Abstract
AbstractThe role of religion in politics is problematic for liberal
legitimacy. Religion is often restrained by a public reason
requirement, but this creates cognitive burdens that asymmetrically
impact religious citizens creating unequal barriers to accessing the
political system, which is itself problematic for liberal
legitimacy. Habermas’ institutional translation proviso balances the
competing concerns of liberal legitimacy, which aims to offset the
asymmetry disadvantaging religious citizens. This paper analyzes the
problem and Habermas’ solution. It concludes that Habermas does not
alleviate the asymmetry created by the public reason requirement to
the greatest extent possible and so does not equalize the barriers
to accessing the political system as much as he might. The
reciprocal translation proviso provides an alternative that balances
the competing components of liberal legitimacy more fully and
alleviates the asymmetry and inequality of barriers to political
access to the greatest extent possible while preserving the public
reason requirement.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Sociology and Political Science,Religious studies
Cited by
1 articles.
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