No, I suppose you’re right, insofar as there’s no fixed initial quantity to be divided. But both involve an equal apportioning of something: money to workers in the one case, and money to man-hours in the other. The parable doesn’t undermine the notion that equality is essential to all concepts of fairness, even where different versions license different outcomes.
No, I suppose you’re right, insofar as there’s no fixed initial quantity to be divided. But both involve an equal apportioning of something: money to workers in the one case, and money to man-hours in the other. The parable doesn’t undermine the notion that equality is essential to all concepts of fairness, even where different versions license different outcomes.