the common good: a buck-passing account eric beerbohm and...

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Forthcoming in the Journal of Political Philosophy The Common Good: A Buck-passing Account Eric Beerbohm and Ryan Davis The “common good” is appealed to by philosophers, political scientists, and politicians alike. Although their purposes are diverse, most invocations of the common good share a unified orientation toward it. The common good is taken to be an ideal worthy of our political pursuit. The common good represents a way of rising above private or parochial interests, setting aside political posturing or gamesmanship, and working toward goals whose value none could deny. 1 Given its uniformly positive valence, it should not be surprising that the common good is often paired with the other guiding concept of political society: justice. We are frequently told that the appropriate aim of a deliberative democracy is toward “justice and the common good,” implicating both that the common good is something beyond justice itself, but also that both concepts play a similar function—as appropriate guides to political activity. 2 What will interest us here is not how justice and the common good are treated similarly, but in a contrast between them. While justice—perhaps without much controversy—is the most examined concept in political philosophy, there has been relatively little systematic study of its complement. If we agree that justice if the “first virtue” of political society, it may well warrant greater scrutiny. Yet the comparison between justice and the common good sets in relief the deep disparity in attention. If the common good, as well as justice, should guide our political reasoning and action, then this concept likewise merits theoretical attention. Our aim is to provide the outlines of a theory of the common good. We will propose a partially revisionary account. On our view, to say a proposal is in the common good is to say that 1 See, recently, Dominique Leydet, “Partisan Legislatures and Democratic Deliberation,” Journal of Political Philosophy 22:3 (2014); Eric McGhee, Seth Masket, Boris Shor, Steven Rogers, and Nolan McCarty, “A Primary Cause of Partisanship? Nomination Systems and Legislator Ideology,” American Journal of Political Science 58:2 (2013): 337-351 2 See, for example, Eric MacGilvary, “Democratic Doubts: Pragmatism and the Epistemic Defense of Democracy,” Journal of Political Philosophy 22:1 (2014): 105-123. Here MacGilvary is following Josh Cohen, “An Epistemic Conception of Democracy,” Ethics 97 (1986): 26-38.

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Page 1: The Common Good: A Buck-passing Account Eric Beerbohm and …scholar.harvard.edu/.../beerbohm/files/common_good_eb_rd.pdf · 2016-08-18 · Forthcoming in the Journal of Political

ForthcomingintheJournalofPoliticalPhilosophy

TheCommonGood:ABuck-passingAccountEricBeerbohmandRyanDavis

The“commongood”isappealedtobyphilosophers,politicalscientists,andpoliticiansalike.

Althoughtheirpurposesarediverse,mostinvocationsofthecommongoodshareaunified

orientationtowardit.Thecommongoodistakentobeanidealworthyofourpoliticalpursuit.The

commongoodrepresentsawayofrisingaboveprivateorparochialinterests,settingasidepolitical

posturingorgamesmanship,andworkingtowardgoalswhosevaluenonecoulddeny.1Givenits

uniformlypositivevalence,itshouldnotbesurprisingthatthecommongoodisoftenpairedwith

theotherguidingconceptofpoliticalsociety:justice.Wearefrequentlytoldthattheappropriate

aimofadeliberativedemocracyistoward“justiceandthecommongood,”implicatingboththatthe

commongoodissomethingbeyondjusticeitself,butalsothatbothconceptsplayasimilar

function—asappropriateguidestopoliticalactivity.2

Whatwillinterestushereisnothowjusticeandthecommongoodaretreatedsimilarly,but

inacontrastbetweenthem.Whilejustice—perhapswithoutmuchcontroversy—isthemost

examinedconceptinpoliticalphilosophy,therehasbeenrelativelylittlesystematicstudyofits

complement.Ifweagreethatjusticeifthe“firstvirtue”ofpoliticalsociety,itmaywellwarrant

greaterscrutiny.Yetthecomparisonbetweenjusticeandthecommongoodsetsinreliefthedeep

disparityinattention.Ifthecommongood,aswellasjustice,shouldguideourpoliticalreasoning

andaction,thenthisconceptlikewisemeritstheoreticalattention.

Ouraimistoprovidetheoutlinesofatheoryofthecommongood.Wewillproposea

partiallyrevisionaryaccount.Onourview,tosayaproposalisinthecommongoodistosaythat

1See,recently,DominiqueLeydet,“PartisanLegislaturesandDemocraticDeliberation,”Journalof

PoliticalPhilosophy22:3(2014);EricMcGhee,SethMasket,BorisShor,StevenRogers,andNolanMcCarty,“APrimaryCauseofPartisanship?NominationSystemsandLegislatorIdeology,”AmericanJournalofPoliticalScience58:2(2013):337-351

2See,forexample,EricMacGilvary,“DemocraticDoubts:PragmatismandtheEpistemicDefenseofDemocracy,”JournalofPoliticalPhilosophy22:1(2014):105-123.HereMacGilvaryisfollowingJoshCohen,“AnEpistemicConceptionofDemocracy,”Ethics97(1986):26-38.

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therearereasonstoacttogethertobringitabout.WetakethisaccounttoofferwhatCarnapcalled

anexplicativeconcept.3Ourviewpreservesafairamountofthemeaningofthewordineveryday

use.Atthesametime,werefinetheconcepttomeetasetofthreerelevanttheoreticaldesiderata,to

bedescribedinsection1.Section2willpresentourpositiveaccount.Sections3and4willinturn

illustratehowouraccountmeetsthedesiderata,andrespondtoobjections.

1. DesiderataforaTheoryoftheCommonGood

Weshouldnotethatourprimaryaimwillbetowardtheory-building,andsowillbeexploratory

ratherthancritical.Forexample,wewillnotarguethatalternativewaysofspecifyingtheconcept

ofthecommongoodwillfailtomeetourdesiderata.Ouraimisnottoprecludeotherwaysof

theorizingthecommongood,buttosuggesttheneedfortheoryinthefirstplace.Conceptual

choicesshouldnotbemadeunconsciously,andouraimistomakeexplicitsomepossibleoptions.

Aswithanyconceptualchoices,therearecostsandbenefitstoourfavoredview.Withthisas

background,wewillsuggestthatatheoryofthecommongoodshouldmeetthreecriteria.Itshould

bedistributivelyneutral,non-partisan,andextensionallyadequate.

First,theconceptofthecommongoodshouldnotprivilegetheinterestsorvaluesofsome

membersofasocietyoverothers.Anygood-centeredapproachbringsacertainhazardtopolitical

deliberation.Itallowscitizenstomakeargumentsthatpaperoverinterpersonaltrade-offs.Inso

doing,itcreatesthepossibilitythattheconceptitselfcouldbiasthedistributionofgoodsor

resources.Suchaconsequence,webelieve,shouldcountasatheoreticalcost.Instead,aconceptof

thecommongoodshouldbedistributivelyneutralamongtheinterestsofrelevantparties.

Itmayhelptohaveaconcreteexampleofhowconceptofthecommongoodcanbeinvoked

inawaythatrunsafoulofdistributiveneutrality.RobertMosesensuredthatsomeofNewYork’s

3RudolfCarnap,MeaningandNecessity:AStudyinSemanticsandModalLogic.(Chicago,IL:The

UniversityofChicagoPress,1947)

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overpassesweresolowthatbusescouldnoteasilytravelfromthepoorestboroughs.4Herethe

distributiveburdenplacedontheleastwelloffwasmorallyunacceptableonarangeofegalitarian

views.Mosesdefendedhisblueprintinabstractions.Hewasparticularlyfondofcitingthecommon

orpublicgoodashisally.Ofcourse,hisactionswerenotactuallysanctionedbyagood-oriented

approachtopoliticalmorality.Butitraisesthedistributiveworryabouthowtheconceptofthe

commongoodcanbeused.Ifpublicofficialsthinkofthemselvesasmakingdecisionsthataregood-

for-us,theymaybetemptedtoglossoverdisparitiesconcealedbehindthisnormativebanner.

