The Problem of a Rational Consensus: J. Rawls versus J.-F. Lyotard
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Nida Vasiliauskaitė
Published 2004-09-29
https://doi.org/10.15388/Problemos.2004.66.6635
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Keywords

Rawls
Lyotard
rationality
consensus
differend

How to Cite

Vasiliauskaitė, N. (2004) “The Problem of a Rational Consensus: J. Rawls versus J.-F. Lyotard”, Problemos, 66, pp. 74–83. doi:10.15388/Problemos.2004.66.6635.

Abstract

The article deals with the problem of a rational consensus in contemporary political philosophy, aroused by postmodern critique of modern Reason. In this context two important ideas – an “Overlapping consensus” of John Rawls and “the Differend” of Jean-François Lyotard – are discussed, compared and criticized. Paradoxical implications produced by a common antifoundationalist approach are pointed out. An attempt is made to show that in both cases consensus or disensus are already presupposed in advance: the kind of the thesis depends upon suppositions about the nature of epistemic pluralism and its link with the political.
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