Thought Noodles

Political realism: five arguments

17 min · 23 de oct de 2024
Portada del episodio Political realism: five arguments

Descripción

Is There a Distinctively Political Normativity? Jonathan Leader Maynard and Alex Worsnip A slew of recent political theorists—many taking their cue from the political writ- ings of Bernard Williams—have recently contended that political normativity is its own kind of normativity, distinct from moral normativity. In this article, we first attempt to clarify what this claim amounts to and then reconstruct and in- terrogate five major arguments for it. We contend that all these arguments are unconvincing and fail to establish a sense in which political normativity is genu- inely separate from moral

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episode In Political Life, What Does a Reasonable Person Believe? artwork

In Political Life, What Does a Reasonable Person Believe?

In this paper, I examine the epistemic foundation for reasonable beliefs in Rawls’ theory of Political Liberalism. The second section delves into Rawls’ argument for an epistemic rationale for political liberalism through the burdens of judgment. The third section explores Peter’s Opacity View as a potential solution to chal- lenges arising from disagreement among epistemic peers. Then, I address Enoch’s critique of public reason theory, which argues that expecting citizens to view opposing beliefs as reasonable leads to Moore’s Paradox. In response to Enoch’s criticism of public reason theory, I propose a nuanced perspective on epistemic permissiveness. I suggest that on fundamental issues such as the existence of God, reasonable individuals should hold beliefs with high confidence while allowing for a margin of potential error. I argue that this approach promotes mutual respect among citizens with differing views and avoids Moore’s Paradox

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