Yes, disrupting perfect equality is a good thing in itself. I think that moral systems are not in any way laws of nature, but social constructs, and should be evaluated not by some higher principles, but by their effect on society. In practice equality mean stagnation, therefore any moral system that holds perfect equality as an ideal is flawed. There is an optimal level of inequality for any given circumstances, and it is never zero.
But that inequality is an instrumental rather than a terminal value. You only value it because it prevents stagnation, not because it’s intrinsically a good thing.
Yes, disrupting perfect equality is a good thing in itself. I think that moral systems are not in any way laws of nature, but social constructs, and should be evaluated not by some higher principles, but by their effect on society. In practice equality mean stagnation, therefore any moral system that holds perfect equality as an ideal is flawed. There is an optimal level of inequality for any given circumstances, and it is never zero.
But that inequality is an instrumental rather than a terminal value. You only value it because it prevents stagnation, not because it’s intrinsically a good thing.
Yes, it is instrumental.
So it’s not anti-egalitarian in the sense used here.