Political philosophy from social contract theory to global justice. Covers the social contract (Hobbes, Locke, Rousseau, Rawls), theories of justice (Rawls, Nozick, Sen), liberty (positive/negative), rights (natural, human, civil), democracy and governance, communitarianism, feminism as political philosophy, Confucian political philosophy (ren, li, rectification of names), anarchism, Marxism, postcolonial philosophy, and cosmopolitanism. Use when analyzing political institutions, rights, justice, freedom, governance, or the legitimacy of authority.
Political philosophy asks the most consequential philosophical questions: What justifies the state's authority over individuals? What do we owe each other as members of a political community? What is justice, and who decides? Unlike ethics, which can operate at the individual level, political philosophy always involves the collective — institutions, laws, power, and their distribution.
Agent affinity: confucius (political and social philosophy, Sonnet), kant (ethics, Sonnet)
Concept IDs: philo-ethical-frameworks, philo-applied-ethics, philo-philosophical-questioning
| # | Domain | Core question | Key thinkers |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Social contract | Why should I obey the state? | Hobbes, Locke, Rousseau, Rawls |
| 2 | Justice | What is a fair distribution? | Rawls, Nozick, Sen, Walzer |
| 3 | Liberty | What freedoms must be protected? | Berlin, Mill, Pettit |
| 4 | Rights | What am I entitled to? | Locke, Dworkin, Nussbaum |
| 5 | Democracy | Who should rule? | Aristotle, Schumpeter, Habermas |
| 6 | Communitarianism | What does community demand? | Sandel, Taylor, Walzer |
| 7 | Feminism as political philosophy | How does gender structure power? | Wollstonecraft, Beauvoir, hooks |
| 8 | Confucian political philosophy | How should governance cultivate virtue? | Confucius, Mencius, Xunzi |
| 9 | Anarchism | Is the state justified at all? | Proudhon, Kropotkin, Goldman |
| 10 | Marxism | How does economics structure politics? | Marx, Gramsci, Cohen |
| 11 | Postcolonial philosophy | Whose perspectives shape the political? | Fanon, Said, Spivak |
| 12 | Global justice and cosmopolitanism | What do we owe people in other countries? | Singer, Pogge, Appiah |
Core question. Why should individuals give up their natural freedom and submit to political authority?
State of nature: Without government, human life is "solitary, poor, nasty, brutish, and short." In the state of nature, every person has a right to everything — which means constant war of all against all, since resources are scarce and no one can be trusted.
The contract: Rational individuals agree to surrender their rights to a sovereign (the Leviathan) who maintains order through absolute authority. The sovereign's power is not based on consent of the governed in any ongoing sense — once the contract is made, obedience is owed so long as the sovereign provides security.
Key insight: Political authority is not divinely ordained but rationally constructed. Even absolute authority can be justified if the alternative is chaos.
State of nature: Unlike Hobbes, Locke's state of nature is relatively peaceful — governed by natural law and natural rights (life, liberty, property). The inconvenience is the lack of impartial judges and enforcement.
The contract: Individuals consent to form a government that protects their pre-existing natural rights. Crucially, the government's authority is conditional — if it violates the natural rights it was created to protect, the people have the right of revolution.
Worked example — Locke on property:
Locke argued that property arises from mixing one's labor with natural resources. If I gather acorns or till a field, the product belongs to me because I have added my labor to it. Two provisos: (1) there must be "enough and as good" left for others, and (2) I must not let anything spoil. These provisos were revolutionary — they set limits on legitimate acquisition and would later inform debates about wealth inequality.
Contemporary application: Does intellectual property follow Locke's labor theory? A software developer "mixes labor" with code. But the proviso — enough left for others — may not hold: patents can exclude others from building on ideas, unlike gathering acorns from an abundant forest.
The problem. "Man is born free, and everywhere he is in chains." How can political authority be legitimate?
The general will. Rousseau distinguished the "will of all" (the sum of individual private interests) from the "general will" (what is in the genuine common interest). Legitimate government acts in accordance with the general will — not majority opinion, but the shared interest of citizens as members of a community.
