Civic Dialogue: Attending to Locality and Recovering Monologue

Ronald C.Arnett
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

This essay examines civic dialogue that is connected to local roots. The conceptual emphasis suggests that locality often houses what one might term monologic tendencies. The conviction of this essay is that without acknowledgment and understanding of what matters to another, that is, of the importance of monologue, the possibility of maintaining a vital public sphere that is open to a multiplicity of ideas and positions is minimal. In this essay, the term monologue is not to be confused with a particular style of communication, but IS the ground of the conviction that one takes into a given discourse. Monologue houses the ground of the conviction that shapes what we seek to protect and promote in a given communicative exchange. Monologue is the creative engine of conviction that shapes the uniqueness of our participation and contribution to any potential dialogic interaction.2 To illustrate this point, I turn to the Scottish Enlightenment and the insights of Adam Ferguson as he wrote them in An Essay on the History of Civil Society. The essay explicates a series of implications that arise from Ferguson’s work and have relevancy to an understanding of civic dialogue that accounts for the local. Ferguson’s distinct contribution was his refusal to dismiss the monologic sentiments of places of particularity.
公民对话:关注地方与恢复独白
这篇文章探讨了与地方根源相关的公民对话。概念上的强调表明,局部性通常包含人们可能称之为单一性倾向的东西。这篇文章的信念是,如果不承认和理解什么对另一个人来说是重要的,也就是说,不理解独白的重要性,维持一个对多种观点和立场开放的重要公共领域的可能性是微乎其微的。在这篇文章中,“独白”一词不应与一种特定的交流方式相混淆,而是一个人进入特定话语的信念的基础。独白包含了信念的基础,这种信念塑造了我们在特定的交流中寻求保护和促进的东西。独白是信念的创造性引擎,它塑造了我们参与任何潜在对话互动的独特性和贡献为了说明这一点,我转向苏格兰启蒙运动和亚当·弗格森在《公民社会史》中所写的见解。这篇文章阐述了弗格森的工作中产生的一系列影响,这些影响与理解当地的公民对话有关。弗格森的独特贡献在于他拒绝摒弃对特殊地区的单一情感。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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CiteScore
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