Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Getting Justice Right Is Harder than We Think
Getting Justice Right Is Harder than We Think
Feb 13, 2026 3:15 PM

There are several forms of justice just as there are several realms in which justice operates. Confusing them can lead to injustice.

Read More…

The question of justice is fundamental to human nature and all human cultures. Little children have an immediate sense of fair and unfair, just and unjust. The theme of justice permeates myth and philosophy. Plato’s Republic and Gorgias are reflections on justice and the right ordering of the soul and society. So is Aristotle’s Politics. The Hebrew Bible, the Tao Te Ching, the Analects of Confucius, the writings of Buddhism, and the Stoics all contain reflections on justice. C.S. Lewis notes in his appendix to The Abolition of Man that in every land and every culture there is a “Tao,” a way of being in the world that affirms what is good and condemns what is bad. Despite the universal hungering for justice, injustice often seems to be the actual way of man.

The quest for justice plex. Even our efforts to promote justice can lead to injustice. Injustice makes us angry and rouses the passions. Yet justice is a virtue that requires clear thinking, prudence (seeing the world as it is), and temperance (moderation). This means that in the face of injustice we have to discipline our passions so they do not e irrational and create even more injustice. As philosophers like Leo Strauss and Stanley Rosen have explained, Plato’s Republic is Socrates’ attempt not only to refute the tyrannical view that justice is the rule of the strong but also to moderate Glaucon’s passionate desire for justice.

False Prudence of the Sage

St. Thomas Aquinas wrote that “injustice can occur in two ways: by the violent act of the man who possesses power and through the false prudence of the sage.”

Unjust acts of violent men are quite clear to us, but we can miss the “false prudence of the sage.” I argue in my ing book, Excluded: How Global Humanitarianism and the Poverty Industry Exclude the Poor from Prosperity and Justice that one of the great sources of injustice for the poor is precisely the “false prudence” of policymakers, technocrats, and humanitarians who, filled with good intentions, think they can help by socially engineering people out of poverty. They are like Don Quixote who thinks he “rescues” the farm boy from beatings only to make his situation even worse.

Injustice es from the failure to distinguish between what are mutative and distributive justice. We can create injustice if we apply the wrong kind of justice at the wrong mutative when it should be distributive or vice versa.

Commutative Justice

Commutative justice is justice of exchange. It is the justice that takes place between individuals or private institutions and groups such as businesses. It relates to contracts, obligations, paying debts, and so on. I have heard people talk mutative justice as less important or secondary to distributive justice, but as The Catechism of the Catholic Church explains:

Commutative justice obliges strictly; it requires safeguarding property rights, paying debts, and fulfilling obligations freely contracted. mutative justice, no other form of justice is possible. (CCC 2411, emphasis added)

Commutative justice is what guides buying and selling and many other trading relationships. For example: I offer to buy your watch for $200 and you agree to the offer. I pay you the $200 and you give me the watch. We have engaged mutative justice. It’s important to note that agreement or consent is necessary but not sufficient. Some things cannot or should not be exchanged. Just because there is a market for something doesn’t mean it is just. There are markets for slaves, pornography, and human organs, but all these are unjust and should be prohibited. Even in areas where exchange would be licit, consent alone is not always sufficient. For example, if someone holds a gun to your head to “encourage” you to agree to the price they offer, this is mutative justice. Or if you are starving and I take advantage of your desperate situation and pay you $20 dollars for your diamond engagement ring, that too would be a violation mutative justice.

The Profit Motive

mutative justice addresses exchange, it does not imply that there can be no profit. Profit has a legitimate role mutative justice. Prices change when demand is high and supply is low. This is most clearly seen in what many economists, philosophers, and theologians, including St. Augustine, have called the “diamond-water paradox.” Water is necessary for life and in high demand, but generally easy to acquire. Thus, in normal conditions, the price is low. Diamonds, on the other hand, are useless for life but highly valued for their beauty, scarcity, low supply, and difficulty of extraction. In normal conditions, the price is very high. Yet if we found ourselves in a desert, the value—and thus the price of water—may even be higher than a diamond. Commutative justice does not require an equal exchange with no profit, only that the price must not be unjust nor the arrangement coerced. The issues of just price and profit are topics for another essay, but in sum, tradition has generally defined just price as being determined by three things: utility, difficulty of production, mon estimation—i.e., market price.

