Justice League

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    truly is justice. Is it what society see it to be, what one sees it to be, or is justice such an aloof ideal that man is still trying to comprehend what exactly justice is to one’s soul. On the terms of understanding justice one must also think if they need justice and if so what it means to them. The value they hold to justice is something such as an intrinsic good which Plato elaborates on in The Republic where the definition and need for justice is looked upon. The definitions of justice…

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    Also in “Self-Constitution in the Ethics of Plato and Kant”, by Christine Korsgaard, Plato's constitutional model says that the procedures that unify a city are based on the actions that unify a person's soul. This makes a city appear to be an agent, "it is not just a place to live, but rather a kind of agent which performs actions and so has a life and a history. And we can see the same three parts in a political decision" (Korsgaard 105). Plato believes that reason is used so people can be…

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    During 300-400 BCE, Greeks passion for reasoning and logic influenced the development of Western thought. Contribution to historical records, philosophers Herodotus and Thucydides were first to explain history; they would delve into the past to decide the facts and significance of historical events. For instance, Herodotus questioned and analyzed historical evidence to write History of the Persian War; however, not often did he differentiate between facts and legends. Later, Thucydides…

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    evidence and witnesses to prove that Carl Lee Hailey murdered the two men. One witnesses was a cop who was shot by accident. Despite all the evidence and witness Carl was freed of all his charges. In the eyes of government, justice was not served, but in the eyes of the people, justice was served. This was not similar to Tom’s case in To Kill a Mockingbird. In Tom’s case there was no evidence to prove that Tom was guilty. However there was evidence to prove that Bob Ewell treats his family like…

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    Greece, there was once a discussion of great importance held between some good friends. This discussion was so important because it was the first recorded debate over the meaning of something many of us wouldn’t think to question in modern times: justice. One would not know most of the participants in the conversation by name, that is, except for one notable philosopher: Socrates. The discourse between Socrates and his friends was documented by a student of his, Plato, another well-known…

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    According to Thrasymachus ‘Justice is the advantage of the stronger’. What does he mean by this and does Socrates succeed in proving him wrong? The name Thrasymachus means fierce fighter, and this certainly represents the character of the same name, who appears in book one of Plato’s Republic. Thrasymachus enters Plato’s world with a statement designed to shock, stating that “justice is the advantage of the stronger”. The idea is that rulers make the laws in their own best interests, and…

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    are unaware that their segregation tactics are unimportant, Dr. King argues that “Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere...whatever affects one directly, affects all indirectly” (182). In other words, the freedom of all citizens is being questioned. Dr. King had hoped that “the white moderate would understand that law and order exist for the purpose of establishing justice” (189), and not for creating unjust laws. Dr. King wanted to awaken the conscience of the community by…

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    What is Justice? It sounds like a simple question to answer, but what about in the world we live in today. Many people in our society have their own distinctive explanation of what justice is. When most people think of justice, they think behavior, treatment, fair play, and equity. In many eyes, justice is seeing the villain pays for what they have done usually by some kind of punishment such as prison or the death penalty. Because justice is a hard word to define everyone has taking up there…

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    whether or not one believes in universals over and above particulars, or whether one is a nominalist, or abides somewhere in between the pronouncements of both camps, the obvious metaphysical inference from Plato 's account of justice is that abstract properties, such as justice, when instantiated by greater, composite phenomena, such as by a city or nation-state as opposed to a person, inherit the same "structure" rather than the same "essence." By structure, I mean thereby the abstract anatomy…

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    This became particularly noticeable during a conversation about birth control during our Reproductive Justice discussion. Two of my peers who identify as Catholic women came to the conclusion that even if they did not believe in using birth control for themselves they have no reason or right to infringe upon that decision for other women. This exemplifies the concept of “Moral Justice” in that they are recognizing that there are complexities and ambiguities to this problem, but there is an…

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