In The Luck of the Draw, Peter Stone surveys the substantial number of arguments for and against lotteries and argues that lotteries have only one crucial effect relevant to decision-making: they have the 'sanitizing effect' of preventing decisions from being made on the basis of reasons.
In The Luck of the Draw, Peter Stone surveys the substantial number of arguments for and against lotteries and argues that lotteries have only one crucial effect relevant to decision-making: they have the 'sanitizing effect' of preventing decisions from being made on the basis of reasons.
Peter Stone is Faculty Fellow in the Center for Ethics and Public Affairs at Tulane University. He has been researching the theory and practice of random selection for over a decade, and his work on the subject has been published in such journals as the Journal of Political Philosophy, Journal of Theoretical Politics, Political Theory, and Social Theory and Practice. He also works on broader issues relating to justice, democracy, and rationality.
Inhaltsangabe
Part I: The Logic of Random Selection 1: Why Lotteries? 1. The School Board Tosses a Coin 2. Lotteries, Lotteries Everywhere 3. Absurd yet Obvious 4. The Story So Far 5. The Argument to Come 2: What Do Lotteries Do? 1. What Is a Lottery? 2. Fundamental Features of Decision-Making 3. Decision-Making by Lottery 4. The Lottery Principle 5. Indeterminacy without Lotteries 6. Lotteries and Divination Part II: Lotteries and Justice 3: Allocative Justice 1. The Relationship between Lotteries and Justice 2. The Just Lottery Rule 3. Consent, Opportunities, Expectations 4: Impartiality 1. What Does Allocative Justice Require? 2. Allocative Justice and Outcomes 3. Allocative Justice and Actions 4. Impartiality and Indeterminacy 5. The Right and the Good 5: The Implications of Impartiality 1. The Nature of the Impartiality Principle 2. Theories of Justice 3. Alternatives to Random Selection Part III: Lotteries beyond Justice 6: The Idea of Sortition 1. Sortition in Practice 2. Sortition and Justice 3. Incentive Alignment 4. Descriptive Representation 5. Random Selection in Other 7: Conclusion Bibliography
Part I: The Logic of Random Selection 1: Why Lotteries? 1. The School Board Tosses a Coin 2. Lotteries, Lotteries Everywhere 3. Absurd yet Obvious 4. The Story So Far 5. The Argument to Come 2: What Do Lotteries Do? 1. What Is a Lottery? 2. Fundamental Features of Decision-Making 3. Decision-Making by Lottery 4. The Lottery Principle 5. Indeterminacy without Lotteries 6. Lotteries and Divination Part II: Lotteries and Justice 3: Allocative Justice 1. The Relationship between Lotteries and Justice 2. The Just Lottery Rule 3. Consent, Opportunities, Expectations 4: Impartiality 1. What Does Allocative Justice Require? 2. Allocative Justice and Outcomes 3. Allocative Justice and Actions 4. Impartiality and Indeterminacy 5. The Right and the Good 5: The Implications of Impartiality 1. The Nature of the Impartiality Principle 2. Theories of Justice 3. Alternatives to Random Selection Part III: Lotteries beyond Justice 6: The Idea of Sortition 1. Sortition in Practice 2. Sortition and Justice 3. Incentive Alignment 4. Descriptive Representation 5. Random Selection in Other 7: Conclusion Bibliography
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