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Definition
1. Justice in Acquisition 2. Justice in transfer 3. Rectification of injustice |
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| unowned things in nature, things that nobody owned before and you take possession |
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| somebody gives you something that they owned and you don't do anything that make them do it (Free of force and fraud) |
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| Rectification of injustice |
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Definition
| if something was taken through force or fraud, the person who has it, is not entitled to it and has to give it back. |
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Term
| which principle is the most important in the business world today? |
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Definition
| Justice in transfer because this is what businesses do as along as it is free of force or fraud |
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Term
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Definition
| freedom of force (physical force or threat of physical force) and fraud (getting someone to do something that they otherwise wouldn't do through misinformation or withholding information) |
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| the right to pursue something |
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| Which type of right does Nozick support? |
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Definition
| Negative rights. He believe positive rights violate negative rights. If you are entitled to something, someone would have to give it to you. People have the right to be free of force or fraud |
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Definition
| whether a distribution is just depends on how it came about |
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Term
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Definition
| whether a distribution is just depends on whether it fits some structural principle/pattern |
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Definition
| distribution varies along a natural dimension, end result |
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| uneven distribution, wealth is constantly changing, historical |
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| What distribution does Nozick Support |
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Definition
| historical and unpatterned |
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Term
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Definition
1. Not a complete moral system 2. property rights are not fully developed (doesnt explain what it means to own something) 3. What date does the entitlement theory start? |
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Term
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Definition
| getting someone to do something that they otherwise wouldn't do through misinformation or withholding information |
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Term
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Definition
| physical force or threat of physical force |
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