Civic Friendship, the Burdens of Politics, and the Ethics of Attention
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https://hdl.handle.net/10037/35997Date
2024-11-22Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Author
Kapelner, Zsolt KristofAbstract
In Philosophizing the Indefensible Shmuel Nili proposes strategic political theory as a productive and respectful manner for political philosophy to engage with unreasonable political views. One objection to his proposal he considers is that strategic political theory gives ‘excessive attention' to unreasonable views. In this paper I offer a perspective on this objection which Nili does not consider and which, I believe, has important consequences for his account. The strategic theorist pays engaged and respectful attention to unreasonable views for the sake of showing respect and upholding ties of civic friendship with unreasonable citizens. Yet such attention might inadvertently disrespect and damage ties of civic friendship with those disadvantaged by the indefensible policies of the unreasonable. I consider how this consideration bears on Nili’s argument for strategic theorizing based on the practical necessity to alleviate what he calls ‘the burdens of politics'.
Publisher
De GruyterCitation
Kapelner. Civic Friendship, the Burdens of Politics, and the Ethics of Attention. Analyse & Kritik. Zeitschrift für Sozialtheorie. 2024Metadata
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