Bibliography
1. A Theory of Justice. Cambridge,
Massachusetts: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 1971. The revised
edition of 1999 incorporates changes that Rawls made for translated editions of
A Theory of Justice. Some Rawls scholars use the abbreviation TJ
to refer to this work.
2. Political Liberalism. The John Dewey
Essays in Philosophy, 4. New York: Columbia University Press, 1993. The
hardback edition published in 1993 is not identical. The paperback adds a
valuable new introduction and an essay titled “Reply to Habermas”. Some Rawls
scholars use the abbreviation PL to refer to this work.
3. The Law of Peoples: with “The Idea of
Public Reason Revisited”. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University
Press, 1999. This slim book includes two works; a further development of his
essay entitled “The Law of Peoples” and another entitled “Public Reason
Revisited”, both published earlier in his career.
4. Collected
Papers. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press, 1999. This
collection of shorter papers was edited by Samuel Freeman.
5. Lectures
on the History of Moral Philosophy. Cambridge, Massachusetts, Harvard
University Press, 2000. This collection of lectures was edited by Barbara
Herman. It has an introduction on modern moral philosophy from 1600 to 1800 and
then lectures on Hume, Leibniz, Kant and Hegel.
6. Justice as Fairness: A
Restatement. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Belknap Press, 2001. This
shorter summary of the main arguments of Rawls’s political philosophy was
edited by Erin Kelly. Many versions of this were circulated in typescript and
much of the material was delivered by Rawls in lectures when he taught courses
covering his own work at Harvard University.
7. Lectures
on the History of Political Philosophy. Cambridge, Massachusetts:
Harvard University Press, 2007. Collection of lectures on Thomas
Hobbes, John Locke, Joseph
Butler, J.J. Rousseau, David Hume,
J.S. Mill
and Karl
Marx, edited by Samuel Freeman.
8. A
Brief Inquiry into the Meaning of Sin and Faith. Cambridge, Massachusetts,
Harvard University Press, 2010. With introduction and commentary by Thomas
Nagel, Joshua Cohen and Robert Merrihew Adams. Senior thesis, Princeton, 1942.
This volume includes a brief late essay by Rawls entitled On My Religion.
Articles
1. “A
Study in the Grounds of Ethical Knowledge: Considered with Reference to
Judgments on the Moral Worth of Character.” Ph.D. Dissertation, Princeton
University, 1950.
2. “Outline
of a Decision Procedure for Ethics.” Philosophical Review (April 1951), 60
(2): 177-197.
3. “Two
Concepts of Rules.” Philosophical Review (January 1955), 64 (1):3-32.
4. “Justice
as Fairness.” Journal of Philosophy (October 24, 1957), 54 (22):
653-662.
5. “Justice
as Fairness.” Philosophical Review (April 1958), 67 (2): 164-194.
6. “The
Sense of Justice.” Philosophical Review (July 1963), 72 (3): 281-305.
7. “Constitutional
Liberty and the Concept of Justice” Nomos VI (1963) (in the notes to the
second volume of his Law, Legislation and Liberty, Hayek
refers to this article to show that Rawls agreed with the Lockean conception
that what could be just or unjust was the way competition was carried on, not
its results)
8. “Distributive
Justice: Some Addenda.” Natural Law Forum (1968), 13: 51-71.
9. “Reply
to Lyons and Teitelman.” Journal of Philosophy (October 5, 1972), 69
(18): 556-557.
10. “Reply
to Alexander and Musgrave.” Quarterly Journal of Economics (November
1974), 88 (4): 633-655.
11. “Some
Reasons for the Maximin Criterion.” American Economic Review (May 1974),
64 (2): 141-146.
12. “Fairness
to Goodness.” Philosophical Review (October 1975), 84 (4): 536-554.
13. “The
Independence of Moral Theory.” Proceedings and Addresses of the American
Philosophical Association (November 1975), 48: 5-22.
14. “A
Kantian Conception of Equality.” Cambridge Review (February 1975), 96
(2225): 94-99.
15. “The
Basic Structure as Subject.” American Philosophical Quarterly (April
1977), 14 (2): 159-165.
16. “Kantian
Constructivism in Moral Theory.” Journal of Philosophy (September 1980),
77 (9): 515-572.
17. “Justice
as Fairness: Political not Metaphysical.” Philosophy & Public Affairs
(Summer 1985), 14 (3): 223-251.
