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Nomocratic Pluralism

Plural Values, Negative Liberty, and the Rule of Law

Kenneth B. McIntyre

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Springer International Publishing img Link Publisher

Geisteswissenschaften, Kunst, Musik / Allgemeines, Lexika

Beschreibung

This book is a contribution to the ongoing conversation about value pluralism and its relation to political life. Its uniqueness lies in its insistence that the acceptance of value pluralism involves placing certain limitations on what is an acceptable form of government and what functions governments ought to be legitimately performing. In a new approach coined “nomocratic pluralism,” this volume argues that liberty under the rule of law, which is not merely liberty where the law is silent, is a key concept of liberty and cannot be subsumed by the other primary implications of the acceptance of value pluralism: that political communities must reject positive liberty as a political value, and place a high, but not absolute, priority on negative liberty as a political value. The concept of liberty under the rule of law is particularly suited to accommodate a great variety of individual and group conceptions of value and the moral good, and thus, along with negative liberty, should be a primary value for those who accept value pluralism.

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Schlagwörter

Liberty, Michael Oakeshott, Moral Pluralism, Practical reason, Value Pluralism, Positive Liberty, Utilitarianism, Isaiah Berlin, Moral Philosophy, Epistemological pluralism, Theoretical reason, Negative liberty, David Wiggins, John Rawls, Liberal Pluralism, Autonomy, Pluralism, Friedrich Hayek, Rule of law, Nomocratic liberalism