From metaphysical to political: Does political culture make Rawls’s principle of tolerance morally relativistic?
From metaphysical to political: Does political culture make Rawls’s principle of tolerance morally relativistic?
Author(s): Bojan VranićSubject(s): Political Philosophy, Political Theory
Published by: Fakultet političkih nauka Univerziteta u Banjoj Luci
Keywords: Moral relativism; political culture; Rawls; political liberalism; metaphysics; concepts;
Summary/Abstract: Te aim of this paper is to analyze Rawls’s conception of political (public) culture, exploring whether his principle of tolerance (Political Liberalism) falls in moral relativism. The analysis consists of three sections. Firstly, the author introduces different critical accounts on Rawls’s theory and identifies where they go wrong. Secondly, the author delineates the intellectual tradition of social liberalism from which sprang Rawls’s conception, showing that he significantly alters the key ideas of dominant liberal justice of the Western world. In the final section of the paper it is argued that Rawls’s idea of political culture is a cornerstone of just society and the spring of tolerance, providing arguments in favor of the idea that Rawls’s conception of political liberalism is not morally relativistic but it is, however, in line with liberal pluralism.
Journal: Politeia - Naučni časopis Fakulteta političkih nauka u Banjoj Luci za društvena pitanja
- Issue Year: 7/2017
- Issue No: 14
- Page Range: 9-22
- Page Count: 14
- Language: English