AlthoughthecaseofRobertMosesisanextremeinstanceofdeployingthe“commongood”

asaguisefordistributivebias,realizingdistributiveneutralitycanbedifficulty.Asanother

example,consider“objectivelist”theoriesofthecommongood.Accordingtotheseaccounts,the

commongoodisgivenbyalistofgoodstakentobepositivelyvaluabletoeverymemberofa

politicalcommunity.Evenseeminglyuncontroversialitemsonsuchlistscanbedistributively

consequential.Manyobjectivelistsofthe“commongood”willcitenationalsecurity,forinstance.5

Whilenationalsecuritymaybeintheinterestofeverycitizen,allocatingresourcesinawaythat

marginallyreducesthesusceptibilityofthepoliticalstatetoattackmaymeanlittletocitizens

whosebodilysecurityisvulnerabletoviolencebyothermembersoftheirhousehold,community,

oreven,possibly,localgovernmentauthorities.Anotherfrequentitemonlistsofthecommongood

isequalityineducation.6Whilecertainlyaworthyideal,allocatingresourcestoachieveequalityin

educationmaymattermosttothosewhoalreadyreceiveaneducationthatprovidesbasiccivic

capacities.Forthosenotyetinthisgroup,equalityineducationmaynotbeameaningfulideal.7In

4RobertCaro,ThePowerBroker:RobertMosesandtheFallofNewYork(NewYork:VintageBooks,

1975).5Forexample,BrianM.Barry,PoliticalArgument(Berkeley:UniversityofCaliforniaPress,1965),p.

195.6ThiselementhasaRawlsianpedigree.SeealsoSamuelFreeman,“DeliberativeDemocracy:A

SympatheticComment,”Philosophy&PublicAffairs29:4(2000):371-418,p.412.7Forthispoint,seeElizabethAnderson,“FairEqualityinEducation:ADemocraticEquality

Perspective,”Ethics117(2007):595-622.Animportantpaperinthehistoryofsociologyonclassandeducation,whichvividlyportraysthevariedwaysinwhichstatusinfluencesmanyaspectsofeducation,isJeanAnyon,“SocialClassandSchoolKnowledge,”CurriculumInquiry1:1(1981):3-42.

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eachofthesecases,aseeminglyuncontroversialitemonanobjectivelistofthecommongoodmay

quietlyimportcertainbackgroundassumptionsaboutwhichdistributiveissuesaremostpressing.

Oursecondproposeddesideratumforaconceptofthecommongoodisthatitshouldbe

non-partisan.Theconceptofthecommongoodshouldbespecifiedinawaythatallowsforthefull

rangeofsubstantivedebateaboutwhatshouldcountaspartofthecommongood.Wehavea

strongmethodologicalreasontofosteragreementaboutcoreconcepts,sincethatallowsforthe

possibilityofgreaterclarityindisagreementsamongconceptions.Toseetheforceofthisreason,

wecanagainlooktoconceptofdistributivejustice.Membersofasociety–andtheirresident

philosophers–canagreethattheyareinterestedincomingupwiththerightdistributionof

benefitsandburdensinacooperativesocialarrangement.Theconceptofjustice,inthissense,

helpssettheircollectiveproblem.Theywilldisagreeaboutwhichparticulartheoryoffersa

plausibleanswertothispredicament.Buttheyhaveaplatformonwhichtodisagree,make

concessions,andevensearchforoverlappingprinciples.

Partisanaccountsofthecommongoodwillfailtoprovidethisservice.Instead,theywill

tendtofavorsomefirst-orderviewaboutmoralityorpoliticsattheexpenseofothers.Itis

temptingtotalkaboutthecommongoodinawaythatcastsadistinctivetelicvalence.Thecommon

goodcaneasilybethoughtofasavaluethatisbothspecifiableintermsofanendstatetobe

realizedorpromoted,and“common”—inthephilosophicallyloadedsenseof“agentneutral.”But

tomakethissuppositionwouldbetoruleoutmanycontendingtheoriesaboutpoliticallife.An

especiallyprominentincludesseveralformsofdeonticegalitarianism.Relationalegalitarianism,

wewanttosuggest,isplainlyincompatiblewithagood-centeredview.Itholdsthatwhatismorally

centralisrelatingtoothersonjustifiableterms.Inequalitiesofgoods–powerorwealth–can

reflectformsofmistreatment.Itconstruesequalityasasocialandpolitical–notfundamentally

distributive–value.Onthisview,thevalueofequalityliesnotinabstractpatternsoritsimpacton

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ourwell-being.Itrests,instead,inthewebofrelationshipsthatweholdasdirectlyvaluable.A

good-orientedapproachwillmisplacethesignificanceofequality.

Third,andmostobviously,anaccountofthecommongoodshouldbeextensionally

adequate.Itshouldbeabletomakesenseofcontemporaryusesamongtheorists,aswellas

practitionersofpolitics.Extensionaladequacydoesnotruleoutthepossibilityofconceptual

revision.8Sometimes,existingpracticemaybepartisanandordistributivelybiased,andso

theoreticalrevisionmayofferthepossibilitiesforprovidingamoreusefulconcept.However,the

conceptshouldcontinuetoanswertoactualpractice.Ausefulconceptmustbeonethatis

intelligiblefromthepointofviewofthosewho,infact,invokeit.

2. ABuck-PassingAccount

Wearelookingforawayofformulatingthecommongoodinawaythatisdistributivelyneutral,

non-partisanamongcompetingconceptions,andextensionallyadequateinlightofuse.How

shouldweproceed?Letusinspecttherolethatthisnotionplaysinourfirst-personalplural

reasoning.Supposewearedeliberatingwhethertoinvestmoreinourspaceprogramor

performingarts.Argumentsthatoneoftheseprogramsis“better-for-us”wouldcomeacrossas

unusual.Itwouldseemtobeprovidingareasonofthewrongkind.Toseetheforceofthis,consider

theexperienceofindividualdecision-making.Inourpersonalchoices,itisstrikinghowrarelywe

aredirectlyguidedbytheaimofourowngood.TheindividualwhohasjustclimbedMount

Himalayawillnotbegladtorecastheraccomplishmentintermsofherwell-beingorinterest.To

her,acceptingthattheclimbwasgoodforher–onwhatevermetricyou’dlike–neednotmakethe

experiencemorevaluable.Itisinthissensethatwhatis“goodforus”is,inScanlon’slanguage,

“evaluativelytransparent.”9So,ifweoptforthepolicyofbolsteringthespaceprogram,wedosofor

reasonsthatweseeaschoiceworthyintheirownright.Wearenotmakingagood-for-usappeal–

8Cf.Godfrey-Smith,“MetaphysicsandthePhilosophicalImagination,”PhilosophicalStudies160:1

(2012):97-113.9Scanlon,WhatWeOwetoEachOther(Cambridge:HarvardUniversityPress),93.

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whateveraggregativeprocedurewearelikelytouse.Thisisn’ttosaythattheprogram’simpacton

thegoodofparticularindividualsisnull,orthatisgoesunregistered.Butwerecognizethatour

collectiveaimisvaluedprimarilyfornon-welfaristreasons.

HerewefollowT.M.Scanlon’sinfluentialbuck-passingaccountofthegood.Scanlonwrites:

[B]einggood,orvaluable,isnotapropertythatitselfprovidesareasontorespondtoa

thingincertainways.Rather,tobegoodorvaluableistohaveotherpropertiesthat

constitutesuchreasons.Sincetheclaimthatsomepropertyconstitutesareasonisa

normativeclaim,thisaccountalsotakesgoodnessandvaluetobenon-naturalproperties,

namelythepurelyformal,higher-orderpropertiesofhavingsomelower-orderproperties

thatprovidereasonsoftherelevantkind.10

InScanlon’soriginalversion,predicates“good”or“valuable”refer(passthebuck)toother

properties,whichprovidereasonsforadoptingvariousattitudes.11ModifyingScanlon’sidea,we

propose,

TheBuck-PassingAccountoftheCommonGood:Beinginthecommongoodconsists

inthefactthattherearereasonstoacttogethertobringitabout.

OurproposalmodifiesScanlon’sinseveralways.First,theparagraphfromScanloncitedabove

famouslycontainsatleasttwotheses:onenegativeandtheotherpositive.Thenegativethesis

claimsthatsomething’sbeinggooddoesnot,itself,providereasons.Thepositivethesisclaimsthat

something’sbeinggoodindicatesthattherearealwaysotherreasonstorespondtoitinsome

appreciativeway.12Ashasbeenpointedoutinthemeta-ethicalliterature,thesethesesare

independent.Wewillbeinterestedonlyinadaptingthepositivethesis.Thetruthofthepositive

10Scanlon,WhatWeOwetoEachOther,97.11Asarefereehelpfullypressesustoclarify,ourproposalforthecommongoodwillnotrequire

adoptinganyspecificviewoftheroleof‘thegood’incollectivedeliberation.12Butnotnecessarilythatthereareonlyotherreasonstorespondinanappreciativeway.Our

thankstoarefereeforpressingustoclarifythis.Ifthepositivethesisimpliedtherewereonlyotherreasons,thenitwouldentailthenegativethesis.

