Justice is more than a legal term; it is the silent heartbeat of a functioning society. Without it, our social structures crumble, and our individual lives lose their intrinsic worth. As Immanuel Kant once profoundly noted, "When justice vanishes, there is no more value in men's lives on earth." But what does justice look like in practice? Justice as the Bedrock of the State
Pindar, the ancient Greek poet, claimed that "Justice is the unshakable foundation of states."
A state's trust in fairness, not its borders or military, defines it. The "contract" between the people and the government is broken if citizens cannot trust that the law applies equally to everyone. Consider a sporting event, for instance, where the referee only calls fouls on one team. No matter how talented the players are, the game loses its meaning. A state without justice is like a rigged game. The Twin Pillars: Peace and Justice Dwight D. Eisenhower famously asserted that "peace and justice are two aspects of one another." He further argued that while force might offer temporary protection, only cooperation and honesty lead to "eternal peace." You cannot have true peace just by stopping a war. If the underlying injustice remains, the "peace" is just a pause before the next conflict.
Simple Example: In a workplace, if one employee does all the work but another gets all the credit, telling them to "just get along" (peace) won't work. For real harmony to exist, you must first fix the credit distribution (justice). Social justice begins with ensuring that everyone has enough food to eat. Norman Borlaug, the father of the Green Revolution, brought a practical lens to philosophy: "The first essential component of social justice is adequate food for all mankind." We cannot talk about high ideals like freedom of speech or digital rights to someone who is starving. Justice must be biological before it is political. Simple Example: You cannot teach a child to value "fair play" if that child is too hungry to focus on the lesson. True social justice begins with meeting basic human needs. It is often said that "Of all virtues, the rarest is justice." Why is it rare? Justice frequently necessitates us relinquishing our personal benefits to uphold what is just. Being "kind" is easy when it costs nothing, but being "just" often means admitting when we're wrong or have too much. Why This Matters for the Future (AI Perspective) As we build artificial intelligence to manage our world, we must ask: Can we teach a machine the "rarest virtue"? If justice is the foundation of our states (Pindar) and the value of our lives (Kant), then the algorithms of tomorrow must be coded with fairness at their core. Can AI ever be more "just" than humans, or is justice a uniquely human soul trait?
Author Sezgin Ismailov

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