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April 10, 2026
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"We do not wish to âjudgeâ or assess out surrounding merely as a kind of expressive activity carelessly projected onto the world, but we wish to evaluate the world âcorrectly,â i.e., in according with that it truly is, and the desire to know is directed at determining what the world truly is."
"Can one understand politics without understanding history, especially the history of political thought, and will this distinguish political philosophy from some other kinds of philosophy (such as, perhaps, logic) to which the study of history is not integral?"
"One obvious way to specify what it is that is âdueâ to someone is to appeal to existing legal codes, but what they will prescribe will vary enormously from one time and place to another. A second account of justice might appeal to some notion of merit or desert. The third approach is Aristotleâs âgeneralâ conception, which simply identified âjusticeâ with the sum of all the virtues and excellences. A fourth conception of justice is the idea that justice is in some way to be connected to equality of shares, resources, or outcomes. Finally there is the idea of fairness or impartiality of procedure. One might think that Rawlsâs view derives some of its apparent plausibility because of a gradual slide between the various senses of âjustice.â People start from a vague intuition that justice as a âgeneralâ concept (in the third sense above) is extremely important for the proper functioning of a society; they then find it easy to shift from this to a particular conception that connects âjusticeâ with fairness of procedure and (a certain kind of limited) equality."
"The general point that a political theory is, among other things, a partisan intervention, is well taken. So question about the actual political implication of a theory cannot be excluded as, in principle, irrelevant."
"To the extent to which the pull that moves me really is irresistible, like an invincibly strong addiction, the normal procedures of evaluation, deliberation, choice, decision, etc. that constitute the substance of our political life are not operating. The same is true of overwhelming aversion. The person being tortured who simply wants it to stop, period, is also not a good model for an agent acting politically."
"Monotheistic religions in the West have tended to conflate having a general orientation in life, having a specific theory of the world, having a sense of the positive meaningfulness of oneâs existence, and having a fixed set of rules for behavior, but these elements are in principle separable. ⌠The âmetaphysical need,â ⌠both Marx and Nietzsche held, is a historical phenomenon that arises under determinate circumstances, and could be expected to disappear under other circumstances that we could relatively easily envisage."
"Kantians, of course, will think that I have lost the plot from the start, and that only confusion can result from failure to make these essential, utterly fundamental divisions between âisâ and âought,â fact and value, or the descriptive and the normative, in as rigorous and systematic a way as possible, just as I think they have fallen prey to a kind of fetishism, attributing to a set of human conceptual invention a significance they do not have. ⌠In some contexts, a relative distinction between the facts and human valuations of those facts, or norms, might be perfectly useful. But the division makes sense only relative to the context, and canât be extracted from that context, promoted, and declared to have absolute standing."
"Asking what the question is, and why the question is asked, is always asking a pertinent question."
"It would be a mistake to believe that one could come to any substantive understanding of politics by discussing abstractly the good, the right, the true, or the rational in complete abstraction from the way in which these items figure in the motivationally active parts of the human psyche, and particularly in abstraction from the way in which they impinge, even if indirectly, on human action."
"An imagined threat might be an extremely powerful motivation to action; and an aspiration, even if built on fantasy, is not nothing, provided it really moves people to action. ⌠Even illusions can have effects. The realist must take powerful illusions seriously as factors in the world that have whatever motivational power they in fact have for the population in question, that is, as something to be understood. This is compatible with seeing through them, and refusing steadfastly to make them part of the cognitive apparatus one employs oneself to try to make sense of the world."
"In its origin, liberalism had no ambition to be universal either in the sense of claiming to be valid for everyone and every human society or in the sense of purporting to give an answer to all the important questions of human life. ⌠The ideal of liberalism is a practically engaged political philosophy that is both epistemically and morally highly abstemious. That is, at best, a very difficult and possibly a completely hopeless project. It is therefore not surprising that liberals succumb again and again to the temptation to go beyond the limits they would ideally like to set for themselves and try to make of liberalism a complete philosophy of life. ⌠In the middle of the twentieth century, Kantianism presented itself as a âphilosophical foundationâ for a version of liberalism, and liberals at that time were sufficiently weak and self-deceived (or strong and opportunistic) to accept the offer."
"A major danger in using highly abstractive methods in political philosophy is that one will succeed merely in generalizing oneâs own local prejudices and repackaging them as demands of reason. The study of history can help to counteract this natural human bias."
"Neither the good nor the true is self-realizing, so it is not generally a sufficient explanation of why people believe that X that X is true, or of why people do Y that Y is good."
"When Catullus expresses his love and hate for Lesbia, he is not obviously voicing a wish to rid himself of one or the other of these two sentiments. Not all contradictions resolve into temporal change of belief or desire."
"The Kantian philosophy is no more than at best a half-secularized version of such a theocratic ethics, with âReasonâ in the place of God. This does not amount to much more than a change of names."
