Egalitarian Legitimacy |
Legitimacy refers to a judgment about what is right and wrong, how one ought to live, structuring the legitimacy of social consumption, shaping the beliefs and intentions of their members. Participants can seek the pleasure of a common sense of being in the right or rejecting those in the wrong. This is the pleasure of a good will, intending to act on what one takes to be valid beliefs.
Does participating in the activity associated with [amenity] promote in participants a sense that the right way to do something is determined by universal, reciprocal respect for all persons and peoples (including the consumer herself)? |
Is universal, reciprocal respect a crucial part of this amenity? Would the absence of this quality fundamentally change this amenity? |
Decision: Score = 5 |
Decision: Score = 4 |
Decision: Score = 99 |
Decision: Score = 3 |
Decision: Score = 2 |
Decision: Score = 1 |
Does participating in the activity associated with [amenity] promote in participants a sense that the right way to do something is determined by hierarchical, exclusive orders and/or affirms the sense that some persons or groups are superior to others? |
Is reinforcing hierarchical, exclusive orders a crucial part of this amenity? Would the absence of this opposition fundamentally change this amenity? |