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thesisdoesnotentailthenegativethesis.13Moreover,withasufficientlycapaciousviewofreasons,

itispossibletothinkthatthegoodmightprovidereasonsevenifitmerelyreferstoother,reason-

providingproperties.InSchroeder’scase,Nate’sfriendtellsNatethatthereisareasontogointo

thelivingroom,butdoesnottellhimwhatthereasonis(unbeknownsttoNate,asurpriseparty

awaitshimthere).WhenNategoesintothelivingroom,heactsontheconsiderationthat“thereis

areasonforhimtogointothelivingroom.”Byhypothesis,though,healsoactsforareason.Butif

thisfactcan,itself,countasareason,thenitseemsthatthenegativebuck-passingthesisisfalse.

Analogouscasesareeveneasiertofindatthecollectivelevel.Inaworldofcomplex

decision-making,policymakersareoftenforcedtorely—tosomeextent,anyway—onexperts.14

Supposeanadvisortellsarepresentativethatthereisreasontovoteforaneconomicstimulus

package.Itmaywellbethattherepresentativehasneithertheexpertisetounderstandwhatthe

reasonisnorthetimetocometounderstandthereason.Nevertheless,itmayberationalforthe

representativetovoteforthepackage.Therepresentativestillvotesforareason—namely,“that

thereisareasontovoteforthestimuluspackage.”However,thenegativethesiswouldrequirethat

therepresentativeactfornoreasonatall,since,byhypothesis,shehasnoother,first-orderreasons

forvotingforthepackage.Thus,thereisananalogousdisconfirmingcaseforthenegativethesis.

Becausethenegativebuck-passingthesismighttherebyencounterproblems,wewillnowsetit

aside.(Equally,nothingwesaywillrequirethatthenegativethesisbefalse.)

Second,ourbuck-passingaccountofthecommongoodisfocusedonreasonsforaction,

ratherthanreasonsforsomeotherattitudeorsetofattitudes.Onemightworrythatthisfeature

willraiseapartisanshipobjectionagainstourownaccount,privilegingdeontologicalratherthan

consequentialistfirst-orderpoliticalviews.However,consequentialistsalsohavetheoriesofright

action,andthereisnoobstacletothinkingthatrightactionsarejustthosethatpromotedesirable

13Cf.MarkSchroeder,“TheBuck-passers’NegativeThesis,”PhilosophicalExplorations12:3(2011).14Cf.Pettit,“DepoliticizingDemocracy,”RatioJuris17:1(2004):52-65.

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statesofaffairs.Ourproposalisevencompatiblewithversionsofconsequentialismaccordingto

whichallvaluesareagent-neutral.15Morecentrally,thereasonsthatwehavetoactwilldependon

thereasonswehaveforintending,whichwillinturndependonourreasonsfordesiring.16Soit

willmatterlittle,fromthestandpointoffirst-ordernormativetheory,whetherwedescribeour

accountintermsofdesires,intentions,oractions.

Onourproposal,itismostnaturaltofocusonreasonsforacting,sinceactingissomething

thatwecandotogether.Ouraccounttherebyconnectsactiontothe“common”aspectofthe

commongood.Weneednottakeanyparticularstandonhowactingtogetherworks:whether,for

example,itinvolvesnon-reductivecollectiveagents,someagentsactingonintentionsformedby

otheragents,orthelike.17Weconsideritavirtueofouraccountthatitisaction-theoretically

lightweight.Further,weneednotarticulatenowexactlyhowrobustoursharedagencymustbe.In

somecasesofactingtogether,ourindividualactionsmaybetightlycoordinated.(Think,for

example,ofreliefworkersactingaspartofasingle,unifiedplanofaction).Onotheroccasions,our

involvementinactingwithfellowcitizensmaybelimitedtodeliberationorvotingthataimstolink

upwiththeactionsofotherstomodifypolicydownstream.18Instillothercases,itmayinvolve

incorporation,iftherelevantreasonsfavorformingacollectivebodyorinstitutionwherenone

15Suchconsequentialistsmaysimplyexpandthesetofreasonsthatapplytoall-of-ustogether,since

allvalueswould,inprinciple,warrantpromotionbyanyagent,nomattertheirposition.Ontheotherhand,somecollectionsofagentswilllikelybecontingentlybebetterplacetopromotesomevaluesthanothers,whichmayrestrictwhatisinthecommongoodforparticulargroups.Ingeneral,theonlyconsequentialiststhatmightbeconcernedwithourviewwouldbethosewhofavoreliminatingdeontictermsaltogether.Eveninthatcase,however,suchtheoristsmightretaintheconceptof“reasonsforaction,”evenwhiledischargingconceptslike“rightness”and“wrongness.”

16Fordiscussion,seeJohnSkorupski’s“bridgeprinciple,”inhisTheDomainofReasons(Oxford:OxfordUniversityPress,2010):p.265.AsimilarpointisforwardedbyHowardNye,DavidPlunkett,andJohn,Ku,“Non-ConsequentialismDemystified,”Philosopher’sImprint15:4(2015).

17SeeMargaretGilbert,JointCommitment:HowWeMaketheSocialWorld(Oxford:OxfordUniversityPress,2013);MichaelBratman,SharedAgency:APlanningTheoryofActingTogether(Oxford:OxfordUniversityPress,2014);DavidVelleman,“HowtoShareanIntention?”inSelftoSelf(Cambridge:CambridgeUniversityPress,2006);AbrahamRoth,“SharedAgencyandContralateralCommitments,”ThePhilosophicalReview113:3(2004).

18Foranaccountofhowourwillscanbecomeinvolvedincommonendeavors,butinawaythatalsodoesnotrequiresuigeneriscollectiveagents,seeXXX.

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existedpreviously.19Anotherrelatedpoint:takingthecommongoodtodirectustoreasonstoact

togetherdoesnotdenythatindividualssometimeshavereasontoactaloneforthecommongood.

Itmerelyentailsthatindividualsdohavereasontoactwithothersforthecommongood.Sothe

proposalcanbeneutralon,forinstance,debatesbetweenRawlsandG.A.Cohen.20Thatis,agents

mightpursuethecommongoodtogetherthroughinstitutions(likethosecomprisingRawls’s‘basic

structure’)orthroughtheactionsofindividualpersons.

Thebuck-passingaccountthusconnectsthecommongoodwithactingtogether.This

featuresupportstheideathatthatthereasonstoactforthecommongoodwillalsobereasonsfor

us,together.Inotherwords,thereasonstoadoptcertainactionsorattitudesmaybeunderstoodas

agent-relative.Becausebuck-passingaccountsofthegooddonotsuggeststatesofaffairsasthe

fundamentalbearersofvalueindependentofthenormativedeliberationofagents,theyfitmore

easilywiththephenomenonofagent-relativity.21Buck-passingaccountscanmakesenseofthe

ideaofindexedvaluesthatprovidereasonstoparticularagents.Mykeepingmypromisemaybe

goodmebutnotgoodyou.Myavoidingterriblesuffering,ontheotherhand,maybegoodmeand

goodyou.Ingeneral:

∀x(xhasreasontodowhatisgoodx)

WhenIactalone,Ioughttoactonconsiderationsofwhatisgoodrelativetome.22Whenweact

together,wemightthenexpectthatweshouldactonwhatisgoodrelativetous.Weshouldacton

reasons“attributabletous,collectively,astheirjointsubject”—or“reasons-for-us.”23Theseideas

19Onincorporationtoachievesharedgoods,seePhilipPettit,“ResponsibilityIncorporated,”Ethics

117(2007):171-201.20SeeG.A.Cohen,“WheretheActionIs:OntheSiteofDistributiveJustice,”Philosophy&PublicAffairs

26(1997):3-30.21Cf.Wallace’sdescriptionofteleologicalaccountsas“inhospitable”tothephenomenonofagent-

relativity.SeeR.JayWallace,“Reasons,ValuesandAgent-Relativity,”Dialectica64:4(2010):503-528,p.519.22AhelpfulexpositionofagentrelativevalueisgivenbyMichaelSmith,“NeutralandRelativeValue

afterMoore,”Ethics113(2003):576-598.23AndreaWestlund,“DecidingTogether,”Philosopher’sImprint9:10(2009),p.2.

