Main | Browse | Search | Author Links | Manage ETD List | Review ETDs | Catalog ETDs | Help
 

Title page for ETD etd-04132005-184623


Type of Document Dissertation
Author Brink, Paul A.
Author's Email Address pbrink@eastern.edu
URN etd-04132005-184623
Title The Idea of a Pluralist Politics: Pluralism and Consensus in John Rawls's *Political Liberalism*
Degree Doctor of Philosophy
Department Political Science
Advisory Committee
Advisor Name Title
Edward A. Goerner Committee Chair
John Roos Committee Member
Michael Zuckert Committee Member
Paul J. Weithman Committee Member
Keywords
  • constitutional consensus
  • religion and politics
  • political discourse
  • pluralism
Date of Defense 2005-02-24
Availability unrestricted
Abstract

This work offers a close examination and critique of the notions of pluralism and consensus as these concepts are developed in the work of John Rawls. Focusing in particular on Rawls’s *Political Liberalism* and later writings, the dissertation argues that although Rawls does seek to take account of the diversity of beliefs and worldviews present in society, his model assumes a particular perspective on this diversity, stemming from larger and more controversial assumptions concerning the purposes and meaning of public discourse and political life. This assumption is made clear by reviewing Rawls’s theory particularly with regard to the relationship between comprehensive views and political conceptions of justice, Rawls’s arguments concerning human reason, and Rawls’s views concerning public political culture. The implication drawn is that this is only one way we might consider these matters and that by posing the problem differently, we may be able to consider other, more constructive, approaches.

The second stage of the dissertation develops an alternative approach that offers a creative response to the fact of pluralism, one less concerned with the strong consensus that Rawls seeks, rather placing a strong emphasis upon the importance of plurality in public life. What particularly distinguishes this approach is its concern to respect the ability of distinct voices to speak in politics using whatever language they find appropriate, enabling them to make contributions to political discussions while remaining faithful to their own communities, traditions, and religious beliefs. It views the strategy of attempting to locate a moral basis for political cooperation rooted in what citizens have in common--what they might be found to possess in spite of their pluralism--as a failed approach, and one that needs to be abandoned. Rather, if we can recognize that a political order is held together by things other than an ideological or doctrinal consensus concerning the moral nature of that order, the way becomes clear to consider the possibility of a politics of genuine pluralism, one in which civility is promoted even as particularity is preserved.

Files
  Filename       Size       Approximate Download Time (Hours:Minutes:Seconds) 
 
 28.8 Modem   56K Modem   ISDN (64 Kb)   ISDN (128 Kb)   Higher-speed Access 
  BrinkP042005.pdf 746.54 Kb 00:03:27 00:01:46 00:01:33 00:00:46 00:00:03

Browse All Available ETDs by ( Author | Department )

If you have more questions or technical problems, please Contact the Graduate School.