Both. As you note, Scanlonian contractualism is about reasonable-rejection.
(Personally, I think it’s kinda appealing to consider contractualism for deriving principles, e.g. via rational-rejection or more concretely via veil-of-ignorance. I’m much less compelled by thinking in terms of claims-to-aid. I kinda assert that deriving-principles is much more central to contractualism; I notice that https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/contractualism/ doesn’t use “claim,” “aid,” or “assistance” in the relevant sense, but does use “principle.”)
Both. As you note, Scanlonian contractualism is about reasonable-rejection.
(Personally, I think it’s kinda appealing to consider contractualism for deriving principles, e.g. via rational-rejection or more concretely via veil-of-ignorance. I’m much less compelled by thinking in terms of claims-to-aid. I kinda assert that deriving-principles is much more central to contractualism; I notice that https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/contractualism/ doesn’t use “claim,” “aid,” or “assistance” in the relevant sense, but does use “principle.”)
(Probably not going to engage more on this.)
Ah, I see. Yeah, we discuss this explicitly in Section 2. The language in the executive summary is a simplification.