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mightmakeittemptingtothinkthatforsomegroupofagents,thecommongoodisgivenbysome

functionoftheagent-relativegoodsoftheagentscomprisingthegroup.Suchas:

∀x∀y(xandyhavereasontodotogetherwhatisbothgoodxandgoody)

Inwhichcase,thecommongood(xandy)wouldbegivenasafunctionofgoodxandgoody.Thatis,the

commongood(xandy)couldbereducedtotheagent-relativegoodsofXandY.Theremightbesome

challengeinspecifyinghowthisreductionwouldwork,sinceinsomecaseswhatisgoodxmightalso

bebady.Suchcases(andperhapsothers)wouldhavetoberuledout.Butinprinciple,wemight

thinkthattheagentrelativegoodofagroupcanbe“factored”intotheagentrelativegoodsofits

members.

Yetthereareavarietyofcaseswherewehavereasons-for-usthatmaynotbereduciblein

thisway.AsWestlundpointsout,ifamarriedcoupleisplanningavacation,itmaybeimportantto

eachpersonthattheotherhasreasonsfromtheirownpointofviewforacceptingtheproposed

destination,eveniftheotheriswillingto“leaveitup”totheirpartner.24Insuchacase,tosaythata

destinationisgoodrelativetomeandgoodrelativetoyou(since,byhypothesis,myhavingahappy

vacationisgoodyou),itdoesn’tfollowthatwehavereasons-for-ustogothere.Ontheotherhand,I

maysometimesbepersuadedthatevenifsomeplanisbadme,therestillmightbereasons-for-usto

doit.Thatis,althoughIhaveanexanteagent-relativereasonagainstsomeplan,Imightfindin

deliberationwithyouthatyouragent-relativereasonsfavoringtheplanarereasonsIcan,ina

sense,sharebydecidingtoadoptyourendsasmyown.25AsWestlundputsit,“co-deliberators

24Ibid.,p.7.KasparLippert-Rassmussenpointsoutthatagent-relativityintuitivelyinvolves

assigning“differentaimstodifferentagents.”[SeeLippert-Rassmussen,Deontology,Responsibility,andEquality(Copehhagen:MuseumTusculanumPress,2005),p.16].Ifagentrelativityingeneralinvokestheperspectivesofseparateagents,thenthecommongoodintuitivelyassigningasingleperspectivetoagentsactingtogether.

25Compare,KylaEbels-Duggan,“AgainstBeneficence:ANormativeAccountofLove,”Ethics119:1(2008):142-170;ChristineKorsgaard,“TheReasonsWeCanShare,”inCreatingtheKingdomofEnds(Cambridge:CambridgeUniversityPress,1996).ComparealsowithJohnFinnis,“PublicGood:TheSpecificallyCommonGoodinAquinas,”inR.P.George[ed.]NaturalLawandMoralInquiry(Washington,DC:GeorgetownUniversityPress,1998).

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behavereasonablywhentheyaredialogicallysensitivetotheinterdependenceoftheirindividual

reasonsforacceptingRasareason-for-them.”26

Resolvingsuchmattersextendsbeyondourpresentscope,butwesuggestthree

implications.First,thedifficultyoffactoringthecommongoodintoitsconstituentgoodsis

probativefortheviewthatthecommongoodmustbereachedthroughsomedeliberativeprocess

(wewillreturntothislater).Second,itmaybeanopenquestionwhethersomegroupofagentshas

acommongoodatall—this,itself,maybeanappropriatesubjectforpoliticaltheorizing.Third,the

irreducibilityofthecommongoodcountsinfavorofitstheoreticalusefulness.Itoffersareasonto

thinkthatweshouldnoteliminatetheconceptaltogetherinfavorofsimpler,lesscontested

notions.27Instead,wemightseethecommongoodasirreduciblyagent-relativetoagroup,asin:

∀x∀y(Ifxandyhaveacommongood,thenxandyhavereasontodotogetherwhatisinthe

commongood(xandy))

Thisproposalclearlydoesnotrequirethatforanysetofagents,theremustbeacommongood.

Whetherthereisacommongoodinthefirstplace—foragroupsomehowdelimited—maybea

controversialmatter.Thereisalsonosuggestionthatthecommoncouldcanbefactoredintothe

goodsofspecificmembers—althoughitalsodoesnotdenythispossibility.Forgroupsthatdohave

acommongood,theproposalanalyzesthatgoodintermsofreasonsthatmembersofthegroup

havetoacttogethertobringitabout.

3. VirtuesoftheBuck-PassingAccount

Withtheproposalnowmoreclearlyinview,wecanconsiderhowourbuck-passingaccount

managesthedistributiveandpartisanshipobjections.Thebuck-passingaccountneednotreduce

26Westlund,p.10.27Non-eliminativestrategiesareofcoursealsosupportedbythecontinuedusefulnessofthe

distinctionbetweenself-interestandamoregeneralcivicinterest.Thissortofdistinctionisdeployed,forexample,inKasparLippert-Rasmussen,“VoteBuyingandElectionPromises:ShouldDemocratsCareAbouttheDifference?”TheJournalofPoliticalPhilosophy19:2(2011):125-144,especiallyn.13.

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thecommongoodtothegoodspickedoutbythewelfarefunctionofanyperson,setofpersons,or

group.Wemayhavereasonstoacttogethertopromoteorhonorimpersonalvalues.Wemayalso

havereasonstoacttogethertopromoteorhonorgoodsconnectedtopersonsnotincludedamong

thoseacting.Inprinciple,suchactionsarejustasmuchpartofour“commongood”asthemountain

climber’squestisapartofherindividualgood.Recallthatinthemountainclimber’scase,wedo

notjudgethatshehassomeexanteinterestsatisfiedinbeingatthetopofamountain.28Rather,

sheadoptstheaimofclimbingthemountainforreasonsthatmakethisaworthyproject,anditis

thengoodforherwelfaretoachieveheraim.Inthecaseofourcommongood,wemayacttogether

forreasonsthat(morallyorotherwise)warrantouraction,andachievingourcommonaim

becomesgoodforuscollectively.29Thus,ouraccountcanremainneutralwithrespectto

distributivequestions.

Thebuck-passingaccountofthecommongoodisalsonon-partisan.Becauseittakesno

axiologicalstand,itallowsfordebatesbetweencompetingpoliticaltheoriestobedecidedontheir

substantivemerits,ratherthanconceptualfiat.Liberalegalitarian,communitarian,naturallaw,and

republicantheoriescanallbegivenintermsofreasonstoacttogether.Libertarians—sometimes

28Wallaceisalsogoodonthispoint,in“TheRightnessofActsandtheGoodnessofLives,”inSmith,

Pettit,SchefflerandWallace(eds.)ReasonandValue(Oxford:OxfordUniversityPress,2004).29Itmaybeintuitivelyoddtoregardallactionwhichwehavereasontodotogetheraspartofthe

commongood.Forexample,supposethatasodacompanywouldgiveeveryAmericancitizenalargesumofmoneyifeachpersonpurchasedonecanofthesoda.Thecompany’sgenerouspublicitystuntwouldseemtogiveallAmericanssufficientreasontocoordinatetheiractionstogetherinresponsetothesamesetofconsiderations.Butitseemsoddtothinkthatinbuyingthesoda,Iamactingforthecommongood.(WethankAdamKernforcallingthispointtoourattentionwiththiscase.)Theissueisthatthiscaseofthecommongoodappearslikeasetofmanyindividualprivategoods,ratherthanonepublicgood.Hereitmayhelptodistinguishthecommongoodfromtherelatednotionofthepublicgood.Thecontrastbetweenpublicandprivategoodsisoftenconnectedtotheideaofexcludabilityornon-excludability.Becausethesodacasefocusesattentiononeachindividualreceivingacorrespondinglyindividuatedgoodratherthansharingasinglegood,ithasthefeelavaluethatisin-principleexcludable.Soitseemsnottobewithinthepublicgood.Foramoredetaileddiscussionoftheconceptofthepublicgoodanditshistory,seeJaneMansbridge,“OntheContestedNatureofthePublicGood,”inWalterW.PowellandElisabethS.Clemens(eds.)PrivateActionandthePublicGood(NewHaven:YaleUniversityPress,1998).Mansbridgealsonotesthehistoricalevolutionoftheconceptofthecommongood.Foranothersignificanttreatmentofthepublicgood,seeRobertE.Goodin,"InstitutionalizingthePublicInterest:TheDefenseofDeadlockandBeyond,"TheAmericanPoliticalScienceReview90,no.2(1996).

