民主病人的案例:认知民主走向绿色

Andrés Cruz
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引用次数: 1

摘要

在主流民主理论中,非代理人只被间接考虑:当且仅当一群代理人关心他们时,他们的利益才重要。在本文中,我认为民主患者,其利益受到民主决策影响的非代理人,在民主理论中有自己的一席之地。也就是说,他们有权在民主决策过程中公平考虑他们的利益。我通过David Estlund提出的认知民主来为民主病人辩护。正如埃斯特伦德所主张的那样,如果民主程序应该在认识论上旨在实现正确的决定,那么它们应该像陪审团一样公平地考虑所有相关证据。由于民主患者的利益受到民主决策的影响,我认为它们确实可以通过全影响原则(All-Affected Principle)作为相关证据,这是民主的核心。然后我提出了一些民主病人的候选人,包括年幼的孩子,严重认知障碍的人,不存在的未来人类,有知觉的动物,甚至没有知觉的生命形式。他们是否成为民主病人,取决于人们对代理、利益以及民主结果对利益的影响所接受的理论。我通过讨论未来人类作为可能的候选人来说明这一点。最后,我简要探讨了从我的论点中衍生出来的设计现实世界机构的挑战,概述了它们应该瞄准的目标以及它们可能面临的一些问题。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Case for Democratic Patients: Epistemic Democracy Goes Green
In mainstream democratic theory, non-agents are only considered indirectly: their interests matter if and only if a group of agents cares about them. In this paper, I argue that democratic patients, non-agents whose interests are affected by democratic decisions, have a place of their own in democratic theory. That is, they are entitled to the fair consideration of their interests in the democratic decision-making process. I defend the case for democratic patients by building upon the idea of epistemic democracy as proposed by David  Estlund . If democratic procedures ought to be epistemically designed towards achieving right decisions, as  Estlund argues, they should consider all relevant evidence fairly, like a jury does. Since democratic patients’ interests are affected by democratic decisions, I argue that they do count as relevant evidence via the All-Affected Principle, which lies at the core of democracy. Then I present some candidates for being democratic patients, which include young children, severely cognitively disabled humans, non-existent future humans, sentient animals and even non-sentient life forms. Whether they turn out to be democratic patients depends on what theories one accepts about agency, interests, and the impact of the outcomes of democracy on interests. I illustrate that point by discussing future humans as possible candidates. Finally, I briefly explore the challenge of designing real-world institutions derived from my argument, outlining what objectives they should aim for and some of the problems they might face.
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