John Rawls was arguably the most important political philosopher of the
20th century. Barely a word of political philosophy is written today
that is not indebted in some way to the philosophical paradigm that
Rawls bequeathed. Rawls Explained sets out the thinker's complex
arguments in a way that makes them accessible to first-time readers of
his hugely influential work. Both clear in its exposition of Rawls'
ideas and true to the complex purposes of his arguments, this book also
attends to the variety of objections that have been made to them. The
book is divided into three parts corresponding to the three books that
form the core of Rawls's theory: A Theory of Justice, Political
Liberalism, and The Law of Peoples. Each section of the book ends
with a survey of some of the main criticisms of the arguments coupled
with Rawls's strongest counterarguments.