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waryoftheverynotionofjointaction—mightworrythattheirviewswillnotbeexpressible

throughthebuck-passingaccount.Forthatmatter,libertariansmightcontendthattheveryideaof

thecommongoodisapartisanone,smugglingincollectivistvalues.30However,evenstrict

libertariansallowthattherearesometimesreasonstoacttogetherthroughpolitics.31

Nordoesthebuck-passingaccountsmuggleinanimplicitconsequentialism.Wemayhave

reasonstoacttogetherthatfollowfromtherelationshipswecurrentlyshare,ormightrealize

throughsharedaction.Thesereasonsmightnotbegroundedfundamentallyinourwelfare

(althoughmay,asnoted,derivativelyconnecttowelfare),andtheymayalsonotbeabout

promotinganystateofaffairs.Thispointbearsemphasizing,asitmightseemthatthedifference

hereismerelyverbal.32Forexample,acriticmightarguethattheconsequentialistversionofthe

commongoodcouldalsocapturerelationalreasons(e.g.weoughttopromotethestateofaffairsin

whichwestandwithothercitizensinrelationshipsofequality).Importantly,thiskindofre-

descriptiondoesnotnecessarilycapturethesamesetofreasons.Tosaythatthemountainclimber

hasareasontoclimbthemountainisnotequivalenttosayingthatshehasareasontobringabout

thestateofaffairsinwhichshehasclimbedthemountain.Anambitiousbutself-effacingmountain

climbermighthavereasontowanttoclimbEverest(agreatachievement!),butnothavereasonto

wanttobringaboutthestateofaffairsinwhichshehadclimbedEverest(toomuchattention!).As

30Forthisversionofapartisanobjectionagainstthecommongood,seeGeoffreyBrennanandLoren

Lomasky,“AgainstRevivingRepublicanism,”Politics,Philosophy&Economics5:2(2006),especiallysectionII.31Forexample,ifthereisuniversalconsenttosomedecisionprocedureotherthanuniversalconsent

forsomedomainofcollectivedecisions,thenonemightregardthatdecisionprocedureasonewehavereasontogethertofollow.Cf.JamesBuchanan,TheCalculusofConsent:LogicalFoundationsofConstitutionalDemocracy(AnnArbor:UniversityofMichiganPress,1965).AhelpfulintroductionisprovidedinJohnThrasherandGeraldGaus,“OnTheCalculusofConsent”inJecobLevy[ed.]TheOxfordHandbookofClassicsinContemporaryPoliticalTheory(Oxford:OxfordUniversityPress,forthcoming).

32Nozick,forexample,allowedthatdifferencemightbeverbal,butremainedsuspiciousofconsequentialistre-descriptions.SeeAnarchyStateandUtopia(NewYork:BasicBooks,1974):29.

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Nye,Plunkett,andKupointout,thefunctionalroleofact-directedreasonscanbequitedifferent

fromstate-directedreasons.33

Sotooforreasonsinthecommongood.Wemayhavereasontoacttobringaboutsocial

equality,notjusttobringitaboutthatweachievedsocialequality.Toseethedifference,imagine

socialequalitybeingachievedbythesamegroupofpeople,butinonecasethroughexclusively

privateactions,andinanothercasethroughtheuseofasharedstateapparatus.34Ourpresent

pointisnotthattheactionmattersbeyondthefactofrealizingthestateinwhichtheactionis

performed,butmerelythatitmaymatter,andoursoconceptualtoolsshouldnotoccludethis

possibility.Thatshouldbelefttothebusinessofsubstantivepoliticalargument.Itmaymatterthat

wehavereasontoapologizeforhistoricalinjustice,notjustthatwebringaboutthestateofaffairs

inwhichweapologized.Itmaymatterthatweprovidehumanitarianaid,notjustthatwebring

aboutastateofaffairswhereaidisprovidedbyus.

Thislastpointleadstoafinal,centralvirtueofouraccount--namely,thatitcanhelpus

understandhowtheconceptofthecommongoodisusedbypoliticaltheorists,andhowitis

connectedtootherconceptswithinpoliticaltheory.First,wewillconsidertheconcept'suse.While

wedonotwantaconceptofthecommongoodthatcallsanyclaimsmadebyactualtheoristsinor

outofbounds(asiftheycouldbedisabusedoftheirmisguidedviewofthecommongoodmerelyby

attendingmorecloselytotheconcept),wedowantaconceptthatwillexplainfeaturescommonto

alluses.35Asthefirstsectionindicated,thecommonthemetoallusesofthecommongoodisthatit

isnormative.36Thereligiousgroup,thepoliticalliberal,andthepoliticalideologuehavevery

33ThisisthecentralpointinHowardNye,DavidPlunkett,andJohnKu,“Non-Consequentialism

Demystified,”Philosopher’sImprint15:4(2015).ItisalsoanticipatedbyVelleman’sdiscussionof“actingforthesakeof”in“LoveasaMoralEmotion”inSelftoSelf(Cambridge:CambridgeUniversityPress,2006).

34SeeXXX.35Wemightcallthesethecommongood’sconceptualplatitudes.SeeMichaelSmith,TheMoral

Problem(Malden,MA:Blackwell,1994).36OurproposalispresagedbyHenryRichardson’sdiscussionofthe“publicgood.”LikeRichardson,

wearemotivatedbydecouplingtheconceptofthecommongoodfromawelfaristaccountofvalue.Second,ourproposalmakesthecommongoodakindofnormativesuccessterm,similartoRichardson,whodefines“aconceptionofthepublicgood,”as“aviewabouthowpublicactionshouldberegulated”(emphasesin

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differentviewofthecommongood,buttheyallagreethatweshouldactforitorinitsbehalf.

Moreover,theverysparsenessofdescriptiongivenbysometheoristscitedabovesuggeststhatthey

takeforgrantedthatthecommongoodisnormativeforus.Like“justice,”thecommongoodisa

kindofnormativesuccessterm.Ourbuck-passingproposalcanexplainwhythecommongoodhas

thisfeature.Thisissimplybecausethecommongoodisunderstoodintermsofreasons,and

reasonsarewhatexpressnormativity.37Ifweunderstandthecommongoodasconceptually

connectedtoreasons,wecanmakesenseoftheonefeaturethatclearlyunitesthewayinwhichthe

termisused.

Ouraccountcanalsohelpilluminatehowthecommongoodisconnectedtootherconcepts

withinpoliticaltheory.Inparticular,considertheideaofdeliberation.Assection2described,

politicaltheoristsregularlyinsistthatpoliticaldeliberationshouldbesomehowaimedator

directedtowardthecommongood.38Howeveraswedescribedabove,tyingtheconceptofthe

commongoodtoocloselytoaimsofdeliberationcanrisktyingtheconceptofthecommongoodtoo

closelytothetheorist’sothersubstantivepoliticalcommitments.Thatis,itraisestheworrythat

thecommongoodwillbecomephilosophicallypartisan.Avirtueofthebuck-passingaccountofthe

commongoodisthatitcanexplainthecloseconnectionbetweenthecommongoodand

deliberationwithoutintroducinganypartisanpoliticalvalues.Thisisbecauseitcanexplainhow

thecommongoodisconceptuallyconnectedtoadeliberativeunderstandingofevaluativefacts.

original).SeeRicharson,DemocraticAutonomy:PublicReasoningabouttheEndsofPolicy(Oxford:OxfordUniversityPress,2002),p.40.

37Schroederpointsoutthisasavirtueofthebuck-passingpositivethesis.Butitisremainsanovelpointthatusesof“commongood”inthepoliticalliteraturesouniformlypresupposethatthecommongoodisnormativeinsomeway.

38GutmannandThompsonusethe“aimedat”languageconnectingthetwoconcepts.SeetheirWhyDeliberativeDemocracy?(Princeton:PrincetonUniversityPress,2004),p.28.JoshCohensaysthatdeliberationshouldbe“focused”onthecommongood.SeeCohen,“DeliberationandDemocraticLegitimacy,”ibid.

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Herewefollowanexplanationofthebuck-passingaccountofgoodnessdevelopedbyR.Jay

Wallace.39WallaceobservesthatonScanlon’soriginalview,thereason-givingpropertiestowhich

thebuckispassedare,themselves,evaluativeproperties.Forexample,theclaimthatsome

experienceisgoodmightbegivenbyotherproperties--forexample,thatitwouldbepleasant.Such

propertiesarenotnaturalproperties--’pleasantness’expressesanevaluativeappraisal.

