Would you accept a change to, "a moral right to all income of any kind or amount cannot be reasonably held"? If I labor in my small garden I should like to suppose I have a defendable right to at least some of that produce - sharing of course with the local rabbits.a moral right to income cannot be reasonably held. — Benkei
In light of these factors, a moral right to income cannot be reasonably held. Instead, it is merely a legal right. — Benkei
I'm suggesting laws can change. — Benkei
I find the issue becomes more or less about what an individual can do and what others believe they should do — I like sushi
For example, a hedge fund manager might earn significantly more than a nurse, not because they are more deserving in a moral sense, but because of the structure of the market. — Benkei
Even where we're not considering different types of labour but within the same type of labour, I might not be the best person to do the work and therefore less deserving. Or perhaps not deserving of the amount paid if the quality of my production lacks compared to others, even if the market accepts the price I set. By being paid income I divert income from people who might be more deserving of it than I am. — Benkei
This raises a critical question for the argument that we are entitled to our income: if we acknowledge the importance of need in labor contracts, then it follows that income should not be viewed as an absolute right. If individuals are hired based on their needs, the resultant income is not merely a reward for their labor but also a response to their vulnerability. — Benkei
Is the production process fair and just? Are workers adequately compensated? Are the environmental and social impacts of the work accounted for?
For example, a company that profits from exploitative labor practices or environmental degradation may pay its executives enormous salaries. Can those individuals claim a moral right to their income, when the production process itself is unjust? — Benkei
When we center the discussion on worth, need and just production it becomes clear that individuals do not have an unqualified moral right to all of their income. — Benkei
In light of these factors, a moral right to income cannot be reasonably held. Instead, it is merely a legal right. — Benkei
The genus of right is claim, the species distinguished as being in some sense absolute - hoping here to avoid any tangents on "absolute."merely to waylay the notion of moral entitlement to income merely because you did the work (moral right would require additional justification). — Benkei
How much of the answer to this question depends on the existence of income as money rather than what is produced - material or agricultural? Money separates and abstracts the labor from the product. Of course, a sharecropper or slave gives some or all of what is produced to the landowner and even farmers who are landowners themselves pay taxes. — T Clark
Although there is need to address the fact that CEOs often have an income that is hundreds of times what their workers make, there is also the issue of risk. The willingness to take on risk has value that has to be compensated. Beyond willingness, there also has to be ability, which often depends more on wealth than income. — T Clark
I see this as a fraught issue. It makes sense that more trained, experienced, and competent people should be paid more than people who are less so, but so called "meritocracy" without more or less rigid job definition will generally lead to socially disadvantaged people, e.g. racial minorities and women, being paid less. Beyond that, it leads directly to those from historically privileged groups becoming even more privileged, but I guess that is outside the scope of this discussion. — T Clark
This makes sense from an ethical perspective. As I see it, a good society should ensure a decent life to all it's members willing to participate. I think that would be hard to implement. I guess minimum wages are an attempt to get at the issue. Beyond that, the only practical solution I can think of is a universal basic income, which can separate work from income completely. I guess that's also outside the scope of this discussion. — T Clark
The problem is enforcement. There have to be legal rights to enforce moral ones. — T Clark
Question: can there be a right that is not either directly or indirectly a moral right? It seems to me that all rights are at least in some part moral. — tim wood
And you appear to hold them as somehow an optional add-on. As if morality stored in that tent over there, and maybe we go get some and maybe we don't and just pass on by. — tim wood
My argument, then, is that I have a moral right to possession of what I earn, both for the immediate good, to me and mine, and also for the greater good of all enjoying the same right. This not an absolute claim to all and everything I earn, because there are conflicting obligations we all have as members of communities that also have to be met. — tim wood
What is your point? What do you think? — I like sushi
Different issue I think — Benkei
There was no absolute moral factor invoked. — jgill
here's a contract after all. Etc. Etc. "The standards society adopted" are largely unexamined. — Benkei
By Nozick? I have read Chapters 1 & 2 so I am unsure why you are suggesting these standards are largely unexamined? Also in Chapter 10 (which I have also read fairly thoroughly) how and why society adopt certain standards are looked at here too. For instance, in the three utopian positions: 'Imperialistic,' 'Missionary,' and 'Existential'.
