Sustaining democracy: folk epistemology and social conflict |
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Authors: | Robert B. Talisse |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Philosophy, Vanderbilt University , Nashville , TN , USA robert.talisse@vanderbilt.edu |
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Abstract: | When political philosophers ask whether there is a philosophical justification for democracy, they are most frequently concerned with one of two queries. The first has to do with the relative merits of democracy as compared with other regimes. The second query has to do with the moral bindingness of democratic outcomes. But there is a third query we may be engaging when we are looking for a philosophical justification of democracy: what reason can be given to democratic citizens to pursue democratic means of social change when they are confronted with a democratic result that seems to them seriously objectionable or morally intolerable? In this paper I develop an epistemological response to the third query. The thesis is that we have sufficient epistemological reasons to be democrats. The epistemological norms that we take ourselves to be governed by can be satisfied only under certain social conditions, and these social conditions are best secured under democracy. |
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Keywords: | democracy epistemology folk epistemology political justification |
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