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This
is a set of closely related theories that without exemption
advocate the thesis that all members of a society should have
exactly equal amount of resources. Simpler theories of this
kind are satisfied with the claim that everyone should be
given, at all costs, completely equal quantity of certain
crucial material goods, like money. More careful and sophisticated
egalitarian thinkers are aware that such a distribution would
have too many shortcomings: those with greater needs for which
they are not themselves responsible (like the handicapped
people), would get less satisfaction than others because they
would have to spend a great share of their resources just
to catch up others (if ever) in normal functioning; lazy and
idle people would be rewarded and the talented and industrious
would be discouraged, etc. To evade such unacceptable consequences,
the adherents of strict equality started a search for some
complex measure of goods that would be given to everybody
in equal amounts but would not suffer from similar bad effects.
Many such egalitarian measures were proposed so far, like:
that everyone should be equally happy, that everyone should
have not only equal amount of material resources but also
an equal power to use these resources (this proposal wants
to deal with unequal personal abilities), that everyone should
have an equal chance to be happy, and the like. The discussion
that goes on among egalitarians does not allow one to say
yet which of the proposed ways of equal distribution is the
best one.
The
main egalitarians are:
Richard Arneson, G.A. Cohen, Amartya K. Sen
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