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Reasonable Democracy : Listening, Conflict, and Citizenship - Simone Chambers

Reasonable Democracy

Listening, Conflict, and Citizenship

By: Simone Chambers

Paperback | 5 September 2000

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In Reasonable Democracy, Simone Chambers describes, explains, and defends a discursive politics inspired by the work of J rgen Habermas. In addition to comparing Habermas's ideas with other non-Kantian liberal theories in clear and accessible prose, Chambers develops her own views regarding the role of discourse and its importance within liberal democracies.Beginning with a deceptively simple question--"Why is talking better than fighting?"--Chambers explains how the idea of talking provides a rich and compelling view of morality, rationality, and political stability. She considers talking as a way for people to respect each other as moral agents, as a way to reach reasonable and legitimate solutions to disputes, and as a way to reproduce and strengthen shared understandings. In the course of this argument, she defends modern universalist ethics, communicative rationality, and what she calls a "discursive political culture," a concept that locates the political power of discourse and deliberation not so much in institutions of democratic decision-making as in the type of conversations that go on around these institutions. While discourse and deliberation cannot replace voting, bargaining, or compromise, Chambers argues, it is important to maintain a background moral conversation in which to anchor other activities.As an extended case study, Chambers examines the conversation about language rights that has been taking place for more than twenty years in Quebec. A culture of dialogue, she shows, has proved a positive and powerful force in resolving some of the disagreements between the two linguistic communities there.

Industry Reviews
"An extremely learned, carefully argued defense of Habermas's theory of communicative rationality as a basis for conceptualizing deliberative democracy."-American Political Science Review "Simone Chambers does a marvelous job of showing how Habermas's conception of communicative rationality and ethics provides the best philosophical perspective from which to make sense of the idea of deliberative democracy."-Stephen K. White, Virginia Tech

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