Experts or Mediators? Philosophers in the Public Sphere 1

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "Experts or Mediators? Philosophers in the Public Sphere 1"

Transcription

1 Experts or Mediators? Philosophers in the Public Sphere 1 Introduction 1 Michael Dusche This paper is inspired by the 1995 dispute between the philosophers Jürgen Habermas and John Rawls in the Journal of Philosophy about the role of the philosopher in the public sphere. I am criticizing Habermas in his attempt to depict Rawls as a kind of justice expert. I am grounding my defence of Rawls in an argument that parallels Quine s indeterminacy argument. This crossover of argumentative strategies taken from analytic philosophy into moral and political theory maybe can account for the relevance of this paper to post-linguistic-turn philosophy, firstly, because the syncretistic nature of such an attempt bears a certain affinity to postmodern fashions of thinking. Secondly, I believe that a thinker such as Quine who is firmly rooted in the analytic tradition nevertheless surpasses this tradition in a way that in some respects may be seen as paralleling the developments in post-structuralist and postmodern thought. In Quine and some of his contemporaries and disciples, analytic philosophy turns away from the positivist assumptions of its fathers. It no longer stipulates a single way of representing the positive world in the one and only true theory. Truth, in fact, comes to be looked at as relative to a theory of which there can be many. However, if many theories serve the same purpose equally well, then truth, as theory dependent, becomes a pluralistic concept itself. This much I think I should say to guard against the misunderstanding that all analytic philosophy is positivistic and hence that all moral and political theory that avails itself of argumentative strategies from the analytic school is infected by positivism. Analytic philosophy has of course inherited the scepticism of the positivists with respect to classical metaphysics. It refused to tackle metaphysical problems directly because it very often dismissed them as merely a confused way of speaking. In order to assess where the problem is real or where, in fact, there is no problem at all, analytic philosophy turned towards our common way of speaking about the problem in question. Instead of directly asking, for example, whether human beings have a free will, analytic philosophers would ask: how do we talk about freedom? Or: what do we mean by the word 'freedom' in our everyday conversation? Consequently, either the metaphysical problem would go away or it had to be reformulated and clarified in terms of a language that we do understand. Asking these kinds of questions is of course critical of classical metaphysics, but it is not necessarily positivistic. Thus, it seems that we have to distinguish two kinds of philosophical schools both operating under the paradigm of the linguistic turn: the early positivist and the later non-positivist schools of analytic philosophy. Both share the view that reflection upon language is the primary step in philosophical investigation. They differ in their

2 respective monistic and pluralistic conceptions of science and truth. Now, the question arises as to where to place moral and political theory within this paradigm. Until the early seventies when Rawls's Theory of Justice appeared, it was commonly held among analytic philosophers that moral and political theory had no place at all in modern postmetaphysical philosophy. It was either not scientific enough or it would be subsumed under the social sciences. It is Rawls, precisely, who made this view obsolete demonstrating that moral and political theory can operate outside the whole paradigm of post-linguistic-turn analytic philosophy and still not fall prey to the inadequacies of the old-fashioned metaphysics that had been dismissed. I would therefore call Rawls an early post-linguistic-turn philosopher. Philosophers in the public sphere Philosophers take part in the discourses that take place in the public sphere of a democratic society. They do so mainly in two roles. Either they assume the role of an expert where they draw upon the specialized knowledge of their field, or they participate as intellectuals drawing only on common sense and claiming a certain moral authority. These two roles can be exemplified by the following two instances. As a first example, we can think of a philosopher who is working in an ethics council where ethical problems relating to genetic engineering are being discussed. The philosopher may be called upon as an expert on moral philosophy. As such, he may share his specialized knowledge regarding analogous ethical questions from other contexts. As a philosopher-expert, he may point out to his fellow council members a range of solutions that are already available in the philosophical literature. In the present example, let us assume that the discussion is about the acceptability of parents obtaining a genetically engineered child. Discussion may be about particular parents who misuse the growing opportunities for genetically engineered reproduction in order to satisfy their narcissistic desires with the help of children that are manufactured to meet the egoistic ends of the parents. The philosopher-expert could draw the attention of the discussants to a well known philosophical notion that tells us never to use people only as means for our own ends, but to respect them as beings with their own ends. Bringing in Kant s categorical imperative, of course, does not imply that the philosopher assumes a role as a judge. So far, he has only been a counsellor. He has only drawn the attention of his fellow council members to a part of the philosophical tradition without taking any decisions in their stead. In the role of an intellectual, on the other hand, the philosopher does formulate authoritative judgements. If a concerned philosopher-intellectual appeals to the general public not to support, say, an all-out war against Afghanistan, thereby condemning a certain policy of a certain country, he employs his competence in an authoritative and no longer in a counselling fashion. Here, however, he does not claim any philosophical expert knowledge. He does not draw on any knowledge that common sense and publicly available data could not reveal. On the contrary, his moral authority derives partly from the fact that he is appealing to the common sense of everybody, thereby aiming at a 2

3 consensus. Partly, it also derives from the fact that he is perceived as independent and neutral with respect to the vested interests within the society. The philosopher has been perceived as the neutral institution in public life in many instances. One such instance is Kant s famous essay on "Eternal Peace" where he writes on the public role of the philosopher: It is not to be expected and not to be desired that kings start philosophizing and that philosophers become kings: for, the possession of power unavoidably spoils the free exercise of reason. However, it is necessary that kings and kingly peoples (that is, peoples which govern themselves in accordance with rules of equality) do not allow the class of philosophers to vanish or to become quiet, but that both, for the enlightenment of their business, allow them to speak publicly, because this class, by its very nature, is incapable of banding or clubbing together and is thus unsuspicious of any propagandistic reputation. 2 In other words, the sovereign, that is, the people in a liberal democracy, should listen to the philosopher with due respect but they should also beware of mistaking him as a king, that is, as someone who could assume sovereignty in their place. The philosopherintellectual derives his moral authority not through expertise in moral philosophy but through his personal credibility. According to Kant, he is not only not in a position to take decisions of sovereignty, he is even incapable of it if he wants to maintain his independence and credibility. Instead, he is believed to be able to take a neutral stand due to this very incapacity. He is unable to assume the role of the sovereign on pain of losing his freedom in the exercise of his reason. I hope to show later what free exercise of reason can imply today. Kant might have thought of his contemporary Voltaire as a prime example of an intellectual who involves himself in the public debates of the time. A more recent instance is the omnipresent, politically engaged philosopher-intellectual à la Sartre. Due to his moral credibility and due to intense occupation with almost every phenomenon of political and cultural life of his time, the intellectuel engagée gained such an influence in the public sphere that he could all by himself set the agenda and define his own role. The great days of the intellectual have largely determined the image of philosophers and the attitudes and expectations regarding their role in the public sphere. Attitudes range from awe to aversion. Those who feel disturbed by the interventions of practical philosophers in public affairs tend to question the relevance of philosophy in public matters. Practical philosophy is not a science whose results are largely undisputed as the results of the so-called hard sciences are. If a national parliament does not feel competent to give an assessment of the risks involved in the civil use of atomic energy, it will call upon an expert committee to carry out the assessment and if the credibility of the experts is established and their vote is unanimous, the parliament will follow their expertise. However, if a national parliament is to decide on controversial normative questions, say on the issue of abortion, it will hardly call upon a committee of philosophers. Philosophers are generally not expected to reach unanimity on any topic, let alone controversial normative questions. Nevertheless, we can observe a tendency to employ practical philosophers, whatever the credit of their field, as experts for difficult ethical questions as they arise 3

