什么是“民主社会”?

Joshua Cohen
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引用次数: 11

摘要

约翰·罗尔斯的《正义论》告诉我们正义需要什么,一个公正的社会应该是什么样子,以及正义如何与一个公正社会成员的整体利益相适应。但它并没有告诉我们很多关于一个公正社会的政治:关于公共辩论、政治动员、选举竞争、有组织的运动、立法决策或行政管理的过程,这些都构成了现代民主政治。事实上,在《正义论》的索引中,既没有“民主”一词,也没有它的任何同源词。唯一得到长期关注的民主传统问题是多数决定原则的基础,这个问题本身主要是在立法决定的规范模式的范围内解决的,与实际立法程序的关系不确定。这种对民主的相对忽视——更广泛地说,对政治的忽视——可能会给人留下这样的印象,即罗尔斯的正义理论在某种程度上诋毁了民主,也许是把民主从属于一种正义的概念,这种概念是通过哲学推理来捍卫的,是由与政治隔绝的法官和行政人员来实施的。因此,当罗尔斯在《正义论》第一版的序言中说,他的正义即公平的概念“构成了民主社会最合适的道德基础”时,人们感到有些惊讶,当然,从1980年杜威讲座开始,正义即公平与民主有着特别密切的联系这一观点就一直很突出。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
What is a ‘Democratic Society’?
JUSTICE AS FAIRNESS John Rawls's A Theory of Justice tells us what justice requires, what a just society should look like, and how justice fits into the overall good of the members of a just society. But it does not tell us much about the politics of a just society: about the processes of public argument, political mobilization, electoral competition, organized movements, legislative decision making, or administration comprised within the politics of a modern democracy. Indeed, neither the term “democracy” nor any of its cognates has an entry in the index to A Theory of Justice . The only traditional problem of democracy that receives much sustained attention is the basis of majority rule, which is itself addressed principally in the context of a normative model of legislative decisions with an uncertain relation to actual legislative processes. This relative inattention to democracy – to politics more generally – may leave the impression that Rawls's theory of justice in some way denigrates democracy, perhaps subordinating it to a conception of justice that is defended through philosophical reasoning and is to be implemented by judges and administrators insulated from politics. So it comes as something of a surprise when Rawls says, in the preface to the first edition of Theory of Justice , that his conception of justice as fairness “constitutes the most appropriate moral basis for a democratic society .” To be sure, the idea that justice as fairness has a particularly intimate democratic connection is prominent from the 1980 Dewey Lectures forward.
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