Abstract
This article investigates civic-political and cognitive participation
as they play out in democratic theory. Its core purpose is to develop
a conceptual-normative critique of the presupposition in liberal democratic
theory that these logics are mutually reinforcing and complementary. This
misunderstanding of a theoretical ambivalence contributes to inhibiting constructive
assessment of epistocratic*technocratic frameworks of democratic
interpretation and theory. I demonstrate that these logics circulate contrasting
views of democratic power and legitimacy and should be disentangled
to make sense of liberal democratic theoretical and political spaces. This critique
is then fed into a political-epistemological interrogation of post-truth
and alt-facts rhetorical registers in contemporary liberal democratic life, concluding
that neither logic of participation can harbor this unanticipated and
fundamentally nonaligned way of doing liberal democratic democracy.
Subject
Philosophy,Sociology and Political Science
Cited by
2 articles.
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