2018
DOI: 10.1111/ejop.12331
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Freedom and poverty in the Kantian state

Abstract: The coercive authority of the Kantian state is rationally grounded in the ideal of equal external freedom, which is realized when each individual can choose and act without being constrained by another's will. This ideal does not seem like it can justify state‐mandated economic redistribution. For if one is externally free just as long as one can choose and act without being constrained by another, then only direct slavery, serfdom, or other systems of overt control seem to threaten external freedom. Yet Kant … Show more

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Cited by 23 publications
(15 citation statements)
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“…Ripstein (2009, pp. 273-8) and Hasan (2018) derive the same conclusion from the idea that Poor would otherwise not possess the kind of agency required to form a polity of equals with Rich. It seems, however, that a tax grounded in Poor's needs for agency could only cover Poor's most basic needs.…”
Section: Kant: Property Enables Us To Pursue Aimsmentioning
confidence: 80%
“…Ripstein (2009, pp. 273-8) and Hasan (2018) derive the same conclusion from the idea that Poor would otherwise not possess the kind of agency required to form a polity of equals with Rich. It seems, however, that a tax grounded in Poor's needs for agency could only cover Poor's most basic needs.…”
Section: Kant: Property Enables Us To Pursue Aimsmentioning
confidence: 80%
“…Within recent Anglophone scholarship, Arthur Ripstein has most explicitly expressed concerns about this tendency to collapse Kantian freedom into a form of immunity from encroachment by others. As a number of critics have pointed out (e.g., Flikschuh ; ; Hasan ), however, Ripstein’s (, 13) own reconstruction of freedom as “independence from being constrained by the choice of another person” is at least ambivalent in relation to the two conceptions.…”
Section: Freedom and The Lawmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…His doctrine of right looks © well suited to orienting us to resist neoliberal inequality, offering an a priori argument for sovereignty that makes justice, not market efficiency, the aim of the state and places few substantive restrictions on state power in its service. Recent scholarship has sought to reconstruct Kant's account of right as a freestanding view of politics that does not need to rely on his other writings (Hasan, 2018;Hodgson, 2010;Ripstein, 2009;Rostbøll, 2016;Uleman, 2004;Varda, 2006;Weinrib, 2008;Zylberman, 2016). 1 Against a history of interpretation that saw Kant's view of the state as essentially libertarian, these scholars argue he held an egalitarian view of justice that requires state action to address poverty and inequality, disagreeing only about whether Kant's theory of justice justifies the now-familiar national welfare state, including social programs like public education and universal health care (Ripstein, 2009, p. 267), or requires further redistribution aimed at fuller equality (Hasan, 2018, p. 923).…”
Section: Q3mentioning
confidence: 99%