Overlapping Consensus


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Universal Human Rights in Theory and Practice


Universal Human Rights in Theory and Practice

Author: Jack Donnelly

language: en

Publisher: Cornell University Press

Release Date: 2003


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4. Choice of Means

Rawls Explained


Rawls Explained

Author: Paul Voice

language: en

Publisher: Open Court Publishing

Release Date: 2011


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In this context Rawls challenges us to see the world through the lens of fairness. Injustice can only be effectively challenged if we can articulate, to ourselves and to others, both why a situation is unjust and how we might move towards justice. Political philosophy at its best offers both an answer to the why of injustice and the how of political and economic change. --

Rawls and Habermas


Rawls and Habermas

Author: Todd Hedrick

language: en

Publisher: Stanford University Press

Release Date: 2010-06-01


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This book offers a comprehensive evaluation of the two preeminent post-WWII political philosophers, John Rawls and Jürgen Habermas. Both men question how we can be free and autonomous under coercive law and how we might collectively use our reason to justify exercises of political power. In pluralistic modern democracies, citizens cannot be expected to agree about social norms on the basis of common allegiance to comprehensive metaphysical or religious doctrines concerning persons or society, and both philosophers thus engage fundamental questions about how a normatively binding framework for the public use of reason might be possible and justifiable. Hedrick explores the notion of reasonableness underwriting Rawls's political liberalism and the theory of communicative rationality that sustains Habermas's procedural conception of the democratic constitutional state. His book challenges the Rawlsianism prevalent in the Anglo-American world today while defending Habermas's often poorly understood theory as a superior alternative.