Respondingtothisproblem,Wallaceelaboratestwodifferentwaysofinterpretingthebuck-passing

account.Accordingtowhathecallsthe“deliberationindependentinterpretation,”evaluative

propertiesaremetaphysicallypriortoandepistemicallyaccessiblewithoutdeliberation.The

“deliberativeinterpretation”reversesthedirectionoffit.Onthedeliberativeinterpretation,“the

onlywaytoestablishwhetheracandidatepropertyisagenuinesubstantivevalue...isthrough

deliberativereflectionaboutthenormativesignificanceofthepropertyforagents.”40The

deliberativeinterpretationmaintainsthepriorityofthenormativetotheappreciativeway.The

responsetosuchfactsintheformofdeliberativeattentionplaysacrucialconceptualrole.Buck-

passingtiesthegoodtoanagent’sdeliberativeresponse.

Giventhatthebuck-passingaccountofthegoodrequiresadispositionofagentstorespond

deliberativelytoasetofconsiderations,itshouldbeunsurprisingthatthe“commongood”also

requiresthecollectivedeliberativeattentionofsomelargergroupofagents.Abuck-passing

accountofthecommongoodcanexplainwhythisconnectionholdssogenerally.Tosaythat

somethinginthecommongoodistogivemetaphysicalandepistemologicalprioritytothe

deliberativeattentionofagroupofpersonsonasetofconsiderations,andtheirdispositionto

respondtothoseconsiderationsinanappreciativeway.Withouttakingsidesabouthowidealized

deliberationshouldproceedorwhichvaluesitshouldfavor,wecanvindicatetheconceptual

39Wallace,“Reasons,Values,andAgent-Relativity,”ibid.40Wallace,513.

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intuitionbehinddeliberativistaccountsofthecommongood.Thisintuition,stretchingbackto

Rousseau,seesthecommongoodasbothamatterofwill,andasidentifyingacommoninterest.41

Wewillnowsettoonesidethebuck-passingaccount’sconceptualvirtues.Totestthis

account,letusconsideritsexplanatoryvalueinimaginedandactualcases.Startwithacasewhere

ourapproachcanexplainsomethingthatislikelytopuzzlethesimplestgood-for-usaccounts.Brian

Barryputshisfingeronaparadigmuseoftheconceptofthecommongood.Henoticesthatwedo

nottendtomakeuseofthisideawhenacandidatepolicycancrediblybesaidtobegood-for-all.

“’Thecommongood’istypicallyusedinaverydifferentway,”hewrites,“namelyinthecontextof

anappealtoindividualpeopletodosomethingorotherwhichiscontrarytotheirnetinterests.”42

Soacentralcaseuseforthecommongoodispreciselywhenwearetryingtoconvinceapersonor

groupofpersonstosupportadecisionthatwilldisadvantagethempersonally.Insuchasetting,we

mightimagineaddressingthemsecond-personally,offeringreasonstoacttogether,ratherthan

takingupthethird-personalpostureofabenefactor.

InthecaseofKelov.CityofNewLondon,theSupremeCourtallowedthecityofNewLondon

totransferlandfromaprivateownertoaprivateredevelopmentproject.TheNewYorkTimes

celebratedtherulingas“awelcomevindicationofacity’sabilitytoactinthepublicinterest.”43

Onceweunderstandthepublicinterestasreflectingaimsthatprovideuswithreasonsfor

collectiveaction,wewillnotbesearchingforthemostinfinitesimalofwaysthatapolicycanbe

seenasgoodforeachmemberofacommunity.Ourclaimthateminentdomainreflectsoraffronts

thecommongoodcannowsetthetermsforadebatethatisnotprimedtowardsaggregating

individualgoods.Tosaythatasocialdecisionisinthecommongoodisnottosaythatitismerely

41Ourthankstoarefereeforthispoint.Ofcourse,addingthedeliberativecomponentdoesmakethe

accountmoremeta-ethicallypartisan.Ifonefavoredalesscommittedview,thisadditionisamodularcomponentoftheview.However,forthoseindependentlyattractedtoanidealofthecommongoodthatistiedtodeliberation,thebuck-passingaccountcanhelptoexplaintheconnectionbetweenthetwo.

42Barry,203.43“TheLimitsofPropertyRights,”TheNewYorkTimes,June24,2005.

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appealing.Itis,onourview,awayofregisteringthattherearesharedreasonsforactingtogether

towardsaparticularend.Thisleavesopenwhetherthosereasonsaremorallydecisive–thatwill

dependonthesubstantivemoraltheoryathand.Weshouldn’texpectaconcepttosettlethiscase,

onlytoensureafairdebateamongalternativeconceptions.44

Onourtheory,thebuckthatgetspassedhereistheideaofthegood.Whileprevious

formulationsrelieduponparticularaccountsofthegood,thisapproachavoidsthisphilosophically

fraughtexerciseinaxiology.Itthuscreatesroomfordisagreementsamongamorediversesetof

moralconceptions.So,forexample,thecontractualistapproachthatwesketchedearliercan

developthisconceptintoaconceptionthattreatshumanrelationshipsasreason-giving.Norneed

oneacceptthatthereisaprotantoreasontopromotethegoodtoacceptthisreadingofthe

concept.Thosewhodenythisgood-promotingviewwouldseethe“good-for-us”variationsofthe

conceptasidentifyingaimsthataredecidedlysupererogatory.Onouraccount,thisproblemdoes

notcarryover.Thecontractualisthasasmuchevaluativeroomastheconsequentialisttodraw

uponitsdistinctivemoralvocabulary.

4. ObjectionsandResponses

Inthissectionwewillconsiderwhatwetaketobetwoofthemostpressingobjectionstoabuck-

passingaccountofthecommongood.Thefirstobjectionarguesthatourconceptofthecommon

goodimplicitlyprecludestheoriesthatwouldlimitstateactiontothepursuitofjustice.Because

plausible,well-defendedtheoriestakeexactlythisform,ourconceptofthecommongoodrulesout

44Weemphasizethatourproposalisnotintendedasaputativeconceptualanalysis.Insteaditis

somethingclosertowhatPeterGodfrey-Smithreferstoasconceptual“reform”—orspecifyingconceptswithaneyetotheoreticalvirtuesandtheoryuse,ratherthantofitwithcurrentuseinagivensocialoracademicpractice.(SeeGodfrey-Smith,MetaphysicsandthePhilosophicalImagination,”PhilosophicalStudies160(2012):97-113.)ThuswecanagreewithMansbridgethat“inpracticalpoliticallife”itis“oftennotnecessarytobeanalyticallyclearerthantheordinarylanguage”aboutthepublicgoodorthecommongood.Still,asMansbridgealsoobserves,“wemaywanttochooseonlyonefromasetofcompetingmeanings”whenengaginginphilosophy(ibid.,p.12).Weagree,andonlywanttoaddthatforsuchpurposes,somemeaningsmaybemoreusefulandexportabletoadiversityofphilosophicalcontextsthanothers.Inshort,howtospecifytheconceptmaybesomethingwortharguingabout.

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toomuchlogicalspace.Thesecondobjectionmaintainsthatouraccounttreatsintuitivelytoo

manypublicpoliticalactionsaspursuingthecommongood.Thefirstaccusestheaccount

presentedhereofakindofpartisanship,whiletheseconddisputestheaccount’sextensional

adequacy.Forthesakeofhavinglabels,wewillrefertotheseasthepartisanobjectionandthe

over-inclusionobjection.Therestofthissectionwilldiscussthemindetail.

4.1 Partisanship

Consideratheoryoflegitimatestateactionaccordingtowhichtheonlythingthestatecan

permissiblydoisbringabouttheconditionsofjustice.Forexample,somepoliticallyliberal

theoriesofjusticeholdthatallstatecoercioncanonlybelegitimatedbypublicjustification.45By

hypothesis,onlyrequirementsofjusticecouldfulfillthisjustificatoryrole.Thus,thestateisonly

permittedtosatisfytherequirementsofjustice,butisnotpermittedtopursueothervalues.