4 due to the new possibilities of biological, medical and genetic engineering. The Federal Chancellor of Germany, Schröder 3, has recently called up a National Council for Ethics 4 in which philosophers and experts from the life sciences, judges and representatives of the two main churches in Germany are going to debate the ethical problems pertaining to genetic engineering and related topics. It is interesting to analyze the opening speech that Schröder held before the members of the Ethics Council. It is indicative for the expectations and worries that prevail within the general public when it comes to the role of the intellectual in the public sphere. One such worry is that the Ethics Council could assume the role of an expert committee that would be equipped with an authority to bind the decisions of the legislative bodies or the voting public. Schröder made it a point in emphasizing that the role of the Ethics Council is not to substitute the decisions of the responsible political bodies. Neither is the Ethics Council to be an institution to which the public can delegate its ethical responsibility. Nor is it to be a group of experts whose role it is to sanction the decisions of others in the matters concerned. Thus, the Ethics Council has no legal authority. Does it have a moral authority? Not according to Schröder, if this would mean that the Ethics Council pronounces judgements about 'good and evil'. Schröder points to the plurality of 'moral' perspectives each of which can claim to be legitimate but which, nevertheless, can be conflicting with each other. Schröder appeals to the neutrality of the Ethics Council and its independence from any particular moral philosophical standpoint. Surprisingly or not, Schröder s own choice of words does not meet his own demand. When he speaks positively about the role of the Ethics Council, he employs concepts that unambiguously reflect a religious bias. He speaks of 'creation' with respect to our biosphere thereby presupposing the existence of a creator god, an assumption that is not shared by many atheist and agnostic Germans. Schröder, as one representative of the Kantian sovereign, proves to be a bad philosopher here. It remains to be seen how well the free exercise of reason, on the other hand, will fare in such close proximity to power. The indeterminacy of reason and the concept of the political 5 So far, I have described two different roles which philosophers occupy in the public sphere. I have described these roles in their positive aspects and in their limitations. The philosopher-expert was said to be limited to the role of a counsellor where he was to abstain from any judgement exceeding the limits of his expertise, which is basically in the field of the history of ideas. The role of the philosopher-intellectual, on the other hand, allows for authoritative judgement. However, the authority of his judgement does not derive from his expertise as a philosopher but from his credibility as an unbiased person. So far, the approach was heuristic. I have not given an account of why I am suggesting these two roles and only these and why I am defining them in these limitations. Why, for instance, would it be wrong to propose a philosopher-expert with an authoritative competence, who could decide, say, difficult ethical questions on behalf of the government, a judge or the general public? In the following, I will try to motivate the present picture and the limitations that it implies. I will do this ex negativo, that is, I will try to show that the contrary 4

5 proposition is not tenable. The contrary proposition would be the following: the philosopher can combine the moral authority of an intellectual with the role of an expert, or, in other words, the philosopher can be an expert on normative grounds. There are actually some philosophers who claim such an authority; others have the reputation of maintaining it involuntarily. An example of the latter kind is John Rawls in his Theory of Justice. He is accused by Jürgen Habermas of attempting to prescribe to a democratic society what it should take to be just and what to be unjust. The objection is that [Rawls] does not regard the material part of his investigation to be a contribution to a discussion leading to the formation of a collective will with respect to the basic institutions of a late capitalist society but as a result of a theory of justice for which he as an expert claims responsibility. 6 According to Habermas, Rawls prematurely anticipates in his theory of justice the results of a process of democratic procedural justice and places himself outside the democratic procedures as a justice expert. Such expertise, according to Habermas, does not befit the philosopher and we can see here that Habermas follows Kant in this respect. The democratic public, according to Habermas and Kant, is sovereign in its value decisions and ultimately no one can presume to have a larger say in normative matters than anyone else. Not even philosophers. In my past research, I have dealt with Habermas's objection to Rawls in detail and I have found that Habermas was right in rejecting a philosopher as a justice expert but wrong in rejecting Rawls, for Rawls, as I tried to show, is not a suitable target for the kind of criticism that Habermas employs against him. I have tried to show that Habermas's objection to Rawls rests on a misinterpretation of Rawls and that Rawls, just like Habermas, pays the required tribute to the sovereignty of the democratic public: since the justification of Rawls's conception of the original position is based on 'our' well-considered judgements of fairness, Rawls's assessment of justice is always subject to the agreement between 'you and me', and is hence intended only as an appeal to 'our' common sense. In his appeal, Rawls turns to the critical public of a society and thus pays respect to the sovereignty of a democratic people. Rawls's argumentation in support of his two principles of justice does not transgress the limitation of being only a contribution to the process of social communication. 7 In defending Rawls against Habermas's criticism, I found that strictly philosophical reasons justify the democratic public in rejecting a philosophical expert in ethical matters. These reasons lie in the indeterminacy of human reason as they became apparent through the work of Willard von Orman Quine and others. More specifically, the reason for the rejection of a philosopher-expert in ethical matters is the irreducible pluralism of ethical views and the incommensurability of these views, which compels us ultimately to a form of collective decision where the internal truth of any particular one of these views cannot play a dominant role. In the following, I would like to point out a parallel between Rawls's thesis of the incommensurability of different yet equally suitable conceptions of justice 8 and Quine's indeterminacy thesis. I shall show that a thesis of indeterminacy of normative theories can be formulated by analogy to Quine's thesis of the indeterminacy of 5

6 empirical theories. Consequently, Rawls has to be reconstructed as a consensus theorist with an appeal to the unanimous consensus as the ideal of justification regarding questions of legitimacy and justice in a political community, and not, say, as a correspondence theorist striving towards an accord with an 'objective moralistic order' as Habermas's interpretation of Rawls seems to suggest. In Political Liberalism, Rawls holds the view that the long-run outcome of the work of human reason under free institutions is an ever growing diversity of worldviews and value orientations. 9 This diversification comprises practical philosophy and especially political theory and theory of justice. In view of certain limits of human reason, as we will see below, it is no longer reasonable to expect the existence of only one reasonable theory of justice. "A modern democratic society is characterized not simply by a pluralism of comprehensive religious, philosophical, and moral doctrines but by a pluralism of incompatible yet reasonable comprehensive doctrines". 10 Many reasonable and yet incommensurable theories of justice compete for acceptance before the forum of public reason. Their reasonableness is evaluated in the light of what Rawls calls the "idea of public reason". 11 Any theory of justice that deserves to be called reasonable has to take into account the mere fact that there may be other reasonable but incompatible theories of justice and accept mediation from the point of view of public reason. If theories of justice would yield only uncontroversial results, no such mediatory position would be needed. Then, normative questions would be on par with other matters of expertise and the public would delegate them to their experts just as questions of a technological nature are delegated to expert committees and not debated in parliament or court. Unfortunately, however, normative theories are indeterminate in a way to be explained below and therefore normative decisions remain within the discretion of the public and its representatives. They are the domain proper of the political and cannot be delegated to experts outside the political process. To explicate the point of view of public reason, we have to avoid any claim that is potentially controversial among different reasonable theories of justice. Determining the limits of what we can legitimately suggest from the point of view of public reason amounts to determining the reasons for potential disagreement between different comprehensive doctrines. In Rawls's own words: "The idea of reasonable disagreement involves an account of the sources, or causes, of disagreement between reasonable persons". 12 This is what Rawls calls "the burdens of judgement" 13. I have tried to give an account of the burdens of judgement in a principled way using Quine's concept of indeterminacy as a model. According to Quine, (Q) It is always possible to devise two or more theories that account equally well for the same set of empirical data but which are yet incompatible. The reformulation of Quine's indeterminacy thesis in terms of normative theory would yield the following sentence: (R) It is always possible to devise two or more normative theories that account equally well for the same set of basic normative assumptions but which are yet incompatible. 6

7 From this it follows that for any given theory of justice, there can be at least one other equally adequate theory of justice and thus no theory of justice can ever be expected to remain forever undisputed. Reasonable disagreement based on at least one alternative and equally suitable conception of justice is always possible. No conception of justice can therefore hold a permanent claim to the domain of public reason and to the realm of the political. We are used to thinking, with Kant, in terms of a dichotomy between legal ethics and virtue ethics. Here, Kant follows the classical liberal framework that differentiates between law and ethics. This framework rests historically upon the experience of thirty years of religious war in Europe that eventually gave way to the opinion that reasonable disagreement between religions as regards the pious life of their supporters is possible and legitimate. It became a matter of common sense that the role of the state is not to forcefully eliminate religious disagreement between its citizens. Religion thus became a private affair, its normative propositions binding only its supporters. Legal affairs, by contrast, were viewed as binding for every citizen regardless of their faith. In the legislative process, the res publica had to remain neutral in all matters exceeding the limits of legal ethics and transgressing the bounds of virtue ethics. Rawls as a selfproclaimed disciple of Kant differentiates accordingly. In his terms, we have to differentiate between the scopee of public reason and that of private reason. Public reason is a matter of politics; virtue ethics a matter of private reason. The concept of the political, of legal ethics or of res publica has traditionally been defined in terms of material propositions as if the difference between public and private matters would lie in the material norm itself. Rawls, now, suggests a Copernican turn in moral theory by formalizing the concept of the political. It is no longer implied in the norm itself whether it is to be subsumed under the domain of legal ethics or virtue ethics. The distinction between legal matters and ethical matters is carried out formally by recourse to the criteria of reasonable disagreement. The realm of the political and the scope of legal ethics are defined by the scope of reasonable disagreement alone. The domain of politics corresponds to the domain of disagreement in ethical matters. Politics is about the peaceful settlement of conflicts regarding matters of justice. It has to mediate between divergent views of justice among groups of individuals. The role of practical philosophy is to assist in this mediational process through its contributions to public debate. Since, as we have seen, reasonable disagreement is always possible, it is never the expertise of a philosophical conception of justice that ultimately decides which normative framework is to become the guiding framework for the legal and political sphere of a given society. The ultimate decision rests with the public and its representatives guided by public reason. The role of the philosopher cannot be that of an expert but only that of a mediator. As a mediator, he can enlighten the public as well as the conflicting parties about the reasons for their disagreement. They may often be unaware of it. As someone who understands both sides, he can gain a certain authority by being neutral. Practical philosophy and public life 7

