您的位置>> 首页 > 所有图书 > ANARCHY,STATE,AND UTOPIA
查看图书
  • 书名: ANARCHY,STATE,AND...
  • 作者:Robert Nozick
  • 出版:Basic Books,INC.,publishers
  • 年月:1974
  • 页数:367
  • 书价:
  • 登录号:G000359
  • 分类号:
  图书目录:Preface

Acknowledgments

                          PART I

         State-of-Nature Theory, or How to Back

            into a State without Really Trying

 1.  Why State-of-Nature Theory?

               POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY

               EXPLANATORY POLITICAL THEORY

2.  The State of Nature

               PROTECTIVE ASSOCIATIONS

               THE DOMINANT PROTECTIVE ASSOCIATION

               INVISIBLE-HAND EXPLANATIONS

               IS THE DOMINANT PROTECTIVE ASSOCIATION

                       STATE.?

3.  Moral Constraints and the State

               THE MINIMAL STATE AND THE ULTRAMINIMAL

                  STATE

              MORAL  CONSTRAINTS  AND  MORAL  GOALS

              WHY SIDE CONSTRAINTS.?

              LIBERTARIAN CONSTRAINTS

              CONSTRAINTS AND ANIMALS

              THE  EXPERIENCE  MACHINE

              UNDERDETERMINATION OF MORAL

                  THEORY

              WHAT  ARE  CONSTRAINTS  BASED  UPON.?

              THE  INDIVIDUALIST  ANARCHIST

4.  Prohibition, Compensation, and Risk

              INDEPENDENTS AND THE DOMINANT PROTECTIVE

                 ~ AGENCY

               PROHIBITION  AND  COMPENSATION

               WHY  EVER  PROHIBIT?

               RETRIBUTIVE  AND  DETERRENCE  THEORIES  



OF

                   PUNISHMENT

               DIVIDING THE BENEFITS OF EXCHANGE

               FEAR AND PROHIBITION

               WHY NOT ALWAYS PROHIBIT.)

               RISK

               THE PRINCIPLE OF COMPENSATION

               PRODUCTIVE EXCHANGE

5.  The State

                PROHIBITING PRIVATE ENFORCEMENT OF

                   JUSTICE

                "THE PRINCIPLE OF FAIRNESS"

                PROCEDURAL RIGHTS

                HOW MAY THE DOMINANT AGENCY ACT.?

                THE DE FACTO MONOPOLY

                PROTECTING OTHERS

                THE STATE

                THE  INVISIBLE-HAND  EXPLANATION  OF  



THE

                    STATE

 6.  Further Considerations on the Argument

       for the State

                 STOPPING THE PROCESS.?

                 PREEMPTIVE  ATTACK

                 BEHAVIOR IN THE PROCESS

                 LEGITIMACY

                 THE RIGHT OF ALL TO PUNISH

                 PREVENTIVE RESTRAINT

                               PART II

                     Beyond the Minimal State?

  7.  Distributive Justice

         SECTION I:

                  THE ENTITLEMENT THEORY

                   HISTORICAL PRINCIPLES AND END-



RESULT

                       PRINCIPLES

                   PATTERNING

                      HOW LIBERTY UPSETS PATTERNS

                      SEN'S ARGUMENT

                      REDISTRIBUTION  AND  PROPERTY  



RIGHTS

                      LOCKE'S  THEORY  OF  ACQUISITION

                     THE PROVISO

       SECTION II.,

                     RAWLS'  THEORY

                     SOCIAL COOPERATION

                     TERMS  OF  COOPERATION  AND  THE  



DIFFERENCE

                          PRINCIPLE

                     THE ORIGINAL POSITION AND END-



RESULT

                         PRINCIPLES

                     MACRO  AND  MICRO

                     NATURAL ASSETS AND ARBITRARINESS

                     THE POSITIVE ARGUMENT

                    THE  NEGATIVE  ARGUMENT

                    COLLECTIVE ASSETS

 8.  Equality, Envy, Exploitation, Etc.

                    EQUALITY

                    EQUALITY  OF  OPPORTUNITY

                    SELF-ESTEEM AND ENVY

                    MEANINGFUL WORK

                    WORKERS' CONTROL

                    MARXIAN EXPLOITATION

                    VOLUNTARY EXCHANGE

                    PHILANTHROPY

                    HAVING  A  SAY  OVER  WHAT  



AFFECTS  YOU

                   THE NONNEUTRAL STATE

          HOW REDISTRIBUTION OPERATES

 9.  Demoktesis

                   CONSISTENCY AND PARALLEL EXAMPLES

                   THE MORE-THAN-MINIMAL STATE DERIVED

                   HYPOTHETICAL HISTORIES

                             PART III

                                  Utopia

10.  A Framework for Utopia

                  THE MODEL

                  THE  MODEL  PROJECTED  ONTO  OUR  



WORLD

                  THE FRAMEWORK

                  DESIGN DEVICES AND FILTER DEVICES

                 THE FRAMEWORK AS UTOPIAN COMMON

                     GROUND

                 COMMUNITY  AND  NATION

                 COMMUNITIES WHICH CHANGE

                 TOTAL COMMUNITIES

                 UTOPIAN MEANS AND ENDS

                 HOW  UTOPIA  WORKS  OUT

                 UTOPIA AND THE MINIMAL STATE

Notes

Bibliography

Index