Book contents
- The Nature of Desert Claims
- The Nature of Desert Claims
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- Part I Reviewing the Received Wisdom on Desert
- Part II An Alternative Model of Desert
- Chapter 4 Stories That Point beyond the 3-Place Model of Desert
- Chapter 5 Setting Another Place for Desert
- Chapter 6 Getting Exactly What One Deserves
- Chapter 7 The Fullness of Truth and the Emptiness of Desert
- References
- Index
Chapter 7 - The Fullness of Truth and the Emptiness of Desert
from Part II - An Alternative Model of Desert
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 13 May 2021
- The Nature of Desert Claims
- The Nature of Desert Claims
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- Part I Reviewing the Received Wisdom on Desert
- Part II An Alternative Model of Desert
- Chapter 4 Stories That Point beyond the 3-Place Model of Desert
- Chapter 5 Setting Another Place for Desert
- Chapter 6 Getting Exactly What One Deserves
- Chapter 7 The Fullness of Truth and the Emptiness of Desert
- References
- Index
Summary
My model of desert works well in accounting for the wide range of desert claims people make in everyday conversations, including claims about inanimate objects being deserving. Surveying desert claims along this wide range, once we exclude the concern for acknowledged truth that lies at the heart of my model, and once we exclude considerations clearly beyond the concern of desert (such as consequentialist calculations), there is no concern left that might plausibly serve as the concern behind our desert claims. Thus, there is a sense in which desert, as conceived by the traditional 3-place model, can be described as an empty concept. For if we assume that model of desert, then we are left to conclude that there are few-if any-instances of actual desert claims. People simply do not have the concern assumed on that traditional model. Yet my own model of desert-emphasizing the role of a shared narrative as a condition for healthy relationships moving forward-readily explains why people would make desert claims and be so insistent on the need for redress until all parties receive the recognition due them.
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- Information
- The Nature of Desert ClaimsRethinking What it Means to Get One's Due, pp. 184 - 217Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2021