8 To understand that mediatory role of practical philosophy, let us have a look into the processes that take place in the public sphere of a democratic society. Looking at these processes from a philosophical perspective, we focus on their normative aspect. Practical philosophy, very broadly speaking, is about the justification of normative propositions, with virtue ethics being about norms that guide us towards our individual or communal happiness or bliss, moral norms compelling us or our community to observe certain rules of fairness vis à vis other individuals or communities, and the norms of political theory and philosophy of law guiding us towards legitimate and just rule and to assess the justice and legitimacy of policies and their implementation. I shall concentrate here on the normative aspects of public life and leave aside ethical questions in the sense given above, that is, questions relating to individual or communal happiness or bliss. Following the basic liberal distinction between the public and the private, I take ethical questions to be the private concern of individuals or groups of individuals that are numerically smaller than the polity in question. It follows from the above discussion of the indeterminacy of moral theory that normative propositions are peculiar, in as much as their validity depends less on their truth-value within a certain theory of justice but more on their justification, that is, their support by all the individuals that are concerned by that norm. This is, why practical philosophy is intrinsically related to the normative discourses taking place in democratic societies. Ideally speaking, a norm is justified between 'you and me' if and only if we have both agreed to that norm. This is the basic contractarian assumption that is at the basis of our liberal democracies. Contractarian theories, of course, face many difficulties. However, I believe that they are the most accurate reconstruction of the normative system that governs the public life of a liberal democracy and that they are best suited to understand and also ameliorate that system. Democratic elections are best understood as an approximation to that ideal of a unanimous consensus. Majority rule as in the legislative assembly can be seen as the expression of the greatest consensus that can be achieved under reality constraints. Coming to the executive, we expect our government to represent the whole electorate and not only the party by which it was elected. Its decisions should be in principle supportable by all. In any case, they should not go against some very fundamental values of any reasonable party in the polity. On the judicative side, judges are expected to deliberate based on public reasons and not go by their private value judgments. Public reasons take into account, that the legitimate conceptions of justice are many and that the decision cannot be one that is utterly unacceptable for any one of these. The examples cited make two things clear. Firstly, we all know the norms that govern our public life, and secondly, we all know that they are mere ideals. In practice, they may often not be followed and sometimes they may be a guise and an excuse for individual or group egotism and for a Machiavellian sort of politics. Nevertheless, they are the thin fabric that holds a polity together and which, in whatever rare instances, make people abide by certain rules more often than not. The belief in the 'fairy tale' of bringing about a just and fair society and legitimacy of rule by the self-determination of a people and the self-rule of the people prevents the collapse of the polity into anarchy. 8

9 Of course, the common belief in this fairy tale has to be sustained by at least some amount of justice and legitimacy somewhere and sometimes. The fairy tale will never be fully true but there will always be a grain of truth in it. I have called this the normative nexus that upholds the background understanding of a democratic society. 14 This background understanding involves basic liberal-democratic principles like the principle of equality before the law, equal fair opportunities of political participation, and other human rights. Human rights also make up for the lack of idealness in majority decisions. Since the ideal of a unanimous consensus can never be reached, the minority will only agree to anything less than a full consensus as a basis for collective decision making under the condition that certain basic rights can never be subject to any majority decision. The reason is that it would be irrational to accept majority decisions for anyone who is at risk to find himself in a minority position if that means that his fundamental rights are at stake. Majority decisions are thus ruled out by the principle of human rights if and only if they call into question some or all of the fundamental rights of any individual or group of individuals. The fundamental rights of the minority must not be sacrificed for the greater common good. This background understanding plays a double role in the political theory of the liberal democratic state. Firstly, as we have seen, it is a necessary condition for the stability of any given liberal democratic state. Secondly, it is also a necessary condition for its justification. The argument for this goes as follows: Ideally, norms (and the institutions that are based on these norms) are justified if and only if they are accepted by every person that is concerned by these norms (or institutions). That means in reality that no norm and no institution are ever justified since no unanimous consensus can ever be expected (cf. society A in figure below). Therefore, what we are looking for is a heuristic way to find out about the relative distance of a given set of rules, which governs a given praxis (or institution) from the ideal of that unanimous consensus. Although this may be difficult to assess, a few things can be said with plausibility. We can at least say that a given praxis, if its rules require force for their up-keeping, is farther away from the ideal of the unanimous consensus then some other praxis whose rules are followed with less need to employ force. 9

10 Society A is nearly ideal since consensus regarding its social and juridical norms reaches almost 100% and the violence needed to keep up its praxis approaches 0%. As societies grow comparatively less ideal (B, C, D, ), their distance from the full consensus grows. One could think of this in two ways. Either the percentage of the population which supports the governing norms is comparatively smaller than in A (i.e. the suppressed minorities are bigger in percentage) or the amount of violence needed to force minorities into accepting these norms is comparatively greater. 15 An extreme case of illegitimate and unjust rule would hence be one where abidance by the rule is accompanied by massive use of force or even killings. Acceptance of a rule-governed common praxis bears some advantage over the leap into anarchy even if the rules of that praxis are non-ideal. I am arguing that the advantage of acceptance of a non-ideal rule-governed praxis over anarchy is the prospect of development and amelioration. A rule-governed praxis requires a common background understanding of its norms that can form a basis for a step-by-step procedure of amelioration through public discourse. In liberal democratic societies, this discourse takes place in the public sphere where the norms of the background consensus are under constant scrutiny and revision. Publicity itself, as defended by Kant (in his Perpetual Peace), is a standard of legitimacy, and, also the fundamental openness of the process is a benchmark for the legitimacy of such a background understanding. We can see, now, how the hermeneutic assumption of a background understanding for any liberal democratic society is a necessary condition for its stability as well as for its justification. A relatively non-ideal set of rules forming the material content of the background understanding of any liberal democratic society is justified as a set of norms governing public life only if it is understood that the composition of that set is not final. For the set of norms regulating a liberal democratic society to be legitimate, it has to be constantly revised and improved toward the regulative ideal of a unanimous consensus. We can describe this process of review, revision and amelioration of the norms that govern the public life of a liberal democratic society with the notion of a collective reflective equilibrium, a term introduced by Rawls in his debate with Habermas in the Journal of Philosophy. 16 The discourse participants in the public sphere of a liberal democratic society have a certain implicit understanding of the rules that ideally should govern their praxis. Amendments can take place, whenever an effort is made by groups within the public sphere to reach a more explicit understanding of these rules. In an attempt to explicate the norms that tacitly govern the shared praxis, these norms come under constraints of consistency, coherence and reaffirmation. Different such attempts compete for broader acceptance and each attempt will point out some norms as more fundamental then others in order to gain support. The self-referentiality of this process, where a given set of norms is criticized based on a subset of these norms, which is given increased emphasis, is an essential feature that led me to think of this process in terms of a hermeneutic circle. In hermeneutics, knowledge is secured in a circular manner. We start with an intuitive understanding of a certain state of affairs, move on to a more explicit or theoretical 10

