Grounds of Political Legitimacy
Grounds of Political Legitimacy
Peter, Fabienne
Oxford University Press
05/2023
246
Dura
Inglês
9780198872382
15 a 20 dias
Descrição não disponível.
1. Political Legitimacy
1.1: What makes political decisions legitimate?
1.2: The normative concern with political legitimacy
1.3: The meta-normative perspective
2. The Political Will
2.1: Will-based conceptions of political legitimacy
2.2: Equal political authoritativeness
2.3: The arbitrariness objection
3. Political Factualism
3.1: Fact-based conceptions of political legitimacy
3.2: Making the right decisions
3.3: The accessibility objection
4. Political Cognitivism
4.1: Belief-based conceptions of political legitimacy
4.2: Cognitive political authority
4.3: The epistemic underdetermination objection
5. A Hybrid Account of the Grounds of Legitimacy
5.1: Going hybrid
5.2: Epistemic constraints on the political will
5.3: Responding to epistemic underdetermination
6. Political Deliberation
6.1: Justificationism about political legitimacy
6.2: Political justification and political deliberation
6.3: Well-ordered political deliberation
7. Epistemic Norms of Political Deliberation
7.1: Epistemic accountability in political deliberation
7.2: The justified belief norm
7.3: The responsiveness norm
8. Political Deference
8.1: What is political deference?
8.2: When is political deference required?
8.3: The limits of political deference
9. Responding to Political Disagreements
9.1: Political disagreements
9.2: Political disagreements and political justification
9.3: Why democracy?
Epilogue
Bibliography
1.1: What makes political decisions legitimate?
1.2: The normative concern with political legitimacy
1.3: The meta-normative perspective
2. The Political Will
2.1: Will-based conceptions of political legitimacy
2.2: Equal political authoritativeness
2.3: The arbitrariness objection
3. Political Factualism
3.1: Fact-based conceptions of political legitimacy
3.2: Making the right decisions
3.3: The accessibility objection
4. Political Cognitivism
4.1: Belief-based conceptions of political legitimacy
4.2: Cognitive political authority
4.3: The epistemic underdetermination objection
5. A Hybrid Account of the Grounds of Legitimacy
5.1: Going hybrid
5.2: Epistemic constraints on the political will
5.3: Responding to epistemic underdetermination
6. Political Deliberation
6.1: Justificationism about political legitimacy
6.2: Political justification and political deliberation
6.3: Well-ordered political deliberation
7. Epistemic Norms of Political Deliberation
7.1: Epistemic accountability in political deliberation
7.2: The justified belief norm
7.3: The responsiveness norm
8. Political Deference
8.1: What is political deference?
8.2: When is political deference required?
8.3: The limits of political deference
9. Responding to Political Disagreements
9.1: Political disagreements
9.2: Political disagreements and political justification
9.3: Why democracy?
Epilogue
Bibliography
Este título pertence ao(s) assunto(s) indicados(s). Para ver outros títulos clique no assunto desejado.
1. Political Legitimacy
1.1: What makes political decisions legitimate?
1.2: The normative concern with political legitimacy
1.3: The meta-normative perspective
2. The Political Will
2.1: Will-based conceptions of political legitimacy
2.2: Equal political authoritativeness
2.3: The arbitrariness objection
3. Political Factualism
3.1: Fact-based conceptions of political legitimacy
3.2: Making the right decisions
3.3: The accessibility objection
4. Political Cognitivism
4.1: Belief-based conceptions of political legitimacy
4.2: Cognitive political authority
4.3: The epistemic underdetermination objection
5. A Hybrid Account of the Grounds of Legitimacy
5.1: Going hybrid
5.2: Epistemic constraints on the political will
5.3: Responding to epistemic underdetermination
6. Political Deliberation
6.1: Justificationism about political legitimacy
6.2: Political justification and political deliberation
6.3: Well-ordered political deliberation
7. Epistemic Norms of Political Deliberation
7.1: Epistemic accountability in political deliberation
7.2: The justified belief norm
7.3: The responsiveness norm
8. Political Deference
8.1: What is political deference?
8.2: When is political deference required?
8.3: The limits of political deference
9. Responding to Political Disagreements
9.1: Political disagreements
9.2: Political disagreements and political justification
9.3: Why democracy?
Epilogue
Bibliography
1.1: What makes political decisions legitimate?
1.2: The normative concern with political legitimacy
1.3: The meta-normative perspective
2. The Political Will
2.1: Will-based conceptions of political legitimacy
2.2: Equal political authoritativeness
2.3: The arbitrariness objection
3. Political Factualism
3.1: Fact-based conceptions of political legitimacy
3.2: Making the right decisions
3.3: The accessibility objection
4. Political Cognitivism
4.1: Belief-based conceptions of political legitimacy
4.2: Cognitive political authority
4.3: The epistemic underdetermination objection
5. A Hybrid Account of the Grounds of Legitimacy
5.1: Going hybrid
5.2: Epistemic constraints on the political will
5.3: Responding to epistemic underdetermination
6. Political Deliberation
6.1: Justificationism about political legitimacy
6.2: Political justification and political deliberation
6.3: Well-ordered political deliberation
7. Epistemic Norms of Political Deliberation
7.1: Epistemic accountability in political deliberation
7.2: The justified belief norm
7.3: The responsiveness norm
8. Political Deference
8.1: What is political deference?
8.2: When is political deference required?
8.3: The limits of political deference
9. Responding to Political Disagreements
9.1: Political disagreements
9.2: Political disagreements and political justification
9.3: Why democracy?
Epilogue
Bibliography
Este título pertence ao(s) assunto(s) indicados(s). Para ver outros títulos clique no assunto desejado.