Full Title (English)
Academicus International Scientific Journal
Publisher
Academicus International Scientific Journal
ISSN
20793715 (Printed Journal)
23091088 (Online Journal)
Journal Volume Number
12
Journal Issue Date (YYYY/MM)
2015/07
Full Title (English)
Pragmatism and Political Pluralism - Consensus and Pluralism
By (author)
Number of Pages
12
First Page
47
Last Page
58
Language of text
English
Publication Date
2015/07
Copyright
2015 Academicus
Main description
A pragmatist thinker like Nicholas Rescher deems the idea that social harmony must be predicated in consensus to be both dangerous and misleading. An essential problem of our time is the creation of political and social institutions that enable people to live together in peaceful and productive ways, despite the presence of not eliminable disagreements about theoretical and practical issues. Such remarks, in turn, strictly recall the “practical” impossibility of settling philosophical disputes by having recourse to abstract and aprioristic principles. In the circumstances, the social model of team members cooperating for a common purpose is unrealistic. A more adequate model is, instead, that of a classical capitalism where - in a sufficiently well developed system - both competition and rivalry manage somehow to foster the benefit of the entire community (theory of the “hidden hand”). Certainly the scientific community is one of the best examples of this that we have, although even in this case we must be careful not to give too idealized a picture of scientific research. Consensus, however, in the Western tradition is an ideal worth being pursued. At this point we are faced with two basic positions. On the one side (a) “consensualists” maintain that disagreement should be averted no matter what, while, on the other, (b) “pluralists” accept disagreement because they take dissensus to be an inevitable feature of the imperfect world in which we live. A pluralistic vision, therefore, tries to make dissensus tolerable, and not to eliminate it. All theories of idealized consensus present us with serious setbacks. This is the case, for instance, with Charles S. Peirce. As is well known, Peirce takes truth to be “the limit of inquiry,” i.e. either what science will discover in the (idealized) long run, or what it would discover if the human efforts were so extended. By taking this path, thus, truth is nothing but the ultimate consensus reached within the scientific community. We can be sure that, once a “final” answer to a question has been found which is thereafter maintained without change, that one is the truth we were looking for. This fascinating theory, however, has various unfortunate consequences. In our day the German philosopher Jürgen Habermas has in a way revived these Peircean insights, putting forward an influential theory to the effect that consensus indeed plays a key role in human praxis, so that the primary task of philosophy is to foster it by eliminating the disagreement which we constantly have to face in the course of our daily life. In his “communicative theory of consensus,” furthermore, he claims that human communication rests on an implicit commitment to a sort of “ideal speech situation” which is the normative foundation of agreement in linguistic matters. Consequently, the quest for consensus is a constitutive feature of our nature of (rational) human beings: rationality and consensus are tied together. A very strong consequence derives from Habermas’ premises: were we to abandon the search for consensus we would lose rationality, too, and this makes us understand that he views the pursuit of consensus as a regulative principle (rather than as a merely practical objective). Rescher opposes both Peirce’s eschatological view and Habermas’ regulative and idealized one.
ISSN
20793715
Journal Title
Academicus International Scientific Journal
Journal Issue Number
8
Journal Issue Date
2013
First Page
101
Full Title
Pragmatism and Science
Author
Marsonet, Michele [person]
ISSN
20793715
Journal Title
Academicus International Scientific Journal
Journal Issue Number
9
Journal Issue Date
2014
First Page
43
Full Title
Pragmatic Objectivity
Author
Marsonet, Michele [person]
Unstructured Citation
F. Fukuyama, The End of History and the Last Man, Free Press, New York 1992.
Unstructured Citation
C.J. Misak, Truth and the End of Inquiry. A Peircean Account of Truth, Clarendon Press, Oxford 1991.
Unstructured Citation
N. Rescher, The Limits of Science, University of California Press, Berkeley-Los Angeles 1984.
Unstructured Citation
N. Rescher, Cognitive Economy, University of Pittsburgh Press, Pittsburgh 1989.
Unstructured Citation
N. Rescher, Pluralism, Clarendon Press, Oxford 1993.