The Scepter of Reason: Public Discussion and Political Radicalism in the Origins of Constitutionalism

Voorkant
Springer Science & Business Media, 30 nov 2001 - 143 pagina's
It is not unusual that formal and informal discussions about the political system, its virtues, and its many defects, conclude in a discussion about impartiality. In fact, we all discuss impartiality when we talk about the best way to equally consider all viewpoints. We show our concerns with impartiality when, facing a particular problem, we try to figure out the best solution for all of us, given our conflicting interests. Thus, the quest for impartiality tends to be a common objective for most of us, although we normally disagree on its particular contents. Generally, these formal and informal discussions about impartiality conclude in a dispute between different "epistemic" conceptions. That is to say, simply, that in these situations we begin to disagree about best procedure to defme the more neutral, impartial solution for all of us.! Basically, trying to answer this question we tend to fluctuate between two opposite positions. According to some, the best way to know which is the more impartial solution is to resort to a process of collective reflection: in those situations we have to consider the opinions of all those who are possibly affected.
 

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Inhoudsopgave

Radicalism and Conservatism in England
1
The Crisis of Political Representation
4
The Radical Societies in England
7
The Radicals Epistemic View and their Egalitarinism
8
The Radicals Institutional Proposals
11
The Conservative Challenge
13
When Thomas Paine Confronted Edmund Burke
17
Radicalism and Populism in the US
21
The Problems of the System of Checks and Balances
71
The Conservative Reaction II Defending the New Institutions in the Federal Convention
75
The Federalists
77
The North American Constitution and Epistemic Elitism
79
Some Basic Tools
81
The Executive
83
The Senate
87
The Judiciary
91

A Government for the Majority
22
Town Meeting and Country Conventions
29
The Experiment of Unchecked Majorities
31
The Constitution of Pennsylvania in Motion
36
The Critical Period of American History
39
The Demand for Paper Money and CounterInstitutional Reactions
41
Institutional
43
The PaperMoney Crisis in Rhone Island
45
The Critics of RadicalismPopulism
49
The Conservative Reaction James Madison Institutional Reforms Against the Power of Factions
55
Defining the Vices of the Political System
56
Analyzing the Madisonian Definition of Factions
59
Representation
61
Minorities
64
Checks and Balances
67
The Conservative Model of Deliberation
95
The Elitist Character of the Conservative Model of Deliberation
98
Why Restricted Deliberation?
100
Radicalism and Public Deliberation
103
Why Public Deliberation?
105
Contemporary Political Institutions and Deliberation
111
The Possibility of Deliberation
112
The Judiciary and Public Dialogue
114
The Political Branches of Government and Deliberation
120
We the People and Interbranch Dialogue
123
Final Notes
126
Bibliography
131
Index
139
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