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John Rawls: anti-foundationalism, deliberative democracy, and cosmopolitanism
Trifirò, Fabrizio
2006
Abstract
This paper aims at illustrating how from the works of John Rawls we can see emerging a
viable anti-foundationalist cosmopolitan and deliberative democratic approach to liberalism.
I shall argue that, despite what some of his critics believe, Rawls’s liberal theory of justice (1)
is not concerned with foundational preoccupations (e.g. Michael Sandel); (2) does not ignore
concrete processes of collective deliberation over matters of public interests (e.g. Amy
Guttman, Dennis Thomson, Brian Barry); (3) nor does it endorse rigid limits to the scope of
democratic deliberation (e.g. Jeremy Waldron, John Gray, Richard Bellamy). Yet I shall
claim, following Andrew Kuper, that (4) there is a real risk of infringing individuals’ primary
moral significance in trying to stretch too much the limits of liberal toleration in order to
accommodate political liberalism with multiculturalism in the international sphere.
Series
Etica & Politica / Ethics & Politics
VIII (2006) 1
Publisher
EUT Edizioni Università di Trieste
Source
Francesco Trifirò, "John Rawls: anti-foundationalism, deliberative democracy, and cosmopolitanism", in: Etica & Politica / Ethics & Politics, VIII (2006) 1, pp. 1-45.
Languages
en
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