Micah Schwartzman
University of Virginia
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Politics, Philosophy & Economics | 2004
Micah Schwartzman
A common objection to the idea of public reason is that it cannot resolve fundamental political issues because it excludes too many moral considerations from the political domain. Following an important but often overlooked distinction drawn by Gerald Gaus, there are two ways to understand this objection. First, public reason is often said to be inconclusive because it fails to generate agreement on fundamental political issues. Second, and more radically, some critics have claimed that public reason is indeterminate because it cannot provide any citizen with sufficient reason(s) for making important political decisions. Against the first of these objections, I argue that the purpose of public reason is not to end reasonable disagreement. Rather, it is to provide a suitable framework of values and principles within which citizens may resolve their moral and political differences. Against the second objection, I argue, first, that the indeterminacy of public reason is much less common than its inconclusiveness; and, second, that there are second-order decision-making strategies that may enable citizens to cope with cases of indeterminacy. The incompleteness of public reason, whether it takes the form of inconclusiveness or indeterminacy, is not a reason for citizens to abandon their commitment to public justification.
Political Theory | 2005
Micah Schwartzman
John Locke’s theory of toleration has been criticized as having little relevance for politics today because it rests on controversial theological foundations. Although there have been some recent attempts to develop secular, or publicly accessible, arguments out of Locke’s writings, these tend to obscure and distort the religious arguments that Locke used to defend toleration. More importantly, these efforts ignore the role that religious arguments may play in supporting the development of a normative consensus on the legitimacy of liberal political principles. Bracketing the search for publicly accessible justifications makes it possible to appreciate the continued relevance of Locke’s religious arguments for toleration.
Journal of Political Philosophy | 2011
Micah Schwartzman
Journal of Moral Philosophy | 2012
Micah Schwartzman
University of Chicago Law Review | 2012
Micah Schwartzman
Archive | 2014
Micah Schwartzman
Archive | 2013
Richard Schragger; Micah Schwartzman
Archive | 2016
Micah Schwartzman; Chad Flanders; Zoe Robinson
Boston University Law Review | 2014
Micah Schwartzman
Archive | 2011
Micah Schwartzman