees for Utilitas for valuable written feedback on earlier versions.