Tuesday, September 18, 2007
Revisiting Eduardo's Paper
I had occasion this week to re-read Eduardo's paper, which, IMHO, is terrific. I commend it to MOJ-readers.
Eduardo M. Penalver, Is Public Reason Counterproductive?
Here's the abstract:
The debate over the proper role of
religion in public life has raged on for decades and shows little signs
of slowing down. Proponents of restrictive accounts of public reason
have proceeded under the assumption that religious and deep moral
disagreement constitutes a threat to social stability that must be
tamed. In contrast to this "scary story" linking pluralism with the
threat of instability, there exists within political theory a
competing, "happy story" according to which pluralism affirmatively
contributes to stability by creating incentives for groups to moderate
their demands. Whether the scary story or happy story is a more
accurate reflection of our reality is a difficult empirical question,
but one that ought to matter a great deal to discussions of public
reason. Acting as if the scary story were true when the happy story is
in fact operating will lead proponents of public reason to stifle the
healthful effects of robust pluralism, degrading the quality of public
deliberation and ultimately undermining stability. In other words, if
the happy story turns out to be the right one, restrictive accounts of
public reason may turn out to be counterproductive, hastening the very
deliberative and social harms they aim to forestall.
And here's the link.
https://mirrorofjustice.blogs.com/mirrorofjustice/2007/09/revisiting-edua.html