11 understanding and go back to our pre-theoretical understanding in order to test the plausibility of our explication. This normally takes place in the mind of one individual. However, in the corresponding case of public discourse on legitimacy and justice of the background understanding of a liberal democratic society, more than one individual is concerned. It is a social process, a process of 'socialized hermeneutics', so to say. Socialized hermeneutics mediates between the existing social praxis (as thesis) and the corresponding theoretical ideal (antithesis), by helping the existing praxis, of which it is a part, to transcend itself, leading it towards its ideal (synthesis). The ideal is not meant to be static; rather, it originates in the dynamics of the social communication process itself. In the normative sense, the idea of the social communication process is delineated only by the outer boundaries of minimal moral praxis: Force on one side and complete harmony on the other. Where no conflicts arise, there is also no need for moral, political or judicial control. On the other hand, where force governs social praxis, the social communication process has broken down, and one cannot speak of any minimally acceptable, and hence reformable, praxis. 17 Let me sum up. I have tried to show that the role of the philosopher in the public sphere can best be understood as that of a mediator and not of an expert. I have tried to show this in two ways, first by appealing to our common sense in the examples cited in the beginning the example of the member of an ethics council and the example of the engaged intellectual. Secondly, I have given a philosophical explanation of the reason why a philosopher could never sincerely assume the role of a justice-expert, the reason being that he would be ignoring the fact of the plurality of equally acceptable conceptions of justice and the indeterminacy of normative theory. Further, on I have tried to explicate the mediatory role of the philosopher in the public sphere by appeal to the Kantian idea of the infinitesimal approximation to the idea of an unanimous consensus. The democratic public being engaged in the never ending task of simultaneously gaining a proper understanding of the societal norms that govern their praxis and, at the same time, revising their background understanding can be assisted by the philosopher as a mediator in matters of understanding, explicating and making consistent the background understanding of our society. 11

12 Notes 1. My heartfelt thanks to Franson Manjali, organizer of the International Seminar "Beyond the Linguistic Turn", at the Centre for Linguistics and English, Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi, January 2002, where this paper was presented. For valuable criticism and comments, I am indebted to Anil Bhatti, Centre for German Studies, JNU. Thanks also to the participants of the conference for a vivid and controversial discussion. 2. Daß Könige philosophieren, oder Philosophen Könige würden, ist nicht zu erwarten, aber auch nicht zu wünschen: weil der Besitz der Gewalt das freie Urtheil der Vernunft unvermeidlich verdirbt. Daß aber Könige oder königliche (sich selbst nach Gleichheitsgesetzen beherrschende) Völker die Klasse der Philosophen nicht schwinden oder verstummen, sondern öffentlich sprechen lassen, ist beiden zur Beleuchtung ihres Geschäfts unentbehrlich und, weil diese Klasse ihrer Natur nach der Rottirung und Clubbenverbündung unfähig ist, wegen der Nachrede einer Propagande verdachtlos. Cf. Kant, Immanuel. Kants gesammelte Schriften. Akademie-Ausgabe der Königlich Preußischen Akademie der Wissenschaften (Berlin: Reimer, 1900ff.), Vol. VIII, Germany s prime minister. 4. Nationaler Ethikrat, henceforth Ethics Council. 5. The following is based on chapter 9 of Philosopher as Mediator. 6. Cf. Jürgen Habermas, Moralbewusstsein und kommunikatives Handeln (Frankfurt am Main: Suhrkamp Verlag, 1983), 76ff. 7. Cf. Michael Dusche, Der Philosoph als Mediator (Vienna: Passagen Verlag, 2000), 18 (henceforth: Philosopher as Mediator). 8. Cf. his Political Liberalism (New York: Columbia University Press, 1993), henceforth: Political Liberalism. 9. Cf. Political Liberalism, xvii. 10. Ibid., xvi. 11. Ibid., 212ff. 12. Ibid., Ibid., 54ff. 14. Literally: the background-consensus of a society that has a democratic understanding of itself, Philosopher as Mediator, It could be interesting to assess which socio-economic parameters correspond with the degree of legitimacy of a society. Binayak Sen (Bangladesh Institute of Development Studies, Dhaka) made an interesting suggestion in this regard. One could attempt to correlate the state of legitimacy of a given society with its degree of Development. 16. Vol. 93, No. 3, Cf. Philosopher as Mediator, 14 (translated by Milind Brahme). 12

SANDEL ON RELIGION IN THE PUBLIC SQUARE

SANDEL ON RELIGION IN THE PUBLIC SQUARE SANDEL ON RELIGION IN THE PUBLIC SQUARE Hugh Baxter For Boston University School of Law s Conference on Michael Sandel s Justice October 14, 2010 In the final chapter of Justice, Sandel calls for a new

More information

Moral Argumentation from a Rhetorical Point of View

Moral Argumentation from a Rhetorical Point of View Chapter 98 Moral Argumentation from a Rhetorical Point of View Lars Leeten Universität Hildesheim Practical thinking is a tricky business. Its aim will never be fulfilled unless influence on practical

More information

* Dalhousie Law School, LL.B. anticipated Interpretation and Legal Theory. Andrei Marmor Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1992, 193 pp.

* Dalhousie Law School, LL.B. anticipated Interpretation and Legal Theory. Andrei Marmor Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1992, 193 pp. 330 Interpretation and Legal Theory Andrei Marmor Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1992, 193 pp. Reviewed by Lawrence E. Thacker* Interpretation may be defined roughly as the process of determining the meaning

More information

FIRST STUDY. The Existential Dialectical Basic Assumption of Kierkegaard s Analysis of Despair

FIRST STUDY. The Existential Dialectical Basic Assumption of Kierkegaard s Analysis of Despair FIRST STUDY The Existential Dialectical Basic Assumption of Kierkegaard s Analysis of Despair I 1. In recent decades, our understanding of the philosophy of philosophers such as Kant or Hegel has been

More information

To link to this article:

To link to this article: This article was downloaded by: [University of Chicago Library] On: 24 May 2013, At: 08:10 Publisher: Routledge Informa Ltd Registered in England and Wales Registered Number: 1072954 Registered office:

More information

Communicative Rationality and Deliberative Democracy of Jlirgen Habermas: Toward Consolidation of Democracy in Africa

Communicative Rationality and Deliberative Democracy of Jlirgen Habermas: Toward Consolidation of Democracy in Africa Ukoro Theophilus Igwe Communicative Rationality and Deliberative Democracy of Jlirgen Habermas: Toward Consolidation of Democracy in Africa A 2005/6523 LIT Ill TABLE OF CONTENTS DEDICATION ACKNOWLEDGEMENT

More information

Writing Module Three: Five Essential Parts of Argument Cain Project (2008)

Writing Module Three: Five Essential Parts of Argument Cain Project (2008) Writing Module Three: Five Essential Parts of Argument Cain Project (2008) Module by: The Cain Project in Engineering and Professional Communication. E-mail the author Summary: This module presents techniques

More information

PROVOCATION EVERYONE IS A PHILOSOPHER! T.M. Scanlon

PROVOCATION EVERYONE IS A PHILOSOPHER! T.M. Scanlon PROVOCATION EVERYONE IS A PHILOSOPHER! T.M. Scanlon In the first chapter of his book, Reading Obama, 1 Professor James Kloppenberg offers an account of the intellectual climate at Harvard Law School during

More information

THE CONCEPT OF OWNERSHIP by Lars Bergström

THE CONCEPT OF OWNERSHIP by Lars Bergström From: Who Owns Our Genes?, Proceedings of an international conference, October 1999, Tallin, Estonia, The Nordic Committee on Bioethics, 2000. THE CONCEPT OF OWNERSHIP by Lars Bergström I shall be mainly

More information

Compromise and Toleration: Some Reflections I. Introduction

Compromise and Toleration: Some Reflections  I. Introduction Compromise and Toleration: Some Reflections Christian F. Rostbøll Paper for Årsmøde i Dansk Selskab for Statskundskab, 29-30 Oct. 2015. Kolding. (The following is not a finished paper but some preliminary

More information

In Defense of Radical Empiricism. Joseph Benjamin Riegel. Chapel Hill 2006

In Defense of Radical Empiricism. Joseph Benjamin Riegel. Chapel Hill 2006 In Defense of Radical Empiricism Joseph Benjamin Riegel A thesis submitted to the faculty of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of

More information

Law and Authority. An unjust law is not a law

Law and Authority. An unjust law is not a law Law and Authority An unjust law is not a law The statement an unjust law is not a law is often treated as a summary of how natural law theorists approach the question of whether a law is valid or not.