Thislineofargumentposesaproblemforouraccount.Itseemstositintensionwithour

suppositionthatthecommongoodprovidesreasonstoactpoliticallythataresomehow“beyond

justice.”Theproblemmaybeformulatedasadilemma.Ononehorn,ouraccountallowsthe

politicallyliberaltheoryaboveasaviablecandidatetheoryofjustice.However,ifthistheoryis

correct,thenthevalueofjusticeisnecessaryandsufficienttoguideallpoliticalactivity.Butifthat

istrue,thenthecommongoodplaysnoadditionalinformativeroleaboutwhichpoliticalactions

shouldbetaken.Itiseithersilent,oritidlyaffirmstheantecedentpronouncementsofjustice.Ona

secondhorn,ouraccountcoulddenythattheorieslikethatofthepoliticalliberalabovearecorrect.

Butinthatcase,itseemsthatwehaveviolatedthepartisanshiprequirementfromsection1.

Simplybyspecifyingtheconcept,wewouldhaveruledoutalogicalavailableconceptionthat

actuallyisdefendedfrommultipledifferenttheoreticalperspectives.

45ArefereehelpfullygivesJonathanQuongasanexample.SeeQuong,LiberalismwithoutPerfection

(NewYork:OxfordUniversityPress,2011),especiallychs.2-3.AnotherexamplemightbeGeraldGaus,TheOrderofPublicReason:ATheoryofFreedomandMoralityinaDiverseandBoundedWorld(Cambridge:CambridgeUniversityPress,2010).

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Wewilltakethefirsthornofthedilemma.Suchanaccountcanbeallowedwithout

renderingthecommongoodeithersilentoridle.Toseewhy,itwillhelptoframe,moreprecisely,

thebasicpoliticallyliberalinsight:46

(P1)Allcoercivestateactionsmustbejustifiedbysufficientpublicreasons.

(P2)Onlyjusticecanprovidesufficientpublicreasons.

(C1)So,coercivestateactioncanonlybepermissiblydirectedatsatisfyingjustice.

(P3)Ifjusticeistheonlylegitimateendofcoercivestateaction,thenothervaluesareeither

idleorsilent.

(C2)So,thecommongoodiseitheridleorsilent.

Statedthisway,itisclearerthatpremise(P3)isvulnerable.Premises(P1)and(P2)simplygivethe

substantiveclaimsofthetheory,soitwouldbeobjectionablypartisan(forpresentpurposes)to

denyeither.Butthepoliticallyliberaltheoryisnotdisputedbydenying(P3).Andinfact,we

believethatthispremiseisincorrect.P3isonlytrueiftheonlyactionsthatcanbecollectively

takenthroughstateinstitutionsarecoerciveactions.However,thisseemslikelytobefalse.

Considerthefollowingcases:

(a) Expression.Aliberal,democraticstatetoleratesthepresenceofreligiousoreducational

institutionsthatdiscriminateonthebasisofrace.However,membersofthepolitical

communitywanttoofficiallyrepudiatetheideathatracistdiscriminationisacceptable.As

such,theydecidethroughdeliberative,democraticinstitutionstorevokethetaxexempt

statusofinstitutionsthatdiscriminate.

(b) Expertise.MembersoftheFederalReserveboarddeliberateaboutwhethertoraiseinterest

ratesbya¼point.Suppose—exhypothesi—thatnoonehasaclaimofjusticeeitherthat

46Ofcourse,politicalliberalismisabroadtent,andmanyofitsmemberswouldnotacceptthatthe

statecanonlylegitimatelypursuejustice.Wearenotconsideringthetruthofthisclaimasathesisaboutthenatureoflegitimatestateaction.

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ratesberaised,orthatratesnotberaised.Still,membersoftheFederalReserveboard

oughttomaketheirdecisionbasedonreasons,ratherthanarbitrarily.47

(c) Refusal.Stateinstitutionsgenerallyenforcecontracts.However,thestatemaydecidethat

ithasmoralreasontodeclinetoenforcecertaincontracts.Membersofthepolitical

communitydecide,forvariousreasons,thatcertaincontractsshouldbelegally

unconscionable.48

Weproposethatineachofthesecases,thecommongoodcanfacilitatedeliberationabouthow

thestateshouldact.Thisremainstrueevenifoneacceptsthepoliticallyliberalstrictureagainst

coercionfornon-justicebasedreasons.Thisisbecausethestatecandothingsotherthanact

coercively.49Ifthistheorywerecorrect,thecommongoodcouldcontinuetoplayameaningfulrole

inwhatmoralmessagesthestateshouldnon-coercivelyexpress,orinhowtosetpoliciesthataffect

membersofthestatebutdonotaltertheextenttowhichthestateengagesincoercion.TheFederal

Reserveexampleillustratesonesuchcase.ImagineiftheFederalReservesimplyselectedan

interestratethatwasbestforFortune500executives.Eventhoughtheirdecisionmightnotaffect

theamountofcoercioninthepoliticalcommunity,itwouldstillseemtobefaulty.TheFedshould

decideinawaythatwassupportedbyreasonsofthecommongood.Finally,thestatecouldusethe

commongoodtoguideitindecidingwheretowithholdcoerciveactivity,evenifthatactivitymight

benotbeunjust(asinRefusal).

Finally,consideraweakerversionof(P3),accordingtowhich:Ifjusticeistheonly

legitimateendofcoercivestateaction,thenothervaluesareeitheridleorsilentwithrespectto

coercivestateactions.Thispremiseallowsthatthecommongoodcouldstillberelevantincasesof

47ThiscaseisadaptedfromPetit,“DepoliticizingDemocracy,”ibid.48ThiscaseisinspiredbySeannaShiffrin,“Paternalism,UnconscionabilityDoctrine,and

Accommodation,”Philosophy&PublicAffairs29:3(2000):205-250.49ThecaseofExpressionismodelledonsimilarexamplesgivenbyCoreyBrettschnieder,who

defendssuchexamplesasnon-coercive.SeeBrettschnieder,WhentheStateSpeaks,WhatShouldItSay?HowDemocraciesCanProtectExpressionandPromoteEquality(Princeton:PrincetonUniversityPress,2012).

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stateactionthatarenon-coercive,butdeniesitcouldberelevanttoanycoerciveaction.Webelieve

thateventhisweakerpremiseisfalse.Sometimes,justicemightprovidesufficientpublicreasonin

supportofsomedisjunctionofcoerciveactions,butremainsilentaboutwhichdisjunctis

preferable.Forexample,supposethatjusticerequiresthateachchildbeprovidedwithasufficient

opportunitytoenterthepoliticalelite.50Forthesakeofspecificity,supposethisrequiresthata

publichighschoolofferanactivitythatmodelsdeliberation—say—ModelUN,Debate,orEthics

Bowl.Whilereasonsofjusticemightprovidetheweightyconsiderationssupportingcoercive

actionsnecessaryrealizetherelevantstandardofpubliceducation,thesereasonsmightleaveopen

whichoptionisbest.However,wemightstillthinkthatthechoiceshouldbemadedeliberatively—

onthebasisofreasons.Onourview,theseshouldbereasonstoacttogether,orreasonsofthe

commongood.

4.2 Over-inclusion

Thesecondobjectionwewillconsiderholdsthatourconceptistoocapacious—counting

considerationsaspartofthecommongoodthatintuitivelyissuefromsomequiteseparate

normativeconcern.Recall,forexample,thequestionfromsection2overwhethertofundaspace

programortheperformingarts.Accordingtothepresentobjection,itmightseemintuitivelyodd

toregardbothoftheseascandidateinstancesofthecommongood.Whiletheperformingarts

mightbethoughtofasacommongood(though,astheprevioussectiondescribed,notrequiredby

justice),onemightthinkthatthereasonstosupportaspaceprogramhaveasourcethatisquite

differentfromthecommongoodofanygroup.Afterall,spaceexplorationmightnotresultin

improvinganyparticularperson’swelfare.Ifitisnotsupportedbyanyperson’sparticulargood,

thenhowcoulditbepartofthecommongood?Instead,onemightthinkthatthereasonsto

50Cf.Anderson,ibid.

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supportthespaceprogrammightbethoughtsomehowmoretranscendent.51Perhaps,forinstance,

theintrinsicvalueoftruthordiscoverymightprovidereasonsforthespaceprogram.

Inshort,theover-inclusionobjectionholds:

(1) Therearereasonsthatwehavetogethertopoliticallypursueaspaceprogram(for

example).

(2) Ifthebuck-passingaccountofthecommongoodiscorrect,thenactingtogetherto

politicallypursueaspaceprogramispartofthecommongood.

