If You're an Egalitarian, How Come You’re So Rich?This book presents G. A. Cohen's Gifford Lectures, delivered at the University of Edinburgh in 1996. Focusing on Marxism and Rawlsian liberalism, Cohen draws a connection between these thought systems and the choices that shape a person's life. In the case of Marxism, the relevant life is his own: a communist upbringing in the 1940s in Montreal, which induced a belief in a strongly socialist egalitarian doctrine. The narrative of Cohen's reckoning with that inheritance develops through a series of sophisticated engagements with the central questions of social and political philosophy. |
Contents
Prospectus | 1 |
Paradoxes of Conviction | 7 |
Politics and Religion in a Montreal Communist | 20 |
Copyright | |
8 other sections not shown