More information

Remarks on the philosophy of mathematics (1969) Paul Bernays

Remarks on the philosophy of mathematics (1969) Paul Bernays Bernays Project: Text No. 26 Remarks on the philosophy of mathematics (1969) Paul Bernays (Bemerkungen zur Philosophie der Mathematik) Translation by: Dirk Schlimm Comments: With corrections by Charles

More information

Habermas and Critical Thinking

Habermas and Critical Thinking 168 Ben Endres Columbia University In this paper, I propose to examine some of the implications of Jürgen Habermas s discourse ethics for critical thinking. Since the argument that Habermas presents is

More information

3. WHERE PEOPLE STAND

3. WHERE PEOPLE STAND 19 3. WHERE PEOPLE STAND Political theorists disagree about whether consensus assists or hinders the functioning of democracy. On the one hand, many contemporary theorists take the view of Rousseau that

More information

Chapter 2 Reasoning about Ethics

Chapter 2 Reasoning about Ethics Chapter 2 Reasoning about Ethics TRUE/FALSE 1. The statement "nearly all Americans believe that individual liberty should be respected" is a normative claim. F This is a statement about people's beliefs;

More information

The Conflict Between Authority and Autonomy from Robert Wolff, In Defense of Anarchism (1970)

The Conflict Between Authority and Autonomy from Robert Wolff, In Defense of Anarchism (1970) The Conflict Between Authority and Autonomy from Robert Wolff, In Defense of Anarchism (1970) 1. The Concept of Authority Politics is the exercise of the power of the state, or the attempt to influence

More information

Lifelong Learning Is a Moral Imperative

Lifelong Learning Is a Moral Imperative Lifelong Learning Is a Moral Imperative Deacon John Willets, PhD with appreciation and in thanksgiving for Deacon Phina Borgeson and Deacon Susanne Watson Epting, who share and critique important ideas

More information

Oxford Scholarship Online

Oxford Scholarship Online University Press Scholarship Online Oxford Scholarship Online The Quality of Life Martha Nussbaum and Amartya Sen Print publication date: 1993 Print ISBN-13: 9780198287971 Published to Oxford Scholarship

More information

HABERMAS ON COMPATIBILISM AND ONTOLOGICAL MONISM Some problems

HABERMAS ON COMPATIBILISM AND ONTOLOGICAL MONISM Some problems Philosophical Explorations, Vol. 10, No. 1, March 2007 HABERMAS ON COMPATIBILISM AND ONTOLOGICAL MONISM Some problems Michael Quante In a first step, I disentangle the issues of scientism and of compatiblism

More information

THE GERMAN CONFERENCE ON ISLAM

THE GERMAN CONFERENCE ON ISLAM THE GERMAN CONFERENCE ON ISLAM Islam is part of Germany and part of Europe, part of our present and part of our future. We wish to encourage the Muslims in Germany to develop their talents and to help

More information

In Kant s Conception of Humanity, Joshua Glasgow defends a traditional reading of

In Kant s Conception of Humanity, Joshua Glasgow defends a traditional reading of Glasgow s Conception of Kantian Humanity Richard Dean ABSTRACT: In Kant s Conception of Humanity, Joshua Glasgow defends a traditional reading of the humanity formulation of the Categorical Imperative.

More information

Tom Conway, Colorado State University, Department of English Spring 2015 Context: Assignment 2: Sustainable Spaceship Argument Overview sustainably

Tom Conway, Colorado State University, Department of English Spring 2015 Context: Assignment 2: Sustainable Spaceship Argument Overview sustainably Tom Conway, Colorado State University, Department of English Spring 2015 Context: The Spaceship Earth assignment comes in the middle of a semester in my upper division Writing Arguments course. The way

More information

Kantian Deontology. A2 Ethics Revision Notes Page 1 of 7. Paul Nicholls 13P Religious Studies

Kantian Deontology. A2 Ethics Revision Notes Page 1 of 7. Paul Nicholls 13P Religious Studies A2 Ethics Revision Notes Page 1 of 7 Kantian Deontology Deontological (based on duty) ethical theory established by Emmanuel Kant in The Groundwork of the Metaphysics of Morals. Part of the enlightenment

More information

Can Christianity be Reduced to Morality? Ted Di Maria, Philosophy, Gonzaga University Gonzaga Socratic Club, April 18, 2008

Can Christianity be Reduced to Morality? Ted Di Maria, Philosophy, Gonzaga University Gonzaga Socratic Club, April 18, 2008 Can Christianity be Reduced to Morality? Ted Di Maria, Philosophy, Gonzaga University Gonzaga Socratic Club, April 18, 2008 As one of the world s great religions, Christianity has been one of the supreme

More information

Two Kinds of Ends in Themselves in Kant s Moral Theory

Two Kinds of Ends in Themselves in Kant s Moral Theory Western University Scholarship@Western 2015 Undergraduate Awards The Undergraduate Awards 2015 Two Kinds of Ends in Themselves in Kant s Moral Theory David Hakim Western University, davidhakim266@gmail.com

More information

A CONCEPTUAL ANALYSIS OF SECULARISM AND ITS LEGITIMACY IN THE CONSTITUTIONAL DEMOCRATIC STATE

A CONCEPTUAL ANALYSIS OF SECULARISM AND ITS LEGITIMACY IN THE CONSTITUTIONAL DEMOCRATIC STATE A CONCEPTUAL ANALYSIS OF SECULARISM AND ITS LEGITIMACY IN THE CONSTITUTIONAL DEMOCRATIC STATE Adil Usturali 2015 POLICY BRIEF SERIES OVERVIEW The last few decades witnessed the rise of religion in public

More information

What Ethical Approach is Effective in the Evaluation of Gene Enhancement? Takeshi Sato Kumamoto University

What Ethical Approach is Effective in the Evaluation of Gene Enhancement? Takeshi Sato Kumamoto University What Ethical Approach is Effective in the Evaluation of Gene Enhancement? Takeshi Sato Kumamoto University Objectives to introduce current Japanese policy to show there are some difficulties in applying

More information

Vol. II, No. 5, Reason, Truth and History, 127. LARS BERGSTRÖM

Vol. II, No. 5, Reason, Truth and History, 127. LARS BERGSTRÖM Croatian Journal of Philosophy Vol. II, No. 5, 2002 L. Bergström, Putnam on the Fact-Value Dichotomy 1 Putnam on the Fact-Value Dichotomy LARS BERGSTRÖM Stockholm University In Reason, Truth and History

More information

PART FOUR: CATHOLIC HERMENEUTICS

PART FOUR: CATHOLIC HERMENEUTICS PART FOUR: CATHOLIC HERMENEUTICS 367 368 INTRODUCTION TO PART FOUR The term Catholic hermeneutics refers to the understanding of Christianity within Roman Catholicism. It differs from the theory and practice

More information

Comment on Martha Nussbaum s Purified Patriotism

Comment on Martha Nussbaum s Purified Patriotism Comment on Martha Nussbaum s Purified Patriotism Patriotism is generally thought to require a special attachment to the particular: to one s own country and to one s fellow citizens. It is therefore thought

More information

On the Rawlsian Anthropology and the "Autonomous" Account

On the Rawlsian Anthropology and the Autonomous Account University of Windsor Scholarship at UWindsor Critical Reflections Essays of Significance & Critical Reflections 2017 Mar 31st, 10:30 AM - 11:00 AM On the Rawlsian Anthropology and the "Autonomous" Account

More information

Department of Philosophy. Module descriptions 2017/18. Level C (i.e. normally 1 st Yr.) Modules

Department of Philosophy. Module descriptions 2017/18. Level C (i.e. normally 1 st Yr.) Modules Department of Philosophy Module descriptions 2017/18 Level C (i.e. normally 1 st Yr.) Modules Please be aware that all modules are subject to availability. If you have any questions about the modules,

More information

The Rightness Error: An Evaluation of Normative Ethics in the Absence of Moral Realism

The Rightness Error: An Evaluation of Normative Ethics in the Absence of Moral Realism An Evaluation of Normative Ethics in the Absence of Moral Realism Mathais Sarrazin J.L. Mackie s Error Theory postulates that all normative claims are false. It does this based upon his denial of moral