(3) However,aspaceprogramisnotpartofthecommongood.

So,thebuck-passingaccountmustbewrong.Ourresponsetothisobjectionwillbetwofold.First,

wewilltrytoshowhowactionsthatdon’tappeartoadvanceanyone’swell-beingcouldstillbepart

ofthecommongood.Second,wewillsuggestthatifouraccountdoesincludesomerevisiontothe

folkconceptofthecommongood,theassociatedtheoreticalcostisworthpaying.

First,wethinkitisimportanttodistinguishbetweentwowaysinwhichthespaceproject

mightbepursuedthroughapoliticalinstitution.Ontheonehand,consideracaseinwhichasmall

cadreofpoliticallyinsulatedelitesiscuriousaboutscientificinquiryintofarcornersofthe

universe.Toslaketheircuriosity,theyadoptandpoliticallyauthorizeaplantofundaspace

program.Inthesecondcase,apoliticalcommunityhasapublicdebate—say,inanelectionyear—

aboutwhethertoprioritizefundingaspaceprogramforthesakeofthevaluesofdiscoveryand

knowledge.Opinionelitesaswellasgrass-rootsorganizationsareinvolved.Intheelection,the

sidefavoringthespaceprogramwins,andtheytakemeasurestopoliticallyauthorizeit.

Whilethesespaceprogramsmightequallyrealizethevaluesoftruthorknowledge,we

suggestthatthelatterprogramhasbettercredentialsforrealizingthecommongood.Thisis

becauseonlyinthelattercaseisthereevidenceofreasonsthatmembersofthepolitically

communityshare,onwhichtoacttogether.Toseethispoint,recallthesimpletwo-personaction

51Wearegratefultoarefereeforhelpingustothinkmoreclearlyaboutthisobjection.

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theorycasefromsection2.Amarriedcouplecoulddecidetogoonvacationeitherbyhavingone

partyunilaterallypickthedestination,orthroughaprocessofdeliberation.Butbecauseeach

party’sreasonsdependinpartontheother’sreasons,thereasonstheyhaveforjointactioncan

onlyemergethrough“dialogicalsensitivity”toeachother.Ifthatisright,thenwemightthinkthat

thepublicdeliberativeprocessesinthesecondversionofthespaceprogramcaseallowaccessto

reasonsformembersofthecommunitytoacttogether,andforthatreasonisintuitivelyaninstance

ofacommongood.

Toputthepointadifferentway,wedonotthinkthatthereisanythinginthenatureofthe

folkuseof“commongood”thatprecludesthespaceprogram.Onavarietyoftheories,the

realizationofgoalsorplanscancountasatleastapartofanindividual’swell-being.52Evenon

purelysubjectivetheoriesofwell-being,whatapersondesiresorvaluespartlydetermines

welfare.53Onlyonamentalstatetheoryofwell-beingwouldsuchpossibilitiesbedenied.Buthere,

itseemsthatthedifferencebetweengroupsandindividualsmakessuchtheorieslessplausiblein

thecaseofthecommongood.Whileitismetaphysicallyinnocuoustothinkthatgroupsofpersons

shareintentions,reasons,orgoals,itismorecontroversialtoattributementalstatestogroups.So

itseemsthattheoriesofanindividual’sgoodthatwoulddisallowgoal-basedprojects(analogousto

thespaceprogram)wouldbelessplausibleatthelevelofthecommongood,anyway.

Moreover,typicaluseofthecommongoodseemslessassociatedwithgoodsthatare

connecteddirectlytowell-being,asmuchastogoodsthatarepoliticallyselectedintherightway.

Politicalscientistsjuxtaposethe“commongood”withmere“partisaninterests,”orwiththe

“particularinterests”ofasubgroupofone’sconstituents.54Tosuggestthatimpersonalorother-

52Foraverynicerecentdiscussion,seeSimonKeller,“WelfareasSuccess,”Nous43:4(2009):656-

683.53AccordingtoDaleDorsey,thisisbecausesubjectivistsmustnecessarilyincludeidealizing

elements.Well-beingcannotsimplybereadofftheactualmentalstatesofanagent.SeeDorsey,“IdealizationandtheHeartofSubjectivism,”Nous(2015):1-22.

54McGhee,et.al.,ibid.,p.337;Leydet,ibid.,pp.235-236.

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regardingvaluescouldbepartofthecommongooddoesnoviolencetotheseuses.Evenwhen

theoristsarguethatthecommongoodmustbeshapedbythe“subjectiveinterests”ofthemembers

ofasociety,theytendtohaveinmindonlythatindividualshavethe“lastword”onwhatcountsas

“goodandbadfortheircommunity.”55

Finally,consideranevenmoreextremeexample.Apoliticalcommunitydecidesthatthey

havemostreasontogethertoprovideaidtoagroupofdistantneedypersons,notwithstandingthat

membersofthisgroupwillnotbeabletoreciprocate.Couldsuchself-sacrificingbehaviorreallybe

partofthecommongood?Ouraccountwouldsuggestso.Itisnotobvioustousthatthisisatodds

withuse,giventhatthecommongoodisfrequentlyinvokedonlyinanegativesense—notpartisan,

orparochial,orselfish,etc.Butsuppose,notimplausibly,thatitisrevisionist.Itmaystillbe

importanttomaintainthisconceptualspace.Consider,forexample,PeterSinger’sargumentthatit

isinourcommongoodtoprovideaidtoothers,becausedoingsomakesourlivesmeaningful.

Weretheworldorganizedinawaythatdidnotallowforsuchactions,ourliveswouldnotbe

meaningful.56ClearlySinger’sviewisaproposalaboutthecommongood,andhisviewholdsthat

thecommongoodiscentrallyrealizedbypreciselythekindofactionbeingconsidered.Singerhas

longbeenopenabouthisdesireforrevisioninourmoralconceptualscheme.Wedonottakesides

hereabouthisproposal,butwedothinkitshouldnotruledoutasaconceptualmatter.Itwouldbe

partisantoclaimthathisproposal,contrarytohisclaims,couldn’tbethecommongood.Atsome

point,thelessonmaysimplybethattradeoffsamongourdesideratacannotbealtogetheravoided.

Conclusion

55ChristianBlumandChristinaIsabelZuber,“LiquidDemocracy:Potentials,Problems,and

Perspectives,”TheJournalofPoliticalPhilosophy24:2(2016):162-182.Seealso,ChristopherKarpowitzandJaneMansbridge,“DisagreementandConsensus:TheImportanceofDynamicUpdatinginPublicDeliberation,”pp.237-253inJ.GastilandP.Levine(eds.)TheDeliberativeDemocracyHandbook(SanFrancisco:Jossey-Bass,2005).

56Singer,PracticalEthics,3rded.(Cambridge:CambridgeUniversityPress,2011)ch.12,especiallyp.294.

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Politicalphilosophershaveinsistedthatthecommongoodisa“self-evident”concept.57This

papersuggeststhatthathopeisunrealistic.Wedoneedanevaluativeterm–orperhapsaplurality

ofterms–thataddresstheterritorythatisunderdeterminedbyatheoryofdistributivejustice.

We’vesuggestedthatabuck-passingaccountofthecommongoodoffersahelpfulwayoffillingthis

role.Itcandosowithouttacitlyencouragingpoliticalpractitionerstoelidedistributive

implicationsoftheirchoices.Atthesametime,itcanavoidunnecessaryphilosophicalcontention.

Givenhoweasyitisto“slipintoutilitarianismbysheerinattention,”58nonconsequentialistsshould

beespeciallywaryaboutembracingconceptsthatcarrywiththemconsequentialistassumptions–

orevenvalences–thatrelyuponatheoryofvalue.FollowingScanlon’sindividualapproach,we

offeredabuck-passingreadingofthecommongoodthatwasdesignedtoavoidthemastervalue

assumption.The“commongood”isanotdummyconcept.Ithasthepotentialtoplayanimportant

roleinourcollectivedecision-making,solongasitbasiccontoursandcontentareworkedout.

57Inthesamesentence.AmitaiEtzionireferstoitastherightthingtodo,byitself,foritselfand

“goodsthatserveallofusandtheinstitutionsweshareandcherish.”AmitaiEtzioni,TheCommonGood(NewYork:Wiley-Blackwell,2004),1.

58RichardKraut,WhatIsGoodandWhy:TheEthicsofWell-Being(Cambridge:HarvardUniversityPress,2007),17.