Rational Choice and Democratic Deliberation: A Theory of Discourse Failure

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Cambridge University Press, Jul 24, 2006 - Philosophy - 258 pages
In public political deliberation, people will err and lie in accordance with definite patterns. Such discourse failure results from behavior that is both instrumentally and epistemically rational. The deliberative practices of a liberal democracy (let alone repressive or non-democratic societies) cannot be improved so as to overcome the tendency for rational citizens to believe and say things at odds with reliable propositions of social science. The theory has several corollaries. One is that much contemporary political philosophy can be seen as an unsuccessful attempt to vindicate, on symbolic and moral grounds, the forms that discourse failure take on in public political deliberation. Another is that deliberative practices cannot be rescued even on non-epistemic grounds, such as social peace, impartiality, participation, and equality. To alleviate discourse failure, this book proposes to reduce the scope of majoritarian politics and enlarge markets.

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Contents

Section 1
5
Section 2
8
Section 3
13
Section 4
18
Section 5
24
Section 6
44
Section 7
53
Section 8
54
Section 19
161
Section 20
166
Section 21
168
Section 22
170
Section 23
179
Section 24
181
Section 25
183
Section 26
186

Section 9
65
Section 10
78
Section 11
87
Section 12
98
Section 13
105
Section 14
123
Section 15
126
Section 16
132
Section 17
142
Section 18
150
Section 27
189
Section 28
192
Section 29
194
Section 30
204
Section 31
211
Section 32
224
Section 33
228
Section 34
230
Section 35
242
Section 36
247

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