More information

Fr. Copleston vs. Bertrand Russell: The Famous 1948 BBC Radio Debate on the Existence of God

Fr. Copleston vs. Bertrand Russell: The Famous 1948 BBC Radio Debate on the Existence of God Fr. Copleston vs. Bertrand Russell: The Famous 1948 BBC Radio Debate on the Existence of God Father Frederick C. Copleston (Jesuit Catholic priest) versus Bertrand Russell (agnostic philosopher) Copleston:

More information

Naturalized Epistemology. 1. What is naturalized Epistemology? Quine PY4613

Naturalized Epistemology. 1. What is naturalized Epistemology? Quine PY4613 Naturalized Epistemology Quine PY4613 1. What is naturalized Epistemology? a. How is it motivated? b. What are its doctrines? c. Naturalized Epistemology in the context of Quine s philosophy 2. Naturalized

More information

OSSA Conference Archive OSSA 8

OSSA Conference Archive OSSA 8 University of Windsor Scholarship at UWindsor OSSA Conference Archive OSSA 8 Jun 3rd, 9:00 AM - Jun 6th, 5:00 PM Commentary on Hample Christian Kock Follow this and additional works at: http://scholar.uwindsor.ca/ossaarchive

More information

Philosophical Perspectives, 16, Language and Mind, 2002 THE AIM OF BELIEF 1. Ralph Wedgwood Merton College, Oxford

Philosophical Perspectives, 16, Language and Mind, 2002 THE AIM OF BELIEF 1. Ralph Wedgwood Merton College, Oxford Philosophical Perspectives, 16, Language and Mind, 2002 THE AIM OF BELIEF 1 Ralph Wedgwood Merton College, Oxford 0. Introduction It is often claimed that beliefs aim at the truth. Indeed, this claim has

More information

No Love for Singer: The Inability of Preference Utilitarianism to Justify Partial Relationships

No Love for Singer: The Inability of Preference Utilitarianism to Justify Partial Relationships No Love for Singer: The Inability of Preference Utilitarianism to Justify Partial Relationships In his book Practical Ethics, Peter Singer advocates preference utilitarianism, which holds that the right

More information

Seth Mayer. Comments on Christopher McCammon s Is Liberal Legitimacy Utopian?

Seth Mayer. Comments on Christopher McCammon s Is Liberal Legitimacy Utopian? Seth Mayer Comments on Christopher McCammon s Is Liberal Legitimacy Utopian? Christopher McCammon s defense of Liberal Legitimacy hopes to give a negative answer to the question posed by the title of his

More information

PRÉCIS THE ORDER OF PUBLIC REASON: A THEORY OF FREEDOM AND MORALITY IN A DIVERSE AND BOUNDED WORLD

PRÉCIS THE ORDER OF PUBLIC REASON: A THEORY OF FREEDOM AND MORALITY IN A DIVERSE AND BOUNDED WORLD EuJAP Vol. 9 No. 1 2013 PRÉCIS THE ORDER OF PUBLIC REASON: A THEORY OF FREEDOM AND MORALITY IN A DIVERSE AND BOUNDED WORLD GERALD GAUS University of Arizona This work advances a theory that forms a unified

More information

Boghossian & Harman on the analytic theory of the a priori

Boghossian & Harman on the analytic theory of the a priori Boghossian & Harman on the analytic theory of the a priori PHIL 83104 November 2, 2011 Both Boghossian and Harman address themselves to the question of whether our a priori knowledge can be explained in

More information

MODELS CLARIFIED: RESPONDING TO LANGDON GILKEY. by David E. Klemm and William H. Klink

MODELS CLARIFIED: RESPONDING TO LANGDON GILKEY. by David E. Klemm and William H. Klink MODELS CLARIFIED: RESPONDING TO LANGDON GILKEY by David E. Klemm and William H. Klink Abstract. We respond to concerns raised by Langdon Gilkey. The discussion addresses the nature of theological thinking

More information

Strange bedfellows or Siamese twins? The search for the sacred in practical theology and psychology of religion

Strange bedfellows or Siamese twins? The search for the sacred in practical theology and psychology of religion Strange bedfellows or Siamese twins? The search for the sacred in practical theology and psychology of religion R.Ruard Ganzevoort A paper for the Symposium The relation between Psychology of Religion

More information

Difficult Normativity

Difficult Normativity Difficult Normativity Normative Dimensions in Research on Religion and Theology Bearbeitet von Jan-Olav Henriksen 1. Auflage 2011. Taschenbuch. 145 S. Paperback ISBN 978 3 631 61993 3 Format (B x L): 14

More information

What Lurks Beneath the Integrity Objection. Bernard Williams s alienation and integrity arguments against consequentialism have

What Lurks Beneath the Integrity Objection. Bernard Williams s alienation and integrity arguments against consequentialism have What Lurks Beneath the Integrity Objection Bernard Williams s alienation and integrity arguments against consequentialism have served as the point of departure for much of the most interesting work that

More information

(Review) Critical legal positivism by Kaarlo Tuori

(Review) Critical legal positivism by Kaarlo Tuori University of Wollongong Research Online Faculty of Law - Papers (Archive) Faculty of Law, Humanities and the Arts 2003 (Review) Critical legal positivism by Kaarlo Tuori Richard Mohr University of Wollongong,

More information

The Human Science Debate: Positivist, Anti-Positivist, and Postpositivist Inquiry. By Rebecca Joy Norlander. November 20, 2007

The Human Science Debate: Positivist, Anti-Positivist, and Postpositivist Inquiry. By Rebecca Joy Norlander. November 20, 2007 The Human Science Debate: Positivist, Anti-Positivist, and Postpositivist Inquiry By Rebecca Joy Norlander November 20, 2007 2 What is knowledge and how is it acquired through the process of inquiry? Is

More information

Cory Juhl, Eric Loomis, Analyticity (New York: Routledge, 2010).

Cory Juhl, Eric Loomis, Analyticity (New York: Routledge, 2010). Cory Juhl, Eric Loomis, Analyticity (New York: Routledge, 2010). Reviewed by Viorel Ţuţui 1 Since it was introduced by Immanuel Kant in the Critique of Pure Reason, the analytic synthetic distinction had

More information

Chapter 2 Ethical Concepts and Ethical Theories: Establishing and Justifying a Moral System

Chapter 2 Ethical Concepts and Ethical Theories: Establishing and Justifying a Moral System Chapter 2 Ethical Concepts and Ethical Theories: Establishing and Justifying a Moral System Ethics and Morality Ethics: greek ethos, study of morality What is Morality? Morality: system of rules for guiding

More information

Is Rawls Really a Kantian Contractarian?

Is Rawls Really a Kantian Contractarian? Public Reason 8 (1-2): 31-49 Is Rawls Really a Kantian Contractarian? Baldwin Wong Chinese University, Hong Kong 2017 by Public Reason Abstract: In most of the introductions to Rawls and contemporary contractarianism,

More information

POLITICAL SECULARISM AND PUBLIC REASON. THREE REMARKS ON AUDI S DEMOCRATIC AUTHORITY AND THE SEPARATION OF CHURCH AND STATE

POLITICAL SECULARISM AND PUBLIC REASON. THREE REMARKS ON AUDI S DEMOCRATIC AUTHORITY AND THE SEPARATION OF CHURCH AND STATE SYMPOSIUM THE CHURCH AND THE STATE POLITICAL SECULARISM AND PUBLIC REASON. THREE REMARKS ON AUDI S DEMOCRATIC AUTHORITY AND THE SEPARATION OF CHURCH AND STATE BY JOCELYN MACLURE 2013 Philosophy and Public

More information

THE SEMANTIC REALISM OF STROUD S RESPONSE TO AUSTIN S ARGUMENT AGAINST SCEPTICISM

THE SEMANTIC REALISM OF STROUD S RESPONSE TO AUSTIN S ARGUMENT AGAINST SCEPTICISM SKÉPSIS, ISSN 1981-4194, ANO VII, Nº 14, 2016, p. 33-39. THE SEMANTIC REALISM OF STROUD S RESPONSE TO AUSTIN S ARGUMENT AGAINST SCEPTICISM ALEXANDRE N. MACHADO Universidade Federal do Paraná (UFPR) Email:

More information

Prentice Hall U.S. History Modern America 2013

Prentice Hall U.S. History Modern America 2013 A Correlation of Prentice Hall U.S. History 2013 A Correlation of, 2013 Table of Contents Grades 9-10 Reading Standards for... 3 Writing Standards for... 9 Grades 11-12 Reading Standards for... 15 Writing

More information

The Need for Metanormativity: A Response to Christmas

The Need for Metanormativity: A Response to Christmas The Need for Metanormativity: A Response to Christmas Douglas J. Den Uyl Liberty Fund, Inc. Douglas B. Rasmussen St. John s University We would like to begin by thanking Billy Christmas for his excellent

More information

Saving the Substratum: Interpreting Kant s First Analogy

Saving the Substratum: Interpreting Kant s First Analogy Res Cogitans Volume 5 Issue 1 Article 20 6-4-2014 Saving the Substratum: Interpreting Kant s First Analogy Kevin Harriman Lewis & Clark College Follow this and additional works at: http://commons.pacificu.edu/rescogitans

More information

Are There Reasons to Be Rational?

