Democracy as a Telos

Social Philosophy and Policy 17 (1):203 (2000)
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Abstract

My aim in this essay is to distinguish and comment on a specific movement of thought which I shall call “democracy as a telos.” This expression refers to a conception of democracy, cultivated by normative political philosophers, in which all democratic potentialities have at last been realized. The result is thought to be a perfected political community. Democracy as a telos must thus be distinguished from the actual liberal democracies we enjoy at the end of the twentieth century. Indeed, democracy as a telos takes off from a specific rejection of such familiar institutions as elections, political parties, oppositions, a free press, and the rest, which are regarded, according to taste, as individualistic, bourgeois, atomistic, formal, and abstract. Democracy as a telos refers to the theories of reformers who, dissatisfied with our present condition, argue that only a radically transformed democracy can generate a real political community

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Philosophy and the Historical Understanding.Louis Arnaud Reid - 1964 - British Journal of Educational Studies 13 (1):90.
What Should we Expect from More Democracy?Mark Warren - 1996 - Political Theory 24 (2):241-270.

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