Hendrick, it could be argued that each person deserves to own 1/N of the pie because they are there. So if Doreen isn’t hungry, she still owns 1/N of the pie which she can sell to anyone who is hungry.
Similarly it could be argued that the whole forest should be divided up and each person should own 1/N of it, and if the pie is found in the part of the forest that I own then I own that whole pie. But I have no rights to pies found in the rest of the forest.
Now suppose that all but one of the group is busy looking up into the trees at beautiful birds, which gives them great enjoyment. But Dennis instead has been working hard looking at the ground, searching for pies, and he finds one. Should he own the pie? Should he have the right to give or sell pieces to whoever he wants? Or should he have no special rights?
What if Dennis, knowing that the group will confiscate his pie if he shows it to them, eats it before they notice he has it. Is it then fair to pump his stomach so it can be divided equally?
Say it’s 5 people walking through the woods, but they left 5 others back at base camp. Do the other 5 have any right to any of the pie?
If so, what if there are 5 starving children in india. Do they have any rights?
I say, Eliezer is wrong to say there is anything objectively fair about this.
If you and the others present get together and give Dennis 1/Nth of the pie—or even if you happen to have the upper hand, and you unilaterally give Dennis and yourself and all others each 1/Nth—then you are not being unfair on any level; there is no meta-level of fairness where Dennis gets the whole pie.
I agree that giving Dennis the whole pie when others disagree would not be fair. But when you disregard Dennis’s opinion and dictate a solution, that isn’t fair either. Just because Dennis is unable to explain his position so that you see it’s right, and he does not suggest a compromise you can accept, does not make your alternative solution imposed on him fair.
There is no absolute standard of fairness here. It all depends. The concept that we should start with equal shares sounds right if you live in an egalitarian nation, otherwise not. Like, if it’s a medieval english nobleman and four retainers walking through the woods, it would be idiotic to assert the pie must be split into 5 equal shares. The retainers would whip you for saying it, and they’d insist it was no more than you deserved, it was a fair response.
I say, fairness involves people who are making a deal, who are trying to be fair to each other. It is not about people who are not present, who cannot speak their minds. You aren’t making a deal with starving children in india. You can be kind to them or unkind but until you can make a deal with them you can’t be fair or unfair. It is not about the people back in base camp unless you made a deal with them that you will uphold or break.
If the people who are making the deal all agree it is fair, then it is fair. That’s what it means for it to be fair. If some of them do not agree that it’s fair then it isn’t fair. It wouldn’t be fair to give Dennis the whole pie, when somebody doesn’t want to. It wouldn’t be fair to give Dennis nothing, or 1/N of what he believes he deserves, when he doesn’t agree. If you can’t reach an agreement then you don’t have a fair solution. Because that’s what a fair solution isn’t.
You can’t say that just anything is fair. “Fair” isn’t an empty concept that can apply to anything whatsoever. “Fair” is a concept that can apply to anything whatsoever that all participants of the deal freely agree to. If they don’t agree, then it isn’t fair.
Hendrick, it could be argued that each person deserves to own 1/N of the pie because they are there. So if Doreen isn’t hungry, she still owns 1/N of the pie which she can sell to anyone who is hungry.
Similarly it could be argued that the whole forest should be divided up and each person should own 1/N of it, and if the pie is found in the part of the forest that I own then I own that whole pie. But I have no rights to pies found in the rest of the forest.
Now suppose that all but one of the group is busy looking up into the trees at beautiful birds, which gives them great enjoyment. But Dennis instead has been working hard looking at the ground, searching for pies, and he finds one. Should he own the pie? Should he have the right to give or sell pieces to whoever he wants? Or should he have no special rights?
What if Dennis, knowing that the group will confiscate his pie if he shows it to them, eats it before they notice he has it. Is it then fair to pump his stomach so it can be divided equally?
Say it’s 5 people walking through the woods, but they left 5 others back at base camp. Do the other 5 have any right to any of the pie?
If so, what if there are 5 starving children in india. Do they have any rights?
I say, Eliezer is wrong to say there is anything objectively fair about this.
If you and the others present get together and give Dennis 1/Nth of the pie—or even if you happen to have the upper hand, and you unilaterally give Dennis and yourself and all others each 1/Nth—then you are not being unfair on any level; there is no meta-level of fairness where Dennis gets the whole pie.
I agree that giving Dennis the whole pie when others disagree would not be fair. But when you disregard Dennis’s opinion and dictate a solution, that isn’t fair either. Just because Dennis is unable to explain his position so that you see it’s right, and he does not suggest a compromise you can accept, does not make your alternative solution imposed on him fair.
There is no absolute standard of fairness here. It all depends. The concept that we should start with equal shares sounds right if you live in an egalitarian nation, otherwise not. Like, if it’s a medieval english nobleman and four retainers walking through the woods, it would be idiotic to assert the pie must be split into 5 equal shares. The retainers would whip you for saying it, and they’d insist it was no more than you deserved, it was a fair response.
I say, fairness involves people who are making a deal, who are trying to be fair to each other. It is not about people who are not present, who cannot speak their minds. You aren’t making a deal with starving children in india. You can be kind to them or unkind but until you can make a deal with them you can’t be fair or unfair. It is not about the people back in base camp unless you made a deal with them that you will uphold or break.
If the people who are making the deal all agree it is fair, then it is fair. That’s what it means for it to be fair. If some of them do not agree that it’s fair then it isn’t fair. It wouldn’t be fair to give Dennis the whole pie, when somebody doesn’t want to. It wouldn’t be fair to give Dennis nothing, or 1/N of what he believes he deserves, when he doesn’t agree. If you can’t reach an agreement then you don’t have a fair solution. Because that’s what a fair solution isn’t.
You can’t say that just anything is fair. “Fair” isn’t an empty concept that can apply to anything whatsoever. “Fair” is a concept that can apply to anything whatsoever that all participants of the deal freely agree to. If they don’t agree, then it isn’t fair.