Power & Market

Unequal but Not Unjust: Hayek, Nozick, and the Epistemological Limits to Distributive Egalitarianism

jls

A recent addition to the Journal of Libertarian Studies: 

Abstract

Despite starting from different intellectual traditions, Friedrich Hayek and Robert Nozick reach the same verdict that unequal distributions of wealth or income are not ipso facto unjust. Hayek starts from the Scottish Enlightenment theory of spontaneous order, while Nozick works within a Lockean natural-rights framework. This article argues that the convergence of their thought rests on a shared nonjustificationist epistemology. Hayek treats knowledge as subjective and dynamic, generated outside the self and therefore externalist. Nozick defines knowledge as beliefs that reliably track truth, independent of internal justification. The combined Hayek-Nozick theory of knowledge has implications for distributive egalitarianism: because the information that creates any distribution emerges only ex post, no planner can certify a preferred pattern ex ante without disabling the very discovery mechanism that enables societal learning. The result is a presumption in favor of institutions that leave truth tracking and discovery intact.

Read the full article at the Journal of Libertarian Studies. 

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