Key insight: Freedom is not merely the absence of constraint but active participation in self-governance. I am free when I obey laws I have given myself as a citizen.
The original position and the veil of ignorance. Rawls asks: What principles of justice would rational people choose if they did not know their place in society — their class, race, sex, natural abilities, or conception of the good? Behind this "veil of ignorance," self-interest becomes impartiality, because you must consider the possibility that you could end up in any position.
Worked example — Choosing principles behind the veil:
Behind the veil, you do not know if you will be wealthy or poor, healthy or disabled, brilliant or average, a member of a majority or a minority. What principles would you choose?
Rawls argues you would choose:
Why the difference principle? Behind the veil, you might turn out to be the least-advantaged person. Rational self-interest (maximin reasoning) leads you to choose arrangements that make the worst position as good as possible.
The priority of liberty. The first principle has lexical priority over the second — no amount of economic benefit justifies restricting basic liberties. You cannot trade freedom of speech for a higher GDP.
Robert Nozick's Anarchy, State, and Utopia (1974) is the libertarian response to Rawls.
Nozick's entitlement theory:
Any distribution that results from just acquisitions and voluntary transfers is just — regardless of the pattern.
Worked example — The Wilt Chamberlain argument:
Suppose society starts with whatever distribution you consider just (D1). Now, one million fans voluntarily pay 25 cents each to watch Wilt Chamberlain play basketball. Chamberlain now has $250,000 more than anyone else (D2). Is D2 unjust?
Nozick's argument: D1 was just. Each transfer was voluntary. No rights were violated. Therefore D2 is just. Any attempt to impose a patterned distribution (equality, need, merit) requires continual interference with voluntary transactions — effectively, a restriction on freedom.
Rawlsian response: Individual transactions can be voluntary while the overall system that shapes them is unjust. The million fans may have "chosen" to pay, but the background institutions (who has money to spend, who has access to entertainment) were shaped by prior injustices and structural inequalities that the veil of ignorance would not sanction.
Amartya Sen (1933-) and Martha Nussbaum argued that justice should be evaluated not by income or resources but by capabilities — what people are actually able to do and be. A wheelchair user may have the same income as an able-bodied person but far fewer capabilities (mobility, access, social participation). Justice requires equalizing capabilities, not just resources.
Nussbaum's central capabilities (partial list):
Negative liberty: Freedom FROM interference. I am free to the extent that no one prevents me from doing what I want. The paradigm case: the government does not censor my speech.
Positive liberty: Freedom TO achieve self-realization and self-mastery. I am free to the extent that I can effectively exercise my capacities and participate in collective self-governance.
The tension: Positive liberty can become paternalistic — "we are liberating you by forcing you to do what your 'true self' really wants." Totalitarian regimes have justified coercion in the name of positive liberty. Berlin warned that positive liberty, unchecked, slides into tyranny.
Worked example — Freedom and poverty:
A person living in extreme poverty has extensive negative liberty — no one is preventing them from entering a restaurant. But they lack positive liberty — they cannot actually afford to eat there.
Libertarian reading (negative liberty): The person is free. Poverty is unfortunate but not a violation of freedom.
Progressive reading (positive liberty): The person is not meaningfully free. Real freedom requires the material conditions for its exercise.
This disagreement structures most contemporary debates about the welfare state, healthcare, education, and economic policy.
Philip Pettit argued that both Berlin's categories miss something. A benevolent slave-owner who never interferes with their slaves still dominates them — the slaves are unfree because the master COULD interfere at any time. Freedom is not merely non-interference but non-domination: no one should have arbitrary power over another.
Rights to life, liberty, and property exist prior to government. Government does not create rights — it recognizes and protects them. If government violates them, it loses legitimacy.
