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In Poeticized Culture, James Hersh shows the John Rawls' framework
of liberal public reason (Political Liberalism, 1993), within which
he proposes his scheme of justice as fairness, includes an
unacknowledged call for a Richard Rortian 'poeticized culture.'
Hersh argues that, despite Rawls's intentions, his framework within
which he proposes justice as fairness demands a Rortian ironic
perspective and does not allow for citizens to hold absolute or
literal religious beliefs. Hersh argues that this Rortian
perspective makes Rawls's justice as fairness the most reasonable
scheme for the world's emerging democracies, particularly for those
democracies emerging in the Middle East where literal religious
beliefs are held with such fervor.
In Poeticized Culture, James Hersh shows the John Rawls' framework
of liberal public reason (Political Liberalism, 1993), within which
he proposes his scheme of justice as fairness, includes an
unacknowledged call for a Richard Rortian "poeticized culture."
Hersh argues that, despite Rawls's intentions, his framework within
which he proposes justice as fairness demands a Rortian ironic
perspective and does not allow for citizens to hold absolute or
literal religious beliefs. Hersh argues that this Rortian
perspective makes Rawls's justice as fairness the most reasonable
scheme for the world's emerging democracies, particularly for those
democracies emerging in the Middle East where literal religious
beliefs are held with such fervor.
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