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158"System" and "lifeworld": Habermas and the problem of holismPhilosophy and Social Criticism 15 (4): 381-401. 1989.
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1Critical theory and democracyIn David M. Rasmussen (ed.), The Handbook of Critical Theory, Wiley-blackwell. pp. 190--215. 1996.
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309New Philosophy of Social Science: Problems of IndeterminacyMIT Press. 1993.This article defends methodological and theoretical pluralism in the social sciences. While pluralistic, such a philosophy of social science is both pragmatic and normative. Only by facing the problems of such pluralism, including how to resolve the potential conflicts between various methods and theories, is it possible to discover appropriate criteria of adequacy for social scientific explanations and interpretations. So conceived, the social sciences do not give us fixed and universal feature…Read more
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87Democracy, solidarity and global exclusionPhilosophy and Social Criticism 32 (7): 809-817. 2006.
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82Constituting Humanity: Democracy, Human Rights, and Political CommunityCanadian Journal of Philosophy 35 (sup1): 227-252. 2005.Democracy and human rights have long been strongly connected in international covenants. In documents such as 1948 United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the 1966 International Covenant of Civil and Political Rights, democracy is justified both intrinsically in terms of popular sovereignty and instrumentally as the best way to “foster the full realization of all human rights.” Yet, even though they are human and thus universal rights, political rights are often surprisingly spe…Read more
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202Intelligibility, rationality and comparison: The rationality debates revisitedPhilosophy and Social Criticism 22 (1): 81-100. 1996.
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War and democracyIn Larry May (ed.), War: Essays in Political Philosophy, Cambridge University Press. 2008.
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131From Demos to Demoi: Democracy across BordersRatio Juris 18 (3): 293-314. 2005.. The paper discusses a needed double transformation of democracy, of its institutional form and its normative ideal, in three steps. First, the Author takes for granted that the empirical fact of the increasing scope and intensity of global interaction and interdependence are not sufficient to decide the issue between gradualists and transformationalists. Indeed, gradualists and transformationalists share an underlying conception that leads to a particular emphasis in modern theories on legal i…Read more
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200The Democratic Minimum: Is Democracy a Means to Global Justice?Ethics and International Affairs 19 (1): 101-116. 2005.I argue that transnational democracy provides the basis for a solution to the problem of the “democratic circle”—that in order for democracy to promote justice, it must already be just—at the international level. Transnational democracy could be a means to global justice. First, I briefly recount my argument for the “democratic minimum.” This minimum is freedom from domination, understood in a very specific sense. Employing Hannah Arendt's conception of freedom as “the capacity to begin,” the fo…Read more
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530Deliberative democracy and the epistemic benefits of diversityEpisteme 3 (3): 175-191. 2006.It is often assumed that democracies can make good use of the epistemic benefi ts of diversity among their citizenry, but difficult to show why this is the case. In a deliberative democracy, epistemically relevant diversity has three aspects: the diversity of opinions, values, and perspectives. Deliberative democrats generally argue for an epistemic form of Rawls' difference principle: that good deliberative practice ought to maximize deliberative inputs, whatever they are, so as to benefi t all…Read more
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469Realizing deliberative democracy as a mode of inquiry: Pragmatism, social facts, and normative theoryJournal of Speculative Philosophy 18 (1): 23-43. 2004.
St. Louis, Missouri, United States of America
Areas of Specialization
| Social and Political Philosophy |
| Philosophy of Social Science |
Areas of Interest
| Social and Political Philosophy |
| Philosophy of Social Science |