Description
Watch an animated book trailer here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GjPhTQ9zi5Q
About the Author
Stephen T. Asma is professor of philosophy at Columbia College Chicago as well as a senior fellow of the Research Group in Mind, Science, and Culture. He is the author of many books, most recently The Emotional Mind: The Affective Roots of Culture and Cognition and The Evolution of Imagination, the latter also published by the University of Chicago Press.
Reviews
"Mr. Asma offers a rightly critical diagnosis of our obsession with egalitarianism." -- Meghan Clyne * Wall Street Journal *
"Asma refreshingly outlines the moral virtues that come with favoritism: loyalty, generosity, and gratitude. While it might strike some as cruel or outdated to accept that we tend to care more about those close to us, Asma shows that this outlook is actually conducive to the moral virtues that utilitarians struggle to justify." -- Reason * Matthew Feeney *
"Against Fairness is a terrific book. Stephen T. Asma goes a long way toward convincing readers of a challenging argument. Engagingly written, it avoids the ponderousness that so often characterizes work in philosophy, and I would recommend it to anyone who seems excessively committed to 'fairness' as the sine qua non of just policy."
-- Barry Schwartz, author of The Paradox of Choice"Every once in awhile a book is published whose very concept snaps your head back and elicits an internal 'Whoa! I hadn't thought of that!' Against Fairness is one such book. We are all so strongly shaped by modern liberal sensibilities of fairness that the very idea that, in fact, all of us (Jesus included!) play favorites-and justly so-is jarring. But once you think about it-which Asma does with cogent arguments and ample empirical evidence-being indiscriminately fair to everyone makes no sense whatsoever. Whence then do we find morality and justice in an unfair world? Asma shows how in this important contribution to the national conversation." -- Michael Shermer, author of The Believing Brain
"Asma realizes, with a sigh, 'that I will be seen as some conservative Ayn Randian and my book read as a social-Darwinist screed,' merely for telling his son that it's not possible for everyone in a race to win it. But that will miss his main point, Asma continues: he's not arguing for a Little Red Hen merit-based fairness over a prizes-for-all equal-shares fairness; he's arguing for a favouritism that flies in the face of both concepts, one that privileges our tribes (by blood or affiliation)." -- Brian Bethune * Maclean's *
"This is one of those books that I found myself agreeing with one moment and arguing with the next, nodding my head up and down, or shaking it left to right like some kind of dashboard ornament-the bobble-headed armchair philosopher." -- Zsuzsi Gartner * the Globe and Mail *
"Asma's philosophical take on reevaluating what is considered to be 'fair' addresses the topic of fairness in a refreshing way, eschewing the culture of rewarding everyone for favoritism." * AirTalk with Larry Mantle, 89.3 KPCC *
Book Information
ISBN 9780226702124
Author Stephen T. Asma
Format Paperback
Page Count 224
Imprint University of Chicago Press
Publisher The University of Chicago Press
Weight(grams) 286g
Dimensions(mm) 216mm * 140mm * 18mm