Are There Reasons to Be Rational? Are There Reasons to Be Rational? Olav Gjelsvik, University of Oslo The thesis. Among people writing about rationality, few people are more rational than Wlodek Rabinowicz. But are there reasons for being

More information

Philosophy Courses Fall 2016

Philosophy Courses Fall 2016 Philosophy Courses Fall 2016 All 100 and 200-level philosophy courses satisfy the Humanities requirement -- except 120, 198, and 298. We offer both a major and a minor in philosophy plus a concentration

More information

2 FREE CHOICE The heretical thesis of Hobbes is the orthodox position today. So much is this the case that most of the contemporary literature

2 FREE CHOICE The heretical thesis of Hobbes is the orthodox position today. So much is this the case that most of the contemporary literature Introduction The philosophical controversy about free will and determinism is perennial. Like many perennial controversies, this one involves a tangle of distinct but closely related issues. Thus, the

More information

What is the "Social" in "Social Coherence?" Commentary on Nelson Tebbe's Religious Freedom in an Egalitarian Age

What is the Social in Social Coherence? Commentary on Nelson Tebbe's Religious Freedom in an Egalitarian Age Journal of Civil Rights and Economic Development Volume 31 Issue 1 Volume 31, Summer 2018, Issue 1 Article 5 June 2018 What is the "Social" in "Social Coherence?" Commentary on Nelson Tebbe's Religious

More information

Kant and his Successors

Kant and his Successors Kant and his Successors G. J. Mattey Winter, 2011 / Philosophy 151 The Sorry State of Metaphysics Kant s Critique of Pure Reason (1781) was an attempt to put metaphysics on a scientific basis. Metaphysics

More information

Ayer and Quine on the a priori

Ayer and Quine on the a priori Ayer and Quine on the a priori November 23, 2004 1 The problem of a priori knowledge Ayer s book is a defense of a thoroughgoing empiricism, not only about what is required for a belief to be justified

More information

book-length treatments of the subject have been scarce. 1 of Zimmerman s book quite welcome. Zimmerman takes up several of the themes Moore

book-length treatments of the subject have been scarce. 1 of Zimmerman s book quite welcome. Zimmerman takes up several of the themes Moore Michael Zimmerman s The Nature of Intrinsic Value Ben Bradley The concept of intrinsic value is central to ethical theory, yet in recent years highquality book-length treatments of the subject have been

More information

Jeu-Jenq Yuann Professor of Philosophy Department of Philosophy, National Taiwan University,

Jeu-Jenq Yuann Professor of Philosophy Department of Philosophy, National Taiwan University, The Negative Role of Empirical Stimulus in Theory Change: W. V. Quine and P. Feyerabend Jeu-Jenq Yuann Professor of Philosophy Department of Philosophy, National Taiwan University, 1 To all Participants

More information

Fourfold Communication as a Way to Cooperation

Fourfold Communication as a Way to Cooperation 1 Fourfold Communication as a Way to Cooperation Ordinary conversation about trivial matters is often a bit careless. We try to listen and talk simultaneously, although that is very difficult. The exchange

More information

Moral Objectivism. RUSSELL CORNETT University of Calgary

Moral Objectivism. RUSSELL CORNETT University of Calgary Moral Objectivism RUSSELL CORNETT University of Calgary The possibility, let alone the actuality, of an objective morality has intrigued philosophers for well over two millennia. Though much discussed,

More information

Common Morality: Deciding What to Do 1

Common Morality: Deciding What to Do 1 Common Morality: Deciding What to Do 1 By Bernard Gert (1934-2011) [Page 15] Analogy between Morality and Grammar Common morality is complex, but it is less complex than the grammar of a language. Just

More information

1/8. The Third Analogy

1/8. The Third Analogy 1/8 The Third Analogy Kant s Third Analogy can be seen as a response to the theories of causal interaction provided by Leibniz and Malebranche. In the first edition the principle is entitled a principle

More information

REASON AND PRACTICAL-REGRET. Nate Wahrenberger, College of William and Mary

REASON AND PRACTICAL-REGRET. Nate Wahrenberger, College of William and Mary 1 REASON AND PRACTICAL-REGRET Nate Wahrenberger, College of William and Mary Abstract: Christine Korsgaard argues that a practical reason (that is, a reason that counts in favor of an action) must motivate

More information

In Epistemic Relativism, Mark Kalderon defends a view that has become

In Epistemic Relativism, Mark Kalderon defends a view that has become Aporia vol. 24 no. 1 2014 Incoherence in Epistemic Relativism I. Introduction In Epistemic Relativism, Mark Kalderon defends a view that has become increasingly popular across various academic disciplines.

More information

(i) Morality is a system; and (ii) It is a system comprised of moral rules and principles.

(i) Morality is a system; and (ii) It is a system comprised of moral rules and principles. Ethics and Morality Ethos (Greek) and Mores (Latin) are terms having to do with custom, habit, and behavior. Ethics is the study of morality. This definition raises two questions: (a) What is morality?

More information

Mika Ojakangas. A Philosophy of Concrete Life. Carl Schmitt and the Political Thought of Late Modernity.

Mika Ojakangas. A Philosophy of Concrete Life. Carl Schmitt and the Political Thought of Late Modernity. Mika Ojakangas. A Philosophy of Concrete Life. Carl Schmitt and the Political Thought of Late Modernity. Stefan Fietz During the last years, the thought of Carl Schmitt has regained wide international

More information

ABSTRACT of the Habilitation Thesis

ABSTRACT of the Habilitation Thesis ABSTRACT of the Habilitation Thesis The focus on the problem of knowledge was in the very core of my researches even before my Ph.D thesis, therefore the investigation of Kant s philosophy in the process

More information

What s God got to do with it?

What s God got to do with it? What s God got to do with it? In this address I have drawn on a thesis submitted at Duke University in 2009 by Robert Brown. Based on this thesis I ask a question that you may not normally hear asked in

More information

THE PURE THEORY OF LAW

THE PURE THEORY OF LAW THE PURE THEORY OF LAW Hans Kelsen Introduction, Polycarp Ikuenobe THE GERMAN LEGAL THEORIST AND philosopher Hans Kelsen provides a positivist account of law. He does this by employing the method of what

More information

1 Hans Jonas, The Imperative of Responsibility: In Search of an Ethics for the Technological Age (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1984), 1-10.

