Determining the Common Good: A (Re-)Constructive Critique of the Proceduralist Paradigm

In recent years, philosophers, political scientists and sociologists have witnessed a renaissance of the concept of the common good in political discourse: political agents such as parties, civic networks and courts increasingly refer to this concept to justify their actions. This development gives...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Christian Blum
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Rosenberg & Sellier 2016-11-01
Series:Phenomenology and Mind
Subjects:
Online Access:https://oaj.fupress.net/index.php/pam/article/view/7098
_version_ 1828959379237371904
author Christian Blum
author_facet Christian Blum
author_sort Christian Blum
collection DOAJ
description In recent years, philosophers, political scientists and sociologists have witnessed a renaissance of the concept of the common good in political discourse: political agents such as parties, civic networks and courts increasingly refer to this concept to justify their actions. This development gives rise to the question whether normative political theory can provide a sensible definition of the common good which is compatible with pluralistic democratic society and which allows the identification of a specific range of well justified policies. The most influential account in this field is the theory of proceduralism which holds that the common good consists, by necessity, in the output of a political system whose procedures grant each citizen an equal say in collective decision-making. This account derives its initial plausibility from acknowledging citizens as agents who autonomously shape the welfare of their community on the basis of their subjective interests. However, it falls short of explaining how democratic decision-making good could possibly authorize actions that are detrimental to the common good. This problem is solved by a modification of the proceduralist paradigm that complements procedural criteria with objective and substantive standards that serve as limiting values for admissible policy outputs.
first_indexed 2024-12-14T09:05:47Z
format Article
id doaj.art-4f071ee40808418f95b316385c5146ee
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 2280-7853
2239-4028
language English
last_indexed 2024-12-14T09:05:47Z
publishDate 2016-11-01
publisher Rosenberg & Sellier
record_format Article
series Phenomenology and Mind
spelling doaj.art-4f071ee40808418f95b316385c5146ee2022-12-21T23:08:43ZengRosenberg & SellierPhenomenology and Mind2280-78532239-40282016-11-01310.13128/Phe_Mi-1961616435Determining the Common Good: A (Re-)Constructive Critique of the Proceduralist ParadigmChristian BlumIn recent years, philosophers, political scientists and sociologists have witnessed a renaissance of the concept of the common good in political discourse: political agents such as parties, civic networks and courts increasingly refer to this concept to justify their actions. This development gives rise to the question whether normative political theory can provide a sensible definition of the common good which is compatible with pluralistic democratic society and which allows the identification of a specific range of well justified policies. The most influential account in this field is the theory of proceduralism which holds that the common good consists, by necessity, in the output of a political system whose procedures grant each citizen an equal say in collective decision-making. This account derives its initial plausibility from acknowledging citizens as agents who autonomously shape the welfare of their community on the basis of their subjective interests. However, it falls short of explaining how democratic decision-making good could possibly authorize actions that are detrimental to the common good. This problem is solved by a modification of the proceduralist paradigm that complements procedural criteria with objective and substantive standards that serve as limiting values for admissible policy outputs.https://oaj.fupress.net/index.php/pam/article/view/7098common gooddemocracyproceduralism
spellingShingle Christian Blum
Determining the Common Good: A (Re-)Constructive Critique of the Proceduralist Paradigm
Phenomenology and Mind
common good
democracy
proceduralism
title Determining the Common Good: A (Re-)Constructive Critique of the Proceduralist Paradigm
title_full Determining the Common Good: A (Re-)Constructive Critique of the Proceduralist Paradigm
title_fullStr Determining the Common Good: A (Re-)Constructive Critique of the Proceduralist Paradigm
title_full_unstemmed Determining the Common Good: A (Re-)Constructive Critique of the Proceduralist Paradigm
title_short Determining the Common Good: A (Re-)Constructive Critique of the Proceduralist Paradigm
title_sort determining the common good a re constructive critique of the proceduralist paradigm
topic common good
democracy
proceduralism
url https://oaj.fupress.net/index.php/pam/article/view/7098
work_keys_str_mv AT christianblum determiningthecommongoodareconstructivecritiqueoftheproceduralistparadigm