"The pure normative standpoint that Kantâs ethics tries to occupy, a standpoint in which we consider only the normatively relevant features of a possible world, abstracting strictly from the real world and the empirical accidents of concrete situations, is an expression of what Dewey called âthe quest for certainty.â In an insecure world, weak humans struggle convulsively to reach some kind of stability; the a priori is an overcompensation in thought for experienced human weakness. This is one of the origins of Kantâs notorious rigidity, his authoritarian devotion to âprinciples,â and his tendency to promote local habits of thought to constituents of the absolute framework in which alone (purportedly) any coherent experience was possible; thus, Euclidean geometry is declared the a priori condition of human experience, and sadistic remnants of Puritanism become demands of pure practical reason. Classical liberalism rejected Kantâs practical philosophy, but perhaps this is not enough. Perhaps one should also reject the very idea of a pure normative standpoint."
"The point of one of Rawlsâ] main constructionsâthe introduction of the âveil of ignoranceââis precisely to exclude from consideration empirical information that might prejudice the overriding normative force of the outcome. It is, then, extremely striking, not to say astounding, to the lay reader that the complex theoretical apparatus of Theory of Justice, operating through over 500 pages of densely argued text, eventuates in a constitutional structure that is a virtual replica (with some extremely minor deviations) of the arrangements that exist in the United States."
"The notion of being an âenlightenedâ person does not reduce simply to that of being a person who has highly developed cognitive abilities or disposes of a vast stock of knowledge; neither does it reduce to the idea of being a morally good or socially useful person. âEnlightenmentâ is not a value-free concept because it is connected with some idea of devoting persistent, focused attention to that which is genuinely important in human life, rather than to marginal or subsidiary phenomena, to drawing the âcorrectâ conclusions from attending to these important featuresâwhatever they areâand to embodying these conclusions concretely in oneâs general way of living. It involves a certain amount of sheer knowledge, an ability to concentrate and reflect, inventiveness in restructuring oneâs psychic, personal, and social habits; but to be enlightened is not to âhaveâ any bit of doctrine, but to have been (re)structured in a certain way."
"Intellectual honesty requires that one reflect on the contribution oneâs theory makes to the class struggle, and acknowledge it openly. One does not have to accept the specific claim that there are two, and only two, mutually exclusive worldviews, to one of which any theory must commit itself, to accept the general claim that entertaining, developing and propounding a theory are actions, and as such they represent ways of taking a position in the world. This means that any kind of comprehensive understanding of politics will also have to treat the politics of theorization, including the politics of whatever theory is itself at the given time being presented for scrutiny, as a candidate for acceptance."
"The idea that all problems either have a solution or can be shown to be pseudo-problems is not one I share."
"The actual effect of Rawlsâs theory is to undercut theoretically any straightforward appeal to egalitarianism. Egalitarianism has the advantage that gross failure to comply with its basic principles is not difficult to monitor, There are, to be sure, well-known and unsettled issues about comparability of resources and about whether resources are really the proper objects for egalitarians to be concerned with, but there can be little doubt that if person A in a fully monetarized society has ten thousand times the monetary resources of person B, then under normal circumstances the two are not for most politically relevant purposes âequal.â Rawlsâs theory effectively shifts discussion away from the utilitarian discussion of the consequences of a certain distribution of resources, and also away from an evaluation of distributions from the point of view of strict equality; instead, he focuses attention on a complex counterfactual judgment. The question is not âDoes A have grossly more than B?ââa judgment to which within limits it might not be impossible to get a straightforward answerâbut rather the virtually unanswerable âWould B have even less if A had less?â One cannot even begin to think about assessing any such claim without making an enormous number of assumptions about scarcity of various resources, the form the particular economy in question had, the preferences, and in particular the incentive structure, of the people who lived in it and unless one had a rather robust and detailed economic theory of a kind that few people will believe any economist today has. In a situation of uncertainty like this, the actual political onus probandi in fact tacitly shifts to the have-nots; the âhavesâ lack an obvious systematic motivation to argue for redistribution of the excess wealth they own, or indeed to find arguments to that conclusion plausible. They don't in the same way need to prove anything; they, ex hypothesi, âhaveâ the resources in question: âBeati possidentes.â"
"What agents would choose in certain well- defined conditions of ignorance (in the âoriginal positionâ) is, for Rawls, an important criterion for determining which conception of âjusticeâ is normatively acceptable. Why should we agree that choice under conditions of ignorance is a good criterion for deciding what kind of society we would wish to have? William Morris in the late nineteenth century claimed to prefer a society of more or less equal grinding poverty for all (e.g., the society he directly experienced in Iceland) to Britain with its extreme discrepancies of wealth and welfare, even though the least well-off in Britain were in absolute terms better off than the peasants and fishermen of Iceland.â This choice seems to have been based not on any absolute preference for equality (or on a commitment to any conception of fairness), but on a belief about the specific social (and other) evils that flowed from the ways in which extreme wealth could be used in an industrial capitalist society.â Would no one in the original position entertain views like these? Is Morrisâs vote simply to be discounted? On what grounds? The âveil of ignoranceâ is artificially defined so as to allow certain bits of knowledge âinâ and to exclude other bits. No doubt it would be possible to rig the veil of ignorance so that it blanks out knowledge of the particular experiences Morris had and the theories he developed, and renders them inaccessible in the original position, but one would then have to be convinced that this was not simply a case of modifying the conditions of the thought experiment and the procedure until one got the result one antecedently wanted."
"Either there is or there is not a mechanism for enforcing human rights. If there is not, it would seem that calling them 'rights' simply means that we think it would (morally) be a good idea if they were enforced, although, of course, they are not. A 'human right' is an inherently vacuous conception, and to speak of 'human rights' is a kind of puffery or white magic."
"One of Nietzscheâs most important legacies to us ⌠is his claim that it is desirable and possible to dismantle the Platonic apparatus of Forms, Absolute Truth, the Idea of the Good, etc. and its historical derivatives, such as Kantâs transcendental philosophy, and that this can be done without fear of falling into ârelativism.â"
"If the basic assumption of the theory of ideology is at all tenable, namely, that the general power relations embodied in our social structures can exert a distorting influence on the formation of our beliefs and preferences without our being aware of it, then we are definitely not going to put that kind of influence out of action by asking the agents in the society to imagine that they didnât know their position. To think otherwise is to believe in magic: imagine you are âimpartialâ and you will be. In fact, doing that will be more likely to reinforce the power of these entrenched prejudices because it will explicitly present them as universal, warranted by reason, etc."
"Nietzsche seems sometimes to replace the âtranscendenceâ which stands at the center of traditional accountsâthe existence of a transcendent God, or, failing that, a transcendental viewpointâwith that of a continually transcending activity. ⌠There is no single, final perspective, but given any one perspective, we can always go beyond it."
"At the end of the last book he published, The Law of Peoples, Rawls sets out the task of âreconcilingâ members of âliberal democraticâ societies to their social order, and interprets his own previous work as contributing to that enterprise. Hegel tried to âreconcileâ Prussians in the early 1820s with the Prussian state by showing that, although that state needed some far-reaching reforms, it was nevertheless fundamentally ârationalâ and conformed to all the intuitive demands for moral acceptability that its members might impose on it.â Similarly, Rawlsâs work was an attempt to reconcile Americans to an idealised version of their own social order at the end of the twentieth century."
"No more than one third of his working time, indeed, was spent in his office."
"More apparent to Teamster members than any moral lapses were the tangible gains that had been steadily realized under Hoffa since his advent to power."
"He's not just the most powerful man in labor," Robert Kennedy had said in the wake of Hoffa's announcement; "he's the most powerful man in the country, next to the President."
"At least one time in adulthood, on the other hand, Hoffa claimed just seven school grades."
"I'll be back."
"From 1955 until 1965 Jimmy Hoffa was as famous as Elvis Presley. From 1965 until 1975 Jimmy Hoffa was as famous as the Beatles."
"There are simply no public figures today who so challenge the elite business and government establishment and so champion the working class as Jimmy Hoffa did almost daily and with arrogance."
"Hell, I'm not saying I'm an angel, but when it came to dirty tricks I couldn't hold a candle to the Irish Mafia."
"Our rooms were bugged, our phones were tapped, and our lawyer's rooms were broken into and their files stolen. We finally had to hire armed guards with pistols to be able to maintain our records. It was hard to believe we weren't in Russia."
"When you go to prison they forget it's your Constitution, too."
"But to hear Kennedy when he was grandstanding in front of the McClellan Committee you might have thought I was making as much out of the pension fund as the Kennedys made out of selling whiskey."
"It has to be considered damned unusual that no other union was ever investigated."
"Sure, we loaned money to build hotels and casinos in Las Vegas. So what? Las Vegas borrowers were good customers."
"I've said consistently that no employer ever really accepts a union. They tolerate the unions. The very minute they can get a pool of unemployment they'll challenge the unions and try to get back what they call managements prerogatives, meaning hire, fire, pay what you want."
"A slab of bread "buttered" with lard and, if you were lucky, seasoned with salt and pepper, was a luxury."
"Mob guys had muscle, and where in hell do you think employers got the tough guys when they wanted to break a strike?"
"We never had any silk sheets in our family..."
"You almost had to live through it to really know the gut ripping misery of the depression during the early thirties which led to labor's bloodiest and most violent days."
"In the ten years I was president of the Teamsters, I had raised the membership from eight hundred thousand to more than 2 million and made it the largest single labor union the world."
"When you run an organization like the Teamsters one man has to be the boss and run things."
"I let him strain for a couple of seconds. Then like taking candy from a baby, I flipped his arm over and cracked his knuckles on the top of the table. It was strictly no contest and he knew it. But he had to try again. Same results."
"They all know I'm back, very much back, and that I will be the general president again come hell or high water."
"Nobody in this country respects what's weak. You believe me! If you see a beggar on a corner, with his hat in his hand, nobody respects him. Dress the same man up, give him an air of dignity, and he can command respect. The same thing applies to this union."