Political Pluralism, Disagreement and Justice

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Buchanan's Constitutional Economics
Buchanan’s Constitutional Economics
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Common Knowledge Effect
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conservative bias
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Deep Disagreement
Deliberative Democracy
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deliberative models
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democracy
diversity
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Evaluative Diversity
Evolutionary Competition
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Karl popper
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Modus Vivendi
Non-normative Facts
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political disagreement
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Polycentric Approach
polycentric democracy
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reasonable disagreement
Search Space
Sequential Persuasion
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Thompson's Approach
Thompson’s Approach

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367728892
  • Weight: 430g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 18 Dec 2020
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
  • Language: English
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This book poses the question: How can we organize society in such a way that our disagreement about facts and norms works to the benefit of everyone? In response, it makes the argument for polycentric democracy, a political arrangement consisting of various political units that enjoy different degrees of independence.

It is argued that to progress towards justice, we first need to change our attitude towards reasonable disagreement. Theorists have always viewed reasonable disagreement as nuisance, if not as a threat. However, this work puts forward that the diversity of perspectives which underlie reasonable disagreement should be viewed as a resource to be harvested rather than a threat to be tamed. Resting on two key arguments, the author proposes the idea of polycentric democracy as the most capable method of making pluralism productive. The book explores what such a political order might look like and concludes that only an institutional system which is capable of profiting from diversity, such as polycentric democracy, might reasonably be expected to generate an overlapping consensus.

Continuing in the tradition of Karl Popper and Friedrich August von Hayek, this book lies at the intersection of philosophy, political economy and political theory. It will be of great interest to academics and scholars working in philosophy, politics and economics.

Julian F. Müller is a Research Associate at the University of Hamburg, Germany. He works at the intersection between political philosophy, social epistemology and political economy. His research into political disagreement has won several research awards.

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