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(Reference retrieved automatically from Web of Science through information on FAPESP grant and its corresponding number as mentioned in the publication by the authors.)

Being a Progressive in Divinitia

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Author(s):
Rudas, Sebastian
Total Authors: 1
Document type: Journal article
Source: CROATIAN JOURNAL OF PHILOSOPHY; v. 19, n. 55, p. 37-53, 2019.
Web of Science Citations: 0
Abstract

In Liberalism's Religion, Cecile Laborde defends a theory of liberal secularism that is compatible with a minimal separation of religion and politics. According to her view, liberal state she calls it Divinitia that symbolically establishes the historic majority's religious doctrine and inspires some of its legislation on a conservative interpretation of such religious tradition can be legitimate. In this article I analyse how is it like to belong to the minority of liberal progressive citizens in a country like Divinitia. I argue that their political activism will be defeated by Divinitia's status quo on at least four different grounds. First, in virtue of being a minority, liberal progressive citizens would rarely obtain democratic victories; second, the conservative majority could rightly argue that they do not have reasons to-compromise their views in order to accommodate progressives'; third, the conservative majority can rightly complain that counter-majoritarian initiatives advanced by progressives are unfair; and four, Diuinitia's public reason reproduces an asymmetry, for religiously inspired reasons can be accessible and therefore justificatory in politics, while the reasons progressives would desire to present in public deliberation would not be accessible to their conservative fellow citizens. (AU)

FAPESP's process: 15/12948-4 - Secularism, Liberalism, and Pluralism in Catholic-Majoritarian Contexts: Conceptual and Practical Problems
Grantee:Sebastián Rudas Neyra
Support Opportunities: Scholarships in Brazil - Post-Doctoral