165
127-28). In other words, it is unreasonable to seek to enact one’s own conception of the good
insofar as other’s have divergent conceptions of the good.
Here, Rawls essentially defines “reasonable” as “liberal.” Sandel (1996, 10) contends
that “Kantian liberals,” like Rawls, “draw a distinction between the ‘right’ and the ‘good’ –
between a framework of basic rights and liberties, and the conceptions
of the good that people
may choose to pursue within that framework.” If a liberal is one who (among other things)
prioritizes the right over the good – that is, they promote a society in which each individual has
the right to pursue their own conception of the good, so long as their doing so does not infringe
on other’s right to do the same – then this seems to be an effort to sneak in liberal principles
behind the guise of reasonability. Rawls defines reasonability as the willingness to bracket one’
view of the good in politics and view it as a purely private matter. As Mouffe (2000, 24-25) puts
it:
What is this if not an indirect form of asserting that reasonable persons are those
who accept the fundamentals of liberalism? In other words,
the distinction
between ‘reasonable’ and ‘unreasonable’ helps to draw a frontier between the
doctrines that accept the liberal principles and the ones that oppose them. It
means that its function is
political
and that it aims at discriminating between a
permissible pluralism of religious, moral or philosophical conceptions, as long as
those views can be relegated to the sphere of the private and
satisfy the liberal
principles – and what would be an unacceptable pluralism because it would
jeopardize the dominance of liberal principles in the public sphere.
Indeed, one of the key distinctions between non-liberal and liberal comprehensive doctrines
seems to be on this exact point: should society specify and promote a particular conception of the
good, or should it avoid specifying a conception of the good and allow each individual to decide
this question for herself? Mouffe’s point here is not that this is necessarily the wrong view, and I
my aim is not to argue against the priority of the right over the good. Rather, the relevant point
here is simply that not everyone agrees with the priority of the right over
the good or thinks that
166
our moral commitments ought to be left to the private sphere (including, for example,
Aristotelians, communitarians, and radical democrats). Coles (2005, 3), for example, highlights
the conflict that exists between the project of radical democracy and the Rawlsian doctrine of
political liberalism. Rawls’ approach disqualifies “a priori diverse advocates of more-radical
democracy as proponents of ‘comprehensive doctrines’” while disguising its
own political and
historically-specific nature. In other words, political liberalism sees “all but the most
instrumental movements toward radical democracy to be simply illegitimate attempts to
empower ‘a highly contentious view of the human good’” (Coles 2005, 39). Thus, in casting
reasonableness as a liberal prioritizing of the right over the good – and characterizing all who
believe that their vision of the good life ought to be the one that is shared by society as a whole
as “unreasonable” – “allows Rawls to present as a moral exigency what is really a political
decision” (Mouffe 2000, 24). Rawls imposes the liberal comprehensive doctrine, while
acting
as though he is treating all comprehensive doctrines equally.
33
As such, in the guise of
developing a pluralist account of democracy, I see Rawls as suppressing difference and
undercutting diversity.
Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: