The Decent Society

Front Cover
Harvard University Press, Jul 1, 2009 - Philosophy - 318 pages

Avishai Margalit builds his social philosophy on this foundation: a decent society, or a civilized society, is one whose institutions do not humiliate the people under their authority, and whose citizens do not humiliate one another. What political philosophy needs urgently is a way that will permit us to live together without humiliation and with dignity.

Most of the philosophical attention nowadays is drawn to the ideal of the just society based on the right balance between freedom and equality. The ideal of the just society is a sublime one but hard to realize. The decent society is an ideal which can be realized even in our children's lifetime. We should get rid of cruelty first, advocated Judith Shklar. Humiliation is a close second. There is more urgency in bringing about a decent society than in bringing about a just one.

Margalit begins concretely where we live, with all the infuriating acts of humiliation that make living in the world so difficult. He argues in a concrete way in the spirit of Judith Shklar and Isaiah Berlin. This is a social philosophy that resists all those menacing labels that promote moral laziness, just as it urges us to get beyond the behavior that labels other human beings. Margalit can't be earmarked as liberal or conservative. If a label is necessary, then the most suitable is George Orwell's humane socialism, a far cry from Animal Farm socialism with its many tools of oppression. How to be decent, how to build a decent society, emerges out of Margalit's analysis of the corrosive functioning of humiliation in its many forms. This is a thoroughly argued and, what is much more, a deeply felt book that springs from Margalit's experience at the borderlands of conflicts between Eastern Europeans and Westerners, between Palestinians and Israelis.

 

Contents

Humiliation
9
Rights
28
Honor
41
Justifying Respect
57
The Skeptical Solution
76
Being Beastly to Humans
89
The Paradox of Humiliation
115
Rejection
130
Snobbery
189
Privacy
201
Bureaucracy
212
The Welfare Society
222
Unemployment
247
Punishment
262
Conclusion
271
Notes
293

Citizenship
150
Culture
162

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Page 12 - And they stripped him, and put on him a scarlet robe. 'And when they had platted a crown of thorns, they put it upon his head, and a reed in his right hand : and they bowed the knee before him, and mocked him, saying, Hail, king of the Jews!
Page 9 - Margalit defines humiliation as: [A]ny sort of behavior or condition that constitutes a sound reason for a person to consider his or her self-respect injured.11 However, the notion of self-respect is ambiguous too.
Page 296 - Two Concepts of Liberty" in Berlin, Four Essays on Liberty (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1969), pp.
Page 1 - A civilized society is one whose members do not humiliate one another, while a decent society is one in which the institutions do not humiliate people.

About the author (2009)

Avishai Margalit is the Schulman Professor of Philosophy at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. He is also the George F. Kennan Professor in the School of Historical Studies at the Institute for Advanced Studies. He writes regularly for the New York Review of Books.

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