The Universal Declaration of Human Rights (1948) codifies rights claims that apply to all human beings regardless of nationality. Philosophical foundations are debated:
Ronald Dworkin (1931-2013) argued that rights "trump" collective goals. Even if censoring a speaker would increase overall social welfare, the speaker's right to free expression takes precedence. Rights protect individuals against the tyranny of the majority.
| Justification | Argument | Key thinker |
|---|---|---|
| Intrinsic | Self-governance is inherently valuable | Rousseau |
| Epistemic | Many minds are more likely to reach truth than few (Condorcet's jury theorem) | Estlund |
| Instrumental | Democracy produces better outcomes than alternatives | Mill |
| Procedural | Fair procedures confer legitimacy regardless of outcomes | Habermas |
Jurgen Habermas argued that democratic legitimacy requires not just voting but genuine deliberation — public reasoning among free and equal citizens. Legitimate laws are those that could be accepted by all affected parties in a process of rational discourse. This requires: (1) inclusion of all affected, (2) equal voice, (3) freedom from coercion, (4) transparency, (5) reasoning rather than bargaining.
Worked example — Deliberation vs. aggregation:
Consider a town deciding whether to build a new highway. Under simple aggregation (majority vote), the majority who benefit from faster commutes outvote the minority whose homes will be demolished. Under deliberative democracy, the town must provide a public forum where the affected minority can present their case, where all arguments must withstand critical scrutiny, and where the outcome must be justifiable to all — including those who lose.
The deliberative process may reach the same decision (build the highway), but it will include provisions (fair compensation, relocation assistance, design modifications) that pure majority rule might omit. The legitimacy comes from the process, not just the outcome.
Core idea. Liberal political philosophy (Rawls, Dworkin) is based on a mistaken picture of the self — the "unencumbered self" who exists prior to social ties and chooses values from a position of detachment. In reality, our identities are constituted by our communities.
Michael Sandel argued that the veil of ignorance strips away everything that makes a person who they are — community, history, tradition, attachments. What remains is not a person but an abstraction. Real moral and political reasoning proceeds from within a tradition, not from a view from nowhere.
Charles Taylor argued that identity is formed through dialogue with others. Misrecognition — being seen through demeaning stereotypes or having one's culture devalued — is not merely insulting but identity-damaging. A politics of recognition demands that the state acknowledge and accommodate cultural differences rather than imposing a false universalism.
Michael Walzer argued that different goods (healthcare, education, political power, money) belong to different distributive spheres, each with its own internal logic. Injustice occurs when one sphere dominates another — when money buys political power, or political power dictates who gets healthcare. Justice requires maintaining the boundaries between spheres.
Wollstonecraft (1792). Mary Wollstonecraft argued that women's apparent inferiority was a product of education and social conditioning, not nature. If women received the same education as men, they would demonstrate the same rational capacities.
Beauvoir (1949). Simone de Beauvoir's The Second Sex argued that "one is not born, but rather becomes, a woman." Femininity is a social construction imposed on women, not a natural essence. Woman has been made "the Other" — defined in relation to man rather than as a subject in her own right.
hooks (1984). bell hooks expanded feminist analysis beyond gender to the intersection of race, class, and gender. "Feminism is a movement to end sexism, sexist exploitation, and oppression" — not a movement for women to gain equal access to existing structures of domination, but a transformation of those structures.
Worked example — The personal is political:
Carol Hanisch (1969) coined this phrase to argue that what appear to be personal problems (unequal division of household labor, sexual harassment, restricted career options) are political problems — products of systematic power structures, not individual failures. A woman who cannot advance in her career because she bears a disproportionate burden of childcare is not experiencing a personal difficulty; she is experiencing a political injustice that requires structural solutions (parental leave, affordable childcare, workplace flexibility).
Ren (humaneness, benevolence). The central virtue of Confucian ethics and politics. A ruler who embodies ren governs with compassion and concern for the people's welfare. Government by ren is superior to government by law — laws coerce from outside, while ren transforms from within.
Li (ritual propriety, social norms). The established patterns of behavior that maintain social harmony. Li is not mere etiquette but the deep grammar of social life — it shapes relationships, structures institutions, and expresses respect.