1 Hans Jonas, The Imperative of Responsibility: In Search of an Ethics for the Technological Age (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1984), 1-10. Introduction This book seeks to provide a metaethical analysis of the responsibility ethics of two of its prominent defenders: H. Richard Niebuhr and Emmanuel Levinas. In any ethical writings, some use

More information

FUNDAMENTAL PRINCIPLES OF THE METAPHYSIC OF MORALS. by Immanuel Kant

FUNDAMENTAL PRINCIPLES OF THE METAPHYSIC OF MORALS. by Immanuel Kant FUNDAMENTAL PRINCIPLES OF THE METAPHYSIC OF MORALS SECOND SECTION by Immanuel Kant TRANSITION FROM POPULAR MORAL PHILOSOPHY TO THE METAPHYSIC OF MORALS... This principle, that humanity and generally every

More information

Policy on Religious Education

Policy on Religious Education Atheism Challenging religious faith Policy on Religious Education The sole object of Atheism is the advancement of atheism. In a world in which such object has been fully achieved, there would be no religion

More information

In this response, I will bring to light a fascinating, and in some ways hopeful, irony

In this response, I will bring to light a fascinating, and in some ways hopeful, irony Response: The Irony of It All Nicholas Wolterstorff In this response, I will bring to light a fascinating, and in some ways hopeful, irony embedded in the preceding essays on human rights, when they are

More information

[Forthcoming in The International Encyclopedia of Ethics, ed. Hugh LaFollette. (Oxford: Blackwell), 2012] Imperatives, Categorical and Hypothetical

[Forthcoming in The International Encyclopedia of Ethics, ed. Hugh LaFollette. (Oxford: Blackwell), 2012] Imperatives, Categorical and Hypothetical [Forthcoming in The International Encyclopedia of Ethics, ed. Hugh LaFollette. (Oxford: Blackwell), 2012] Imperatives, Categorical and Hypothetical Samuel J. Kerstein Ethicists distinguish between categorical

More information

Summary of Kant s Groundwork of the Metaphysics of Morals

Summary of Kant s Groundwork of the Metaphysics of Morals Summary of Kant s Groundwork of the Metaphysics of Morals Version 1.1 Richard Baron 2 October 2016 1 Contents 1 Introduction 3 1.1 Availability and licence............ 3 2 Definitions of key terms 4 3

More information

Wittgenstein on The Realm of Ineffable

Wittgenstein on The Realm of Ineffable Wittgenstein on The Realm of Ineffable by Manoranjan Mallick and Vikram S. Sirola Abstract The paper attempts to delve into the distinction Wittgenstein makes between factual discourse and moral thoughts.

More information

From the Categorical Imperative to the Moral Law

From the Categorical Imperative to the Moral Law From the Categorical Imperative to the Moral Law Marianne Vahl Master Thesis in Philosophy Supervisor Olav Gjelsvik Department of Philosophy, Classics, History of Arts and Ideas UNIVERSITY OF OSLO May

More information

Tuesday, September 2, Idealism

Tuesday, September 2, Idealism Idealism Enlightenment Puzzle How do these fit into a scientific picture of the world? Norms Necessity Universality Mind Idealism The dominant 19th-century response: often today called anti-realism Everything

More information

-- The search text of this PDF is generated from uncorrected OCR text.

-- The search text of this PDF is generated from uncorrected OCR text. Citation: 21 Isr. L. Rev. 113 1986 Content downloaded/printed from HeinOnline (http://heinonline.org) Sun Jan 11 12:34:09 2015 -- Your use of this HeinOnline PDF indicates your acceptance of HeinOnline's

More information

THE SEPARATION OF LAW AND MORALS

THE SEPARATION OF LAW AND MORALS Brigham Young University BYU ScholarsArchive All Faculty Publications 1986-11-28 THE SEPARATION OF LAW AND MORALS Noel B. Reynolds Brigham Young University - Provo, nbr@byu.edu Follow this and additional

More information

DRAFT PAPER DO NOT QUOTE

DRAFT PAPER DO NOT QUOTE DRAFT PAPER DO NOT QUOTE Religious Norms in Public Sphere UC, Berkeley, May 2011 Catholic Rituals and Symbols in Government Institutions: Juridical Arrangements, Political Debates and Secular Issues in

More information

! 1! Democratic Theory as Practice: Social Inquiry for Moral Dialogue

! 1! Democratic Theory as Practice: Social Inquiry for Moral Dialogue ! 1! Democratic Theory as Practice: Social Inquiry for Moral Dialogue In Part I of the dissertation, I discuss why a philosophy of social inquiry that does not recognize the ways in which the normative

More information

Has Nagel uncovered a form of idealism?

Has Nagel uncovered a form of idealism? Has Nagel uncovered a form of idealism? Author: Terence Rajivan Edward, University of Manchester. Abstract. In the sixth chapter of The View from Nowhere, Thomas Nagel attempts to identify a form of idealism.

More information

Zimmerman, Michael J. Subsidiary Obligation, Philosophical Studies, 50 (1986):

Zimmerman, Michael J. Subsidiary Obligation, Philosophical Studies, 50 (1986): SUBSIDIARY OBLIGATION By: MICHAEL J. ZIMMERMAN Zimmerman, Michael J. Subsidiary Obligation, Philosophical Studies, 50 (1986): 65-75. Made available courtesy of Springer Verlag. The original publication

More information

Theo-Web. Academic Journal of Religious Education Vol. 11, Issue Editorial and Summary in English by Manfred L. Pirner

Theo-Web. Academic Journal of Religious Education Vol. 11, Issue Editorial and Summary in English by Manfred L. Pirner Theo-Web. Academic Journal of Religious Education Vol. 11, Issue 1-2012 Editorial and Summary in English by Manfred L. Pirner This Editorial is intended to make the major contents of the contributions

More information

Is the Existence of the Best Possible World Logically Impossible?

Is the Existence of the Best Possible World Logically Impossible? Is the Existence of the Best Possible World Logically Impossible? Anders Kraal ABSTRACT: Since the 1960s an increasing number of philosophers have endorsed the thesis that there can be no such thing as

More information

AUTONOMY, TAKING ONE S CHOICES TO BE GOOD, AND PRACTICAL LAW: REPLIES TO CRITICS

AUTONOMY, TAKING ONE S CHOICES TO BE GOOD, AND PRACTICAL LAW: REPLIES TO CRITICS Philosophical Books Vol. 49 No. 2 April 2008 pp. 125 137 AUTONOMY, TAKING ONE S CHOICES TO BE GOOD, AND PRACTICAL LAW: REPLIES TO CRITICS andrews reath The University of California, Riverside I Several

More information

Freedom as Morality. UWM Digital Commons. University of Wisconsin Milwaukee. Hao Liang University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. Theses and Dissertations

Freedom as Morality. UWM Digital Commons. University of Wisconsin Milwaukee. Hao Liang University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. Theses and Dissertations University of Wisconsin Milwaukee UWM Digital Commons Theses and Dissertations May 2014 Freedom as Morality Hao Liang University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee Follow this and additional works at: http://dc.uwm.edu/etd

More information

Direct Realism and the Brain-in-a-Vat Argument by Michael Huemer (2000)

Direct Realism and the Brain-in-a-Vat Argument by Michael Huemer (2000) Direct Realism and the Brain-in-a-Vat Argument by Michael Huemer (2000) One of the advantages traditionally claimed for direct realist theories of perception over indirect realist theories is that the

More information

UNITY OF KNOWLEDGE (IN TRANSDISCIPLINARY RESEARCH FOR SUSTAINABILITY) Vol. I - Philosophical Holism M.Esfeld

UNITY OF KNOWLEDGE (IN TRANSDISCIPLINARY RESEARCH FOR SUSTAINABILITY) Vol. I - Philosophical Holism M.Esfeld PHILOSOPHICAL HOLISM M. Esfeld Department of Philosophy, University of Konstanz, Germany Keywords: atomism, confirmation, holism, inferential role semantics, meaning, monism, ontological dependence, rule-following,

More information

Rationalist-Irrationalist Dialectic in Buddhism:

Rationalist-Irrationalist Dialectic in Buddhism: Rationalist-Irrationalist Dialectic in Buddhism: The Failure of Buddhist Epistemology By W. J. Whitman The problem of the one and the many is the core issue at the heart of all real philosophical and theological

More information

Does law have to be effective in order for it to be valid?

Does law have to be effective in order for it to be valid? University of Birmingham Birmingham Law School Jurisprudence 2007-08 Assessed Essay (Second Round) Does law have to be effective in order for it to be valid? It is important to consider the terms valid

More information

GREAT PHILOSOPHERS: Thomas Reid ( ) Peter West 25/09/18

GREAT PHILOSOPHERS: Thomas Reid ( ) Peter West 25/09/18 GREAT PHILOSOPHERS: Thomas Reid (1710-1796) Peter West 25/09/18 Some context Aristotle (384-322 BCE) Lucretius (c. 99-55 BCE) Thomas Reid (1710-1796 AD) 400 BCE 0 Much of (Western) scholastic philosophy

More information

Sidgwick on Practical Reason

Sidgwick on Practical Reason Sidgwick on Practical Reason ONORA O NEILL 1. How many methods? IN THE METHODS OF ETHICS Henry Sidgwick distinguishes three methods of ethics but (he claims) only two conceptions of practical reason. This

More information