RT Journal Article T1 Can we say when the compensation of social differences has been just? A1 González Castán, Óscar Lucas AB I shall examine John Rawls’s thesis that in a just society in which there are differences between its members in relation to the primary goods that they enjoy, rational people will not be subject to excusable general envy. This investigation requires an analysis of the first premises of Rawls’s theories of social justice and political liberalism. According to Rawls, the ulfillment of the second principle of justice precludes rational people from feeling excusable general envy, because social inequalities will be compensated in a just way to the benefit of the least fortunate. But this raises the question of how much the status of the least advantaged should be improved so that situations of inequality are not unjust anymore. PB Springer SN 0022-5363 YR 1998 FD 1998-06 LK https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14352/106023 UL https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14352/106023 LA eng NO González-Castán, Óscar L. (1998). "Can We Say When the Compensation of Social Differences Has Been Just?", The Journal of Value Inquiry 32, nº 2, pp. 227-241. DS Docta Complutense RD 5 abr 2025