Rectification of names (zhengming). Confucius insisted that social disorder arises when names no longer correspond to reality — when a ruler does not rule, a father does not father, a minister does not minister. If the name does not fit the reality, reform the reality to match the name.
Worked example — Confucian governance vs. social contract:
In the Western tradition, political legitimacy flows upward from the consent of the governed. In the Confucian tradition, legitimacy flows from the moral character of the ruler: a virtuous ruler receives the Mandate of Heaven; a corrupt ruler loses it. The people have the right to rebel — not because they consented to a contract, but because the ruler has failed to embody ren.
Contemporary resonance: The Confucian emphasis on virtue in leadership anticipates modern concerns about character in politics — the idea that institutional design alone is insufficient without leaders who embody the values the institutions are meant to serve.
Mencius (372-289 BCE): Human nature is innately good. The "four sprouts" (compassion, shame, respect, right-and-wrong) are present in everyone. Government's role is to cultivate these natural tendencies.
Xunzi (c. 310-235 BCE): Human nature is innately selfish. Without education and ritual, people descend into conflict. Government's role is to reshape human nature through li and education.
This mirrors the Rousseau-Hobbes debate in Western philosophy — optimism vs. pessimism about human nature as the basis for political theory.
Core idea. All forms of coercive authority are illegitimate unless justified. The state has not met its burden of justification.
Proudhon (1840): "Property is theft." The first self-described anarchist, Proudhon argued that large-scale property accumulation is inherently exploitative — it allows some to live from the labor of others.
Kropotkin (1902): In Mutual Aid, Kropotkin argued that cooperation, not competition, is the primary driver of evolutionary success. Anarchism is not chaos but voluntary cooperation — communities organizing themselves without coercion.
Goldman (1910): Emma Goldman connected anarchism to feminism, arguing that the state and the patriarchal family are parallel structures of domination.
Historical materialism. The economic base (mode of production — who owns the means of production) determines the superstructure (law, politics, culture, ideology). Political ideas are not neutral; they reflect and reinforce the interests of the ruling class.
Class struggle. History is the history of class struggle — slaveholders vs. slaves, lords vs. serfs, bourgeoisie vs. proletariat. The state is an instrument of class domination; "the executive of the modern state is but a committee for managing the common affairs of the whole bourgeoisie."
Gramsci's hegemony. Antonio Gramsci (1891-1937) explained why revolution had not occurred in the West: the ruling class maintains power not only through coercion but through cultural hegemony — shaping common sense, values, and norms so that the existing order appears natural and inevitable. Resistance requires counter-hegemonic culture.
Fanon (1961). Frantz Fanon analyzed colonialism as a system that dehumanizes both colonizer and colonized. The Wretched of the Earth argued that decolonization is inherently violent because the colonial system itself is violent — peaceful reform within colonial structures is impossible because the structures are designed to maintain domination.
Said (1978). Edward Said's Orientalism showed how Western knowledge about "the East" was not neutral scholarship but a system of power — it constructed "the Orient" as exotic, irrational, and inferior, thereby justifying colonial domination.
Spivak (1988). Gayatri Spivak asked "Can the subaltern speak?" — whether those at the very bottom of social hierarchies can represent themselves in intellectual and political discourse, or whether they are always spoken for by others.
Core question. Do our obligations of justice extend beyond national borders?
Singer's argument. If we can prevent suffering without sacrificing anything of comparable moral importance, we ought to do so. National borders are morally arbitrary. Therefore we have obligations to the global poor equivalent to our obligations to our neighbors.
Pogge's structural argument. Thomas Pogge argued that the global economic order actively harms the world's poor — through unfair trade rules, debt structures, and resource privileges granted to dictators. We are not merely failing to help; we are actively causing harm.
Cosmopolitanism (Appiah). Kwame Anthony Appiah argues for a cosmopolitanism that combines universal concern with respect for cultural difference — "universality plus difference." We have obligations to all human beings, but we fulfill them while respecting the plurality of ways human beings organize their lives.