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COLLOQUIA & CONFERENCES
LEGITIMATE PARENTAL PARTIALITY
Harry Brighouse
Department of Philosophy
University of Wisconsin at Madison
April 4, 2008
Friday, 3:30pm-5:00pm
BA 363
Parents have a special duty to care for their children. But many things
they do to, for, and with their children have adverse effects on other
children, because they improve their own children's chances in competitions
for scarce goods; so parental partiality conflicts with equality of
opportunity. To what extent, and in what ways, is it legitimate for
parental behavior to have these effects? The current paper offers a way of
answering that question: what we should do is work out what kinds of
partiality parents should be allowed to exhibit in order for the family to
realize the goods which justify it. The conjecture is that this approach
legitimizes a good deal of partiality, but is also consistent with
stringent egalitarian measures.
This talk is co-sponsored by USC's Department of Education Studies.
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