29. “Distributive Justice and Free Market Economics: A Eudaimonistic Perspective”
by Michael F. Reber
Abstract: In today’s society, a peculiar understanding of distributive justice has developed which holds that “social justice must be distributed by the coercive force of government.” However, this is a perversion of the ideal of distributive justice. The perspective of distributive justice which should be considered is one with its roots in the school of thought referred to as self-actualization ethics or eudaimonism, which holds that each person is unique and each should discover whom he or she is—to actualize his or her true potential and to live the “good life” within the congeniality and complementarity of personal excellences of his or her fellow members of community. When a eudaimonistic perspective is considered, a definition of distributive of justice could be “the allocation of goods and utilities via the voluntary ubiquitous human interaction of self-actualizing individuals who not only recognize the human dignity of the self and other and the rights which flow from and guarantee it, but also actively will goods and utilities toward the self and other so as to manifest human dignity.” Therefore, with a eudaimonistic understanding of distributive justice, one can argue that the free market is the ubiquitous interactions of self-actualizing individuals who are giving and receiving goods and utilities for one and another’s own “happiness,” i.e. the free market is the socio-economic mechanism by which distributive justice operates. In this paper I first will overview the philosophical foundations of distributive justice. Next, I will propose a eudaimonistic definition of distributive justice. Finally, I will highlight examples of distributive justice operating in a free market economy.
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Another example of State hypocrisy. In promising to deliver the distribution of justice, their reduction of the individual to a statistic (via welfare recipient or payee) succeeds in oppressing the unique merits of a person that would otherwise be beneficial to society. The process of standardization employed by the State, hides the real demand for charitable deeds. This is done via the “Soul Killer”, in which individuals do not recognize the demand for their humanitarian abilities due to the global belief that the State is societies sole steward and the individual has done their part in enabling the steward by the way of paid taxes. This in turn leaves those in an ill situation to never recognize the real supply of charity, and to continue to rely on the States illusionary monopoly of “good deeds”.