Not Monsters After All: How Political Deliberation Can Build Moral Communities Amidst Deep Difference

Rachel Wahl
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Political deliberation typically aims to improve the legitimacy of collective decisions. This article proposes a different function for deliberation, which is both more modest but nevertheless critical in public life: the legitimation not of decisions, but of fellow citizens. This outcome is especially important in polarized societies, where what divides citizens is not only differences in conceptions of the good, but also the perception that the other side is not motivated by any good at all. Drawing on the work of Hans-Georg Gadamer and Charles Taylor as well as on an empirical study of political dialogue between university students after the 2016 election in the United States, I show how a particular form of political dialogue can help interlocuters recognize the conceptions of the good that motivate others’ views. Such learning can help create what Taylor suggests is necessary for diverse democracies: a shared understanding that does not obscure and in fact brings to the fore principled and significant divisions. Such recognition has the potential to diminish support for violence and the disenfranchisement of political opponents.
毕竟不是怪物:政治审议如何在深刻的差异中建立道德共同体
政治审议通常旨在提高集体决策的合法性。本文提出了审议的另一种功能,它在公共生活中更为温和,但却至关重要:不是决定的合法性,而是公民同胞的合法性。这一结果在两极分化的社会中尤为重要,在两极分化的社会中,公民之间的分歧不仅在于对善的概念不同,还在于认为对方根本没有任何善的动机。根据汉斯-乔治·伽达默尔(Hans-Georg Gadamer)和查尔斯·泰勒(Charles Taylor)的工作,以及对2016年美国大选后大学生之间政治对话的实证研究,我展示了一种特殊形式的政治对话如何帮助对话者认识到激发他人观点的好概念。这样的学习可以帮助创造泰勒所建议的多样化民主所必需的东西:一种共同的理解,这种理解不会模糊,实际上会突出原则性和重大的分歧。这种承认有可能减少对暴力的支持和剥夺政治对手的选举权。
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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