Distributive Justice

The second type of justice is called distributive. Distributive justice regulates what munity owes to its members and mon goods proportionately” (St. Thomas, Summa Theologica). We can see distributive justice in many situations: the family, the church, and the state. A monastery is a good example of distributive justice. When a man es a monk, he makes an act of voluntary poverty and gives up all his rights to private ownership. The land, the abbey, and its contents are still private property, however, yet the abbot has distributive justice responsibility to provide for all the monks according to their needs. An abbot has broad authority: He can discipline a monk, deny food, and require an extra fast, but he cannot do whatever he wants and take everything to himself. He has a debt of distributive justice to his monks much like a father and mother have to their children.

The state also has distributive justice responsibilities: welfare assistance, honors/rewards, and punishments. The state can levy taxes and make distributions to the poor or use those same taxes to build projects for mon good (or do both). It can also help those who have suffered from natural disaster. As Joseph Pieper explains in The Four Cardinal Virtues, distributive justice need not be equal. If a tornado goes through a town and destroys Joe’s house but only slightly damages Steve’s, Joe will receive a lot more than Steve. There are times when, according to distributive justice, the abbot or the father or the government can provide assistance “to each according to their need.”

The Wrong Kind of Justice Can Lead to Injustice

When we fail to make distinctions among the different types of justice, we can create harm and even injustice. Let’s take some simple examples. One misapplication of justice is when we mutative justice to the family—that is, when we tend to see all relationships through the lens of individual market exchange. As Fr. Marcel Guarnizo explains in our podcast discussion, the Nobel Prize economist Gary Becker argues that some children are Cadillacs and some are Chevrolets. Parents, Becker argues, should invest more in the Cadillac children. Becker writes:

As consumer durables, children are assumed to provide “utility.” The utility from children pared with that from other goods via a utility function or a set of curves.

And further,

A family must determine not only how many children it has but also the amount spent on them.… I will call more expensive children “higher quality” children, just as Cadillacs are called higher quality cars than Chevrolets. To avoid any misunderstanding, let me hasten to add that “higher quality” does not mean morally better. If more is voluntarily spent on one child than on another, it is because the parents obtain additional utility from the additional expenditure and it is this additional utility which we call higher “quality.”

Becker notes he is not making a moral claim. He is analyzing fertility rates in the developed world, plex subject. Nevertheless, the point here is that the idea of seeing children primarily in economic terms is an error. (See “market fundamentalism” below.) It views children in an instrumentalist manner (as a tool) and the family as a place mutative justice when it is not. Not to mention that early labelling of some children as a Chevrolet could also be a big mistake even on utilitarian grounds, because you might miss the Rolls Royce potential of a late bloomer. But that is another discussion.

The proper type of justice for the family is distributive. For example, I have a nine-year-old daughter who can find anything. If I lose my keys, shoes, phone, tennis racket, whatever it is, she can find it. So every night my wife and I give her dinner. One day she didn’t find the book I needed for work, so that evening when the family sat down for dinner, her plate was empty. She looked at me with sad eyes, but I told her that she didn’t find my book, so I didn’t owe her dinner. After all, “If you don’t work, you don’t eat.” We immediately can see there is something wrong here. It is unjust because the relationship between parents and children is not one mutative justice. As the father, I have distributive justice responsibilities to my daughter whether she finds my book or not. I receive money from my work (commutative) and I use that money to clothe, feed, educate, and help my children flourish. This is not simply my being a good father. It is a requirement of justice. Not to do so would be unjust. This doesn’t mean I can never deprive my children of a snack or a meal as a punishment for hitting a sibling or not finishing their chores. Nor does it mean I cannot hire my children plete some chore and pay them for it. But that is not the normal relationship in a family.

