No. 12 (2017): New Trends in Philosophy
Invited Contributions

New Wine in Old Bottles: The Kind of Political Philosophy We Need

Beatrice Magni
University of Milan

Published 2017-08-09

Keywords

  • political philosophy,
  • normativity,
  • interpretation,
  • judgement

How to Cite

Magni, B. (2017). New Wine in Old Bottles: The Kind of Political Philosophy We Need. Phenomenology and Mind, (12), 30–39. https://doi.org/10.13128/Phe_Mi-21103

Abstract

There isn’t an overall consensus on the aim, meaning and role(s) of contemporary political philosophy. The relationship between philosophy and politics has been addressed and sharpened – not just today but in different ways and from various, separate and sometimes conflicting perspectives (Leopold & Stears, 2008). Regardless, the main aims, meaning and role of a field of study are key issues, and the quality and credibility of the research will most likely depend on our capacity to draw a path through this conflicting background. The purpose of this paper is to contribute to drafting elements of a new road map that could lead contemporary political philosophy out of this crippling impasse. It builds on a specific version of political theory – Walzer’s interpretation path reviewed (Walzer, 1985) – and addresses a kind of political practice able to reconcile political philosophy’s normative commitments – as is the case with the Rawls’ four roles of political philosophy (Rawls, 2007) – with its actual ambitions and conditions of achievability (Hall, 2015; Galston, 2010).

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