Social wrongs
Laitinen, Arto; Särkelä, Arvi (2023)
Laitinen, Arto
Särkelä, Arvi
2023
Julkaisun pysyvä osoite on
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi:tuni-202111038133
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi:tuni-202111038133
Kuvaus
Peer reviewed
Tiivistelmä
In this paper we elucidate the notion of ‘social wrongs’. It differs from moral wrongness, and is broader than narrowly political wrongs. We distinguish conceptually monadic wrongness (1.1), dyadic wronging (1.2), and the idea of there being something ‘wrong with’ an entity (1.3). We argue that social and political wrongs share a feature with natural badness or wrongness (illnesses of organisms) as well as malfunctioning artifacts or dysfunctional organizations: they violate so called ought-to-be norms; they are not as they ought to be; there is something wrong with them. In contrast, moral wrongs are violations of ought-to-do norms. Social wrongs typically, but not invariably, include dyadic wronging. We examine who or what can wrong whom or what, and by what means: we can be wronged by individuals and groups, as well as by practices, institutions or structures (2.1–2.3). The notion of structural injustice is compared to the notion of social wrongs in 2.4. Social wrongs are defined as there being something wrong with the social reality (3.3), in comparison to there being something wrong with an organism or a system (3.1), including the narrowly political wrongs of systems of governance (3.2).
Kokoelmat
- TUNICRIS-julkaisut [19817]