It is important to note that this does not mean the family is “socialist.” That is a category error. Socialism is an passing ideology imposed upon society. It is not a simple description synonymous with “sharing stuff.” Second, socialism rejects private property, but the family owns private property and there is private property within the family. Children can own toys, books, and bicycles that do not belong to the parents, and that they can take when they leave home. Distributive justice does not reject private ownership the way socialism does. Third and most important, socialists from Robert Owen, Karl Marx, and Friedrich Engels to Antonio Gramsci, the Fabians, and the Frankfurt School not only reject private property and religion; they also see the family itself and “this present form of marriage” between a man and woman as obstacles to socialist reform. Sharing among the family is not socialist. It is practicing distributive justice.

Errors with Distributive Justice

We also can create harm or injustice when we apply distributive to a relationship that mutative justice. This can be a tendency of religious leaders who generally work within distributive relationships. A prime example of this is how we often help the poor. There are of course some situations when people require distributive justice from the state, the church, charitable organizations, and private individuals. These can be long term, for example when a person has a serious disability, or short term, when there has been a natural disaster or a person needs help getting back on their feet after losing a job. But too often we think of distributive justice as the primary means of helping those in need, when often their biggest problem is that they don’t have access mutative justice.

We often hear calls to be more generous to help poor people in Africa or Latin America. And there are indeed times when they need immediate help. But for a majority of people in the developing world, the fundamental problem is not that they lack material goods or money but rather that they are excluded from institutions of justice that would enable them to create prosperity in their own families munities. As we explain in the documentary Poverty Inc., they lack access to things like clear title to land and the ability to get their court cases heard, register their business, and participate in the formal economy. The primary need for most poor people throughout the world is legal justice and the rule of law so they can participate mutative justice. When we use distributive justice in the wrong situation, we can perpetuate unjust systems that keep them poor and dependent.

Market Fundamentalism?

In the past several years, a number of conservative thinkers have e critical of what they see as a free-market ideology and argued for more state involvement in setting industrial policies that have a broader view of mon good. These are important debates, and I sympathize with many of the critiques if not necessarily the solutions. But one thing I have noticed is the charge that market-based thinking is a product of “market fundamentalism.” The distinctions mutative and distributive justice can help us think more clearly about this. The best ways to define “market fundamentalism,” if we must use the phrase, is:

Assuming that all social and political problems can best be solved by the markets. This would reduce all social relations to market relations and ignore the proper roles for the state, family, and civil society. Markets merce are essential, but they cannot solve many social problems. Nor can the mutative justice to every (or at least most) social and political problems, as we saw with the family example above.

Note that it is not market fundamentalism to advocate for a free petitive economic system with private property, rule of law, freedom of association, and free exchange. Nor is it market fundamentalism to argue that there is a legitimate place mutative justice in society. Rather, to reject mutative justice because one doesn’t want to be a “market fundamentalist” would be to promote injustice and perhaps cultural or political fundamentalism.

