How “political” is Quong’s political liberalism?

pages: 47-56

Authors

  • Enrico Zoffoli Technische Universität Darmstadt

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.2298/FID1401047Z

Abstract

In this short paper I ask to what extent the sharp contrast between the political and the comprehensive, on which political liberals such as Rawls and Quong place primary emphasis, caters to a truly “political” conception of liberalism. I argue that Quong’s own take on this point is more distinctively “political” than Rawls’s, in that it assigns far less weight to citizens’ comprehensive doctrines. Indeed, I suggest that Quong’s exclusion of comprehensive doctrines (exemplified by his worries about an “overlapping consensus”) has more radical implications than Quong himself seems to think. In doing so, I offer a streamlined version of Quong’s critique, which encompasses two more or less direct criticisms of Rawls’s doctrine of the overlapping consensus. I will call them the “sincerity objection” and the “liberal objection”. Keywords: comprehensive doctrines, overlapping consensus, political liberalism, public reason, rawls

Published

30.01.2014

How to Cite

Zoffoli, E. (2014) “How ‘political’ is Quong’s political liberalism? pages: 47-56”, Filozofija i društvo/Philosophy and Society. Belgrade, Serbia, 25(1). doi: 10.2298/FID1401047Z.

Issue

Section

STUDIES AND ARTICLES