The vast application of the word "justice"and our moral judgment
about just or unjust affairs calls for the necessity of a general
classification of justice. One of these general classifications is
distinguishingsuperficial justice from substantial justice. The present
paper, after clarifying on the rationale behind this classification,
evaluates the manner and the amount of the effects of the superficial
and substantial indices of justice on our moral judgment about just
or unjust affairs and actions in public and private spheres