Maybe Chapter 3 does not cover what bothers you thoroughly enough. It woudl be helpful if you can pinpoint where in the Chapter he falls short. I will read that Chapter now. I have been meaning to get back to the book and read every page so this is a good enough excuse to do so now :) Thanks — I like sushi
And you appear to hold them as somehow an optional add-on. As if morality stored in that tent over there, and maybe we go get some and maybe we don't and just pass on by.
— tim wood
What part of what I wrote makes you say this when I'm only discussing one specific presumed moral right? — Benkei
In light of these factors, a moral right to income cannot be reasonably held. Instead, it is merely a legal right. — Benkei
Good question. My view is simply that if we all want to have the kinds of systems and benefits that we-all seem to want to have, then we all implicitly accept the consequences of those systems, adjusting and refining as we go. And while it is clear that there is a lot of adjusting and refining to be done and probably always will be, still, it seems the best system is some kind of capitalist/democratic system.Where is morality found when societies accept ludicrous riches and abject poverty at the same time? — Benkei
"The standards society adopted" are largely unexamined. It is a card house of assumptions and I'm challenging a specific one — Benkei
Therefore, affirmative action or equal opportunity initiatives would be justified to help these individuals reach their potential — Benkei
This could mean adopting hiring practices that prioritize diversity, ensuring that supply chains are free from discrimination, and promoting workplace cultures that are inclusive and supportive of all employees. — Benkei
However, the labor market doesn’t determine worth in any moral sense—it merely assigns value based on economic factors like demand, supply, and efficiency. — Benkei
In an ideal ethical framework, all things being equal, an employer should prioritize hiring the individual who is most in need of income. — Benkei
if we acknowledge the importance of need in labor contracts, then it follows that income should not be viewed as an absolute right. If individuals are hired based on their needs, the resultant income is not merely a reward for their labor but also a response to their vulnerability. — Benkei
When we center the discussion on worth, need and just production it becomes clear that individuals do not have an unqualified moral right to all of their income. Market outcomes, contractual agreements, and economic success do not inherently reflect moral entitlements. Rather, they are contingent on broader social, ethical, and political contexts. Worth is often arbitrary, need is ignored, and production is more often than not exploitative and unjust.
In light of these factors, a moral right to income cannot be reasonably held. Instead, it is merely a legal right. — Benkei
The minimal state treats us as inviolate individuals, who may not be used in certain ways by others as means or cools or instruments or resources; it treats us as persons having individual rights with the dignity this constitutes. Treating us with respect by respecting our rights, it allows us, individually or with whom we choose, to choose our life and to realize our ends and our conception of ourselves, insofar as we can, aided by the voluntary cooperation of other individuals possessing the same dignity. How dare any state or group of individuals do more. Or less.
Nozick,Anarchy, State and Utopia, (1999, pp. 333-334)
Don't be so practical man! First things first. — Benkei
I think risk is secondary though. — Benkei
the perpetual gains of a shareholder is another process I'm not ethically comfortable with. — Benkei
I haven't gotten as far to think about actual policy implementations. — Benkei
But it does if employers act as you state here: — I like sushi
Let's pretend that because it sometimes happens it isn't an issue? Really? — Benkei
The market doesn't operate that way. There's no price mechanism through which such information is communicated so even if you would want to, you can't. — Benkei
This means recognizing that individuals from socially disadvantaged groups may not have had the same opportunities to demonstrate their worth due to systemic barriers. Therefore, affirmative action or equal opportunity initiatives would be justified to help these individuals reach their potential. This adjustment reframes worth not just as a reflection of past contributions but as a recognition of untapped potential, especially in underrepresented groups. — Benkei
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