Summing Up

Getting justice right is difficult. It requires prudence, moderation, clear thinking, and humility. It also requires us to make clear distinctions. A proper view of legal, distributive, mutative justice will not solve all our problems, but it can help us care for the poor, preserve the rights of the family, understand the role of the market, and get a proper perspective on the role of the state.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Conservatives and Progressives Find Agreement on Ways to Fight Poverty and Increase Opportunity
In our increasingly polarized society, it’s often difficult for conservatives and progressives to mon ground. It’s even more rare for policy experts on the left and the right to find proposals that they can jointly agree on. So it’s rather remarkable that just such a diverse group has created a detailed plan for reducing poverty and increasing economic mobility. With support from the American Enterprise Institute and the Brookings Institution, a group of scholars “worked together for more than a...
6 Quotes: The Second Vatican Council’s Declaration on Religious Freedom (Dignitatis Humanae)
Fifty years ago today, on December 7, 1965, Pope Paul VI promulgated the Declaration on Religious Freedom (Dignitatis humanae). This document produced by the Second Vatican Council clarified the Catholic Church’s views on religious liberty, changed the way the Church interacted with states, and helped foster ecumenical relations with other faith traditions. Since the release of Dignitatis humanae, the importance of defending religious freedom has e even more necessary. As Archbiship Charles J. Chaput has said, “In some ways, the...
Unemployment as Economic-Spiritual Indicator — November 2015 Report
Series Note: Jobs are one of the most important aspects of a morally functioning economy. They help us serve the needs of our neighbors and lead to human flourishing both for the individual and munities. Conversely, not having a job can adversely affect spiritual and psychological well-being of individuals and families. Because unemployment is a spiritual problem, Christians in America need to understand and be aware of the monthly data on employment. Each month highlight the latest numbers we need...
Seeking Justice Must Always Be Personal
Conversations about justice tend to quickly devolve into debates over top-down solutions or mechanistic policy prescriptions.But whilethe government plays an important role in maintaining order and cultivating conditions for society, we mustn’t forget that justice begins with right relationships at the local and personal levels. In Episode 4 of For the Life of the World: Letters to the Exiles, Evan Koons explorestopic from the perspective of hospitality, a theme we find throughout the Biblical story. How do weapproach and treat...
The Federal ‘Anti-Poverty’ Program that Taxes the Poor
Imagine you’re at the checkout line at the supermarket and the clerk asks how much e your family earns each year. Offended, you ask why that is any of her business. “We need to know to determine how much sales tax you need to pay,” the checker politely explains. “If you’re classified as the ‘working poor’ you need to pay more sales tax.” “I think you have that backwards,” you helpfully add. “You mean the working poor need to pay...
The Power of Prayer
This is just a brief note, a cohortative: Let us pray! For those tempted to disdain prayer in favor of work in alleviating the ills of the world, I mend C.S. Lewis’ essay, “Work and Prayer.” There he writes, among other things, “Prayers are not always—in the crude, factual sense of the world—’granted’. This is not because prayer is a weaker kind of causality, but because it is a stronger kind.” From of old prayer has been recognized, in John...
More Fear Mongering on GMO Foods
In an email last week, GMOInside.org – a coalition opposed to genetically engineered and genetically modified organisms, which counts shareholder activist group As You Sow a member – blasted an email chock-a-block with material for two previous posts (here and here). And es a third PowerBlog post about the activists’ effort to roll back Senate support for the Safe and Affordable Food Labeling (SAFE) Act, dubbed the DARK Act (Deny Americans the Right to Know Act – get it?). Readers...
Facebook and the Institutional Forms of Social Good
Over at Think Christian, I take a look at the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative and derive a lesson from Jesus’ interaction with the rich young man in Mark 10. A basic lesson we can take from the decision to organize the initiative as an LLC rather than a traditional non-profit corporation is that pursuing social good is possible in a wide variety of institutional forms. A for-profit incorporation doesn’t preclude a main, or even primary, purpose aimed at social good. Just...
Letter from Rome: Paris and the Progressive Denial of Reality
In his book Living the Truth, the German Thomist Josef Pieper presents the following thesis: All obligation is based upon being. Reality is the foundation of ethics. The good is that which is in accord with reality. He who wishes to know and to do the good must turn his gaze upon the objective world of being. Not upon his own “ideas”, not upon his “conscience”, not upon “values”, not upon arbitrarily established “ideals” and “models”. He must turn away...
Does Microlending Solve Poverty?
If you give a man a fish you feed him for a day, but if teach a man to fish, you feed him for a lifetime. But what if a man knows how to fish but can’t afford a fishing pole? Or what if he knows how to sew but can’t afford a sewing machine? Can farm, but lacks a plow? The recognition that some people have skills to make themselves self-sufficient but lack capital to buy the tools they...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved