Abstract
This essay discusses two contributions of the principle of sufficient
autonomy to educational justice. In Just Enough, Liam Shields criticizes
instrumental accounts of autonomy. According to these accounts,
autonomy is valuable insofar as it contributes to well-being. Shields argues
that instrumental arguments fail to support mandatory autonomy
education in all cases, while his non-instrumental principle of sufficient
autonomy does support this. This essay develops a version of the
instrumental argument and argues this version can do the work of
supporting mandatory autonomy education. Another contribution of the
principle of sufficient autonomy is the requirement of talents discovery.
According to Shields, the requirement of talents discovery renders Rawls’s
principle of fair equality of opportunity more plausible, since one’s chances
of accessing a given economic position depend on one’s opportunities to
discover one’s innate talents. This essay argues that Rawlsian fair equality
of opportunity does not have the same implications as the principle of
sufficient autonomy as to which types of talents should be discovered and
to what extent.