Democracy After Liberalism: Pragmatism and Deliberative Politics

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Psychology Press, 2005 - 162 ˹éÒ
Can a democratic society propose an account of its practices and institutions that is at once adequately robust to answer antidemocrats and sufficiently inclusive to ein the assent of citizens who disagree about philosophical, moral, and religious essentials? A robust theory will draw upon controversial philosophical premises, and will thereby fail to respect the deep pluralism characteristic of a free society. Anything less than a robust philosophical theory, however, will raise questions of why anyone should prefer democracy to mild oligarchy or peaceful tyranny.
 

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Introduction
1
What Liberalism Is
15
Tension in Liberal Theory
33
Three Liberal Responses
55
The Deliberative Turn in Democratic Theory
77
A Pragmatist Conception of Deliberative Democracy
97
Toward a Deliberative Culture
123
Endnotes
143
Works Cited
151
Index
159
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Robert Talisse is Assistant Professor of PHilosophy at Vanderbilt University. He has written several books including On Dewey (2000), On Rawls (2001) and On James (2004). He is also the co-editor of the forthcoming American Philosophy: An Encyclopedia (Routledge).

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