From the school yard to the workplace, there’s no charge more damning than
“You’re being unfair!” Born out of democracy and raised in open markets,
fairness has become our de facto modern creed. The very symbol of American
ethics—Lady Justice—wears a blindfold as she weighs the law on her impartial
scale. In our zealous pursuit of fairness, we have banished our urges to like
one person more than another, one thing over another, hiding them away as dirty
secrets of our humanity. In Against Fairness, polymath philosopher
Stephen T. Asma drags them triumphantly back into the light. Through playful,
witty, but always serious arguments and examples, he vindicates our unspoken and
undeniable instinct to favor, making the case that we would all be better off if
we showed our unfair tendencies a little more kindness—indeed, if we favored
favoritism.
Conscious of the egalitarian feathers his argument is sure to ruffle, Asma
makes his point by synthesizing a startling array of scientific findings,
historical philosophies, cultural practices, analytic arguments, and a variety
of personal and literary narratives to give a remarkably nuanced and thorough
understanding of how fairness and favoritism fit within our moral architecture.
Examining everything from the survival-enhancing biochemistry that makes our
mothers love us to the motivating properties of our “affective community,” he
not only shows how we favor but the reasons we should. Drawing on
thinkers from Confucius to Tocqueville to Nietzsche, he reveals how we have
confused fairness with more noble traits, like compassion and open-mindedness.
He dismantles a number of seemingly egalitarian pursuits, from classwide
Valentine’s Day cards to civil rights, to reveal the envy that lies at their
hearts, going on to prove that we can still be kind to strangers, have no
prejudice, and fight for equal opportunity at the same time we reserve
the best of what we can offer for those dearest to us.
Fed up with the blue-ribbons-for-all absurdity of "fairness" today, and
wary of the psychological paralysis it creates, Asma resets our moral compass
with favoritism as its lodestar, providing a strikingly new and remarkably
positive way to think through all our actions, big and small.
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