CONTENTS
Abbreviations
Introduction
i. The State of Nature
ii. Three Unsolved Problems
iii. Rawls and the Unsolved Problems
iv. Free, Equal, and Independent
v. Grotius, Hobbes, Locke, Hume, Kant
vi. Three Forms of Contemporary Contractarianism
vii. The Capabilities Approach
viii. Capabilities and Contractarianism
ix. In Search of Global Justice
i. Needs for Care, Problems of Justice
ii. Prudential and Moral Versions of the Contract; Public and Private
iii. Rawls’s Kantian Contractarianism: Primary Goods, Kantian Personhood, Rough Equality, Mutual Advantage
iv. Postponing the Question of Disability
v. Kantian Personhood and Mental Impairment
vi. Care and Disability: Kittay and Sen
vii. Reconstructing Contractarianism?
i. The Capabilities Approach: A Noncontractarian Account of Care
ii. The Bases of Social Cooperation
iii. Dignity: Aristotelian, not Kantian
iv. The Priority of the Good, the Role of Agreement
v. Why Capabilities?
vi. Care and the Capabilities List
vii. Capability or Functioning?
viii. The Charge of Intuitionism
ix. The Capabilities Approach and Rawls’s Principles of Justice
x. Types and Levels of Dignity: The Species Norm
xi. Public Policy: The Question of Guardianship
xii. Public Policy: Education and Inclusion
xiii. Public Policy: The Work of Care
xiv. Liberalism and Human Capabilities
i. A World of Inequalities
ii. A Theory of Justice: The Two-Stage Contract Introduced
iii. The Law of Peoples: The Two-Stage Contract Reaffirmed and Modified
iv. Justification and Implementation
v. Assessing the Two-Stage Contract
vi. The Global Contract: Beitz and Pogge
vii. Prospects for an International Contractrarianism
i. Social Cooperation: The Priority of Entitlements
ii. Why Capabilities?
iii. Capabilities and Rights
iv. Equality and Adequacy
v. Pluralism and Toleration
vi. An International “Overlapping Consensus”?
vii. Globalizing the Capabilities Approach: The Roleof Institutions
viii. Globalizing the Capabilities Approach: WhatInstitutions?
ix. Ten Principles for the Global Structure
i. “Beings Entitled to Dignified Existence”
ii. Kantian Social Contract Views: Indirect Duties,Duties of Compassion
iii. Utilitarianism and Animal Flourishing
iv. Types of Dignity, Types of Flourishing: Extending the Capabilities Approach
v. Methodology: Theory and Imagination
vi. Species and Individual
vii. Evaluating Animal Capabilities: No NatureWorship
viii. Positive and Negative, Capability and Functioning
ix. Equality and Adequacy
x. Death and Harm
xi. An Overlapping Consensus?
xii. Toward Basic Political Principles: The Capabilities List
xiii. The Ineliminability of Conflict
xiv. Toward a Truly Global Justice
7. The Moral Sentiments and the Capabilities Approach
Notes
References
Index