Should the state undertake the task of promoting the good life? Perfectionism is the idea that the state should promote the good life. Many philosophers have answered in the negative to the above question, so they reject perfectionism. This thesis aims to develop a moderate version of perfectionism, and seeks to defend it against several influential anti-perfectionist arguments, in particular the argument from public reason liberalism. I begin by examining public reason liberalism. John Rawls, Gerald Gaus, Martha Nussbaum, and many other political philosophers endorse public reason liberalism. They believe that state coercion should be publicly justified, and that perfectionism cannot meet the requirements of public reason. I argue that pub...
1. This book is aimed to discuss systematically liberal-perfectionist theory, offering a critical r...
Debates between political liberals and liberal perfectionists have been reinvigorated by Jonathan Qu...
Liberal institutions should respect citizens as autonomous agents. But what does this mandate requir...
Much of contemporary political philosophy revolves around debates over perfectionism, which is the v...
The six essays in this thesis all focus on the neutrality-perfectionism debate within contemporary l...
Much of the recent literature on political perfectionism has focused on dealing with objections to t...
Broadly understood, perfectionism is the view that the state may, or should, promote valuable concep...
Jonathan Quong's Liberalism Without Perfection elaborates a generally Rawlsian conception of public ...
This paper presents a dilemma for Matthew Kramer’s view, as defended in his Liberalism with Excellen...
This paper explores the question whether perfectionism amounts to a political doctrine that is more...
Is Rawls’s political liberalism so thoroughly aligned with the principle of neutrality that no chanc...
Debates within political theory about the “neutrality” of the liberal state and the degree to which ...
In Liberalism with Excellence Kramer offers an account of liberalism that gets at something liberal ...
Since the publication of J. Raz’s Morality of Freedom (Raz 1986), liberalism has often been interpre...
Political liberals aim to treat citizens as free and equal participants in a society governed by pri...
1. This book is aimed to discuss systematically liberal-perfectionist theory, offering a critical r...
Debates between political liberals and liberal perfectionists have been reinvigorated by Jonathan Qu...
Liberal institutions should respect citizens as autonomous agents. But what does this mandate requir...
Much of contemporary political philosophy revolves around debates over perfectionism, which is the v...
The six essays in this thesis all focus on the neutrality-perfectionism debate within contemporary l...
Much of the recent literature on political perfectionism has focused on dealing with objections to t...
Broadly understood, perfectionism is the view that the state may, or should, promote valuable concep...
Jonathan Quong's Liberalism Without Perfection elaborates a generally Rawlsian conception of public ...
This paper presents a dilemma for Matthew Kramer’s view, as defended in his Liberalism with Excellen...
This paper explores the question whether perfectionism amounts to a political doctrine that is more...
Is Rawls’s political liberalism so thoroughly aligned with the principle of neutrality that no chanc...
Debates within political theory about the “neutrality” of the liberal state and the degree to which ...
In Liberalism with Excellence Kramer offers an account of liberalism that gets at something liberal ...
Since the publication of J. Raz’s Morality of Freedom (Raz 1986), liberalism has often been interpre...
Political liberals aim to treat citizens as free and equal participants in a society governed by pri...
1. This book is aimed to discuss systematically liberal-perfectionist theory, offering a critical r...
Debates between political liberals and liberal perfectionists have been reinvigorated by Jonathan Qu...
Liberal institutions should respect citizens as autonomous agents. But what does this mandate requir...