Mises Review  /  Ludwig von Mises  Institute
 
Justice: What's the Right Thing to Do?
Michael J. Sandel
1 2010
Volume 16, Number 1 


 
[Justice: What's the Right Thing to Do? • By Michael J. Sandel •  Farrar, 
Straus and Giroux, 2009 • 307 pages]
 
It is easy to see why Michael Sandel is a popular Harvard professor. He  
presents major ideas of ethics and political philosophy in a clear way, tied 
to  important contemporary issues. Justice: What's the Right Thing to Do?,  
based on a famous course that Sandel teaches, offers a discussion of what 
Sandel  regards as the three main competing views of justice. 
The first of these takes welfare to be the criterion of justice. What 
counts  as just is what leads to the best consequences. Thus, supporters of the 
free  market such as Milton Friedman praise the market because it leads to 
prosperity,  in contrast with other economic systems. 
Why do we care [about prosperity]… The most obvious answer is that we think 
 prosperity makes us better off than we would otherwise be — as individuals 
and  as a society. Prosperity matters, in other words, because it 
contributes to  our welfare. (p. 19)
Another approach, which many libertarians will find familiar, takes freedom 
 and rights to be fundamental to justice. What is essential, according to 
this  way of seeing things, is to give each person what is rightfully due to 
him, even  if following this course does not lead to the best consequences. 
The approach to justice that begins with freedom is a capacious school…  
Leading the laissez-faire camp are free-market libertarians who believe that  
justice consists in respecting and upholding the voluntary choices made by  
consenting adults. The fairness camp contains theorists of a more 
egalitarian  bent. (p. 20)
The third view, the one to which Sandel is himself inclined, stresses 
virtue.  What character traits should the government, as well as society as 
whole,  endeavor to inculcate in the population? 
The idea of legislating morality is anathema to many citizens of liberal  
societies, as it risks lapsing into intolerance and coercion. But the notion  
that a just society affirms certain virtues and conceptions of the good 
life  has inspired political movements and arguments across the ideological  
spectrum. (p. 20)
This latter approach may be less familiar than the other two, but an 
example  will show what Sandel has in mind. He considers sellers who increase 
prices in  response to a disaster. Are not such people displaying greed, a 
character trait  we do not wish people to have? Sandel knows full well the 
argument that raising  prices in a disaster increases the supply of goods that 
people need. He quotes a  characteristically incisive passage from Thomas 
Sowell on the point at  issue. 
Thomas Sowell, a free-market economist, called price gouging an  
"emotionally powerful but economically meaningless expression that most  
economists 
pay no attention to, because it seems too confused to bother with"  … Higher 
prices for ice, bottled water, roof repairs, generators, and motel  rooms 
have the advantage, Sowell argued, of limiting the use of such things by  
consumers and increasing incentives for suppliers in far-off places to provide  
the goods and services most needed in the hurricane's aftermath. (p.  4)
Nevertheless, he does not regard this consideration as decisive. Even if  
raising prices promotes welfare, still, "we" don't want to promote greed, do  
"we"? Sandel is evidently willing to sacrifice a great deal of welfare to 
obtain  the sort of virtue he wants. As we shall later see, his 
virtue-oriented position  has little to recommend it. I have here merely 
introduced it 
briefly. 
Sandel does a good job in showing the weakness of the welfare view, 
although  here he goes over standard ground. If we aim to achieve the best 
consequences,  will we not sometimes be required to do morally abhorrent 
things? 
Some actions,  e.g., torture, are wrong, regardless of consequences. 
To this objection there is a familiar rejoinder. What about the terrorist 
and  the ticking atomic bomb? Are we really sure that torture is in all 
circumstances  wrong? Sandel has an excellent response. In the imagined case, 
the 
terrorist is  guilty of a horrendous moral wrong, planting the nuclear 
bomb. We can sharpen  the case by asking whether it would be wrong to torture 
someone completely  innocent, in order to extract the essential information. 
Suppose the only way to induce the terrorist suspect to talk is to torture  
his young daughter (who has no knowledge of her father's nefarious  
activities). Would it be morally permissible to do so? (p. 40)
The consequentialist would have to answer, implausibly, that it would not 
be  wrong. 
Readers of this journal will naturally be interested in what Sandel has to  
say about one rights-based approach in particular, libertarianism. One 
might  reasonably fear the worst: Sandel stands among the foremost 
communitarians and,  as his previous work makes evident, he views the free 
market with 
disdain._[2]_ (http://mises.org/misesreview_detail.aspx?control=374#note1)  
Sandel here proves unpredictable. He thinks that most of the standard  
objections to libertarianism fail; even if there is something to these  
objections, libertarians have plausible responses. 
Those who favor the redistribution of income through taxation offer various 
 objections to the libertarian logic. Most of these objections can be 
answered.  (p. 66)
If an opponent claims that the free market leaves too much to luck,  
libertarians can respond that people are self-owners and have the right to make 
 
