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The Normative Underpinnings of Democracy and the Balance between Morality and Legitimacy
Authors:David Martínez Rojas
Affiliation:1. Escuela de Trabajo Social, Facultad Psicología, Universidad San Sebastián, Santiago, Chile;2. Universidad Bernardo O’Higgins, Santiago, Chiledavid.martinez@uss.cl david.eduardo.martinez@gmail.com
Abstract:ABSTRACT

Jürgen Habermas’s political philosophy incorporates the view that legitimacy is immanent to law, even though it makes morality a central component of democratic legitimacy. Taking this as a starting point, the article examines one criticism that applies to Habermas’s political theory, insofar as he puts morality at the centre of his reconstruction of the concept of legitimacy. Habermas claims that the moral point of view justifies only those norms that embody universalizable interests and rules out those that embody particular interests. Therefore, the objection is that particular citizens will have no reason to endorse these norms and act according to them because these norms do not incorporate their interests. The article goes on to show that Habermas can successfully answer this objection by means of the principle of discourse. The principle performs this function, inasmuch as it has a post-Kantian nature. On the one hand, it incorporates Kantian autonomy. And on the other, the Hegelian insight that autonomy has to be actualized through modern institutions and practices.
Keywords:Habermas  morality  legitimacy  rational discourse  democracy  post-Kantian
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