18. “The
Idea of an Overlapping Consensus.” Oxford Journal for Legal Studies
(Spring 1987), 7 (1): 1-25.
19. “The
Priority of Right and Ideas of the Good.” Philosophy & Public Affairs
(Fall 1988), 17 (4): 251-276.
20. “The
Domain of the Political and Overlapping Consensus.” New York University Law
Review (May 1989), 64 (2): 233-255.
21. “Roderick
Firth: His Life and Work.” Philosophy and Phenomenological Research
(March 1991), 51 (1): 109-118.
22. “The
Law of Peoples.” Critical Inquiry (Fall 1993), 20 (1): 36-68.
23. “Political
Liberalism: Reply to Habermas.” Journal of Philosophy (March 1995), 92
(3):132-180.
24. “The
Idea of Public Reason Revisited.” Chicago Law Review (1997), 64 (3):
765-807. [PRR]
Book chapters
1. “Constitutional
Liberty and the Concept of Justice.” In Carl J. Friedrich and John W. Chapman,
eds., Nomos, VI: Justice, pp. 98–125. Yearbook of the American
Society for Political and Legal Philosophy. New York: Atherton Press, 1963.
2. “Legal
Obligation and the Duty of Fair Play.” In Sidney Hook, ed., Law and
Philosophy: A Symposium, pp. 3–18. New York: New York University
Press, 1964. Proceedings of the 6th Annual New York University Institute of
Philosophy.
3. “Distributive
Justice.” In Peter Laslett and W.
G. Runciman, eds., Philosophy, Politics, and Society. Third Series,
pp. 58–82. London: Blackwell; New York: Barnes & Noble, 1967.
4. “The
Justification of Civil Disobedience.” In Hugo
Adam Bedau, ed., Civil Disobedience: Theory and Practice,
pp. 240–255. New York: Pegasus Books, 1969.
5. “Justice
as Reciprocity.” In Samuel Gorovitz, ed., Utilitarianism: John Stuart Mill:
With Critical Essays, pp. 242–268. New York: Bobbs-Merrill, 1971.
6. “Author’s
Note.” In Thomas Schwartz, ed., Freedom and Authority: An Introduction to
Social and Political Philosophy, p. 260. Encino & Belmont,
California: Dickenson, 1973.
7. “Distributive
Justice.” In Edmund S. Phelps, ed., Economic Justice:
Selected Readings, pp. 319–362. Penguin Modern Economics Readings.
Harmondsworth & Baltimore: Penguin Books, 1973.
8. “Personal
Communication, January 31, 1976.” In Thomas Nagel’s “The Justification of
Equality”. Critica (April 1978), 10 (28): 9n4.
9. “The
Basic Liberties and Their Priority.” In Sterling M. McMurrin, ed., The Tanner Lectures on Human
Values, III (1982), pp. 1–87. Salt Lake City: University of Utah Press; Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1982.
10. “Social
unity and primary goods” in Sen, Amartya; Williams,
Bernard, eds. (1982). Utilitarianism and beyond. Cambridge / Paris:
Cambridge University Press / Editions de la Maison des Sciences de l’Homme.
pp. 159–185. ISBN 9780511611964.
11. “Themes
in Kant’s Moral Philosophy.” In Eckhart Forster, ed., Kant’s Transcendental
Deductions: The Three Critiques and the Opus postumum, pp. 81–113,
253-256. Stanford Series in Philosophy. Studies in Kant and German Idealism.
Stanford, California: Stanford University Press, 1989.
Reviews
1. Review
of Axel Hägerström‘s Inquiries into the Nature of
Law and Morals (C.D. Broad, tr.). Mind (July 1955), 64
(255):421-422.
2. Review
of Stephen Toulmin‘s An Examination of the Place of
Reason in Ethics (1950). Philosophical Review (October 1951), 60
(4): 572-580.
3. Review
of A. Vilhelm Lundstedt‘s Legal Thinking
Revised. Cornell Law Quarterly (1959), 44: 169.
4. Review
of Raymond Klibansky, ed., Philosophy in
Mid-Century: A Survey. Philosophical Review (January 1961), 70 (1):
131-132.
5. Review
of Richard B. Brandt, ed., Social Justice
(1962). Philosophical Review (July 1965), 74(3): 406-409.
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