exchanges as they wish. Further, libertarians are by no means obviously wrong 
 when they compare taxation to forced labor. Nor will it do to respond to 
this  that taxation has been democratically enacted. If taxation is slavery, 
majority  support does not change things. 
If democratic consent justifies the taking of property, does it also  
justify the taking of liberty? May the majority deprive me of freedom of  
speech 
and of religion, claiming that, as a democratic citizen, I have already  
given my consent to whatever it decides? (p. 68)
Surprise has its limits. As readers will have already surmised from 
Sandel's  comments about the market and greed, he has not converted to 
libertarianism. But  if he thinks that the usual objections do not overthrow 
libertarianism, why does  he not join us? He answers by moving to his own 
preference 
among the three  approaches he distinguishes. The problem with libertarianism 
involves  virtue. 
"Sandel stands among the foremost communitarians  and, as his previous work 
makes evident, he views the free market with  disdain."
Libertarianism allows people to engage in degrading exchanges. A free 
market  would permit people to sell their kidneys for frivolous reasons, e.g., 
to 
 satisfy a healthy and wealthy eccentric who collects kidneys. Even worse, 
it  would allow consensual cannibalism. Sandel describes a bizarre case in 
Germany  in which this occurred. 
[C]annibalism between consenting adults poses the ultimate test for the  
libertarian principle of self-ownership and the idea of justice that follows  
from it. It is an extreme form of assisted suicide…If the libertarian claim 
is  right, banning consensual cannibalism is unjust, a violation of the 
right to  liberty. (p. 74)
Further, libertarianism leads to such horrors as an all-volunteer army.  
People with proper civic spirit will want to defend their country out of  
patriotism, rather than for pay. If they are not thus motivated, nevertheless  
they have a civic responsibility to serve and the draft enforces this  
obligation. Sandel appears to have forgotten his earlier remarks about taxation 
 
and slavery — or is slavery all right as long as civic responsibility 
mandates  it? 
Sandel's complaints about degrading exchanges cannot be so readily 
dismissed  as his misguided praise for conscription: nevertheless, the 
appropriate 
counter  to them is apparent. Libertarianism does not claim to encompass the 
whole of  morality. Quite the contrary, it asks only, when is force or the 
threat of force  permissible? The answer to this question delimits a sphere 
of rights, but not  everything that is within one's rights counts as morally 
acceptable. People are  free to do bad things, in the sense that they cannot 
be compelled to do what is  morally required. Only if they violate rights 
can force be used against them.  The fact, if it is one, that the consensual 
cannibal does not violate rights  leaves us free to recoil from him in 
disgust. 
Sandel is well aware of this response, but he does not accept it. He 
subsumes  it under a more general doctrine, neutrality. In this view, the state 
must  remain neutral between competing moral views. (Of course, many 
libertarians  think that the state should not exist, but we can readily 
substitute 
"the  protection agencies" for "the state" in the argument.) Thus, even if 
most people  find cannibalism morally abhorrent, the state cannot impose this 
opinion on  those who dissent from it. 
Sandel argues that neutrality cannot be sustained. Are there not certain  
issues that require the state to commit itself, one way or the other? The 
state  cannot be neutral on abortion. Either fetal life merits protection, or 
it does  not: the state cannot say that because people have conflicting moral 
views on  the issue, it must stand aside. 
For, if it's true that the developing fetus is morally equivalent to a  
child, then abortion is morally equivalent to infanticide. And few would  
maintain that government should let parents decide for themselves whether to  
kill their children. So the "pro-choice" position in the abortion debate is  
not really neutral on the underlying moral and theological question… (p.  251)
Sandel makes this point in criticism of a familiar target, John Rawls. Here 
 Sandel has in mind Rawls's famous doctrine of public reason, which limits 
the  considerations that may be invoked in public debate. 
Sandel's complaint against neutrality fails. Even if he were correct — in 
my  view he isn't — that the state must take a stand on some issues, it 
hardly  follows that it must do so wherever a moral controversy arises. 
Abortion  
inevitably raises issues of rights; Sandel's horror stories of degrading  
exchanges in a libertarian society do not. He thus leaves intact the 
libertarian  contention that people should be free to act as they wish, so long 
as 
they do  not violate rights. 
Anyone with the slightest libertarian inclinations will shudder at Sandel's 
 own approach to justice. As he sees matters, we must determine the meaning 
of  social institutions such as marriage. "What counts as the purpose of 
marriage  partly depends on what qualities we think marriage should celebrate 
and affirm"  (pp. 259–60). Of course it will be the courts that decide this; 
such weighty  matters cannot be left to individual decision. In this way, 
e.g., disputes over  gay marriage can be settled. Having settled such 
controversies, we can then be  enlisted in programs of civic improvement. 
A politics of the common good would take as one of its primary goals the  
reconstruction of the infrastructure of civic life … it would tax the 
affluent  to rebuild public institutions and services so that rich and poor 
alike 
would  want to take advantage of them. (p. 267)
We can thus transcend the market economy and the greed that motivates it.  
Onward and upward! 
 
Notes
_[2]_ (http://mises.org/misesreview_detail.aspx?control=374#ref1)  See, 
e.g., his Public Philosophy: Essays on Morality in  Politics (Harvard, 2005) 
and my review in The Mises Review Fall  2005.

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