Representation, Epistemic Democracy, and Political Parties in John Stuart Mill and José de Alencar

Detalhes bibliográficos
Autor(a) principal: Dalaqua,Gustavo Hessmann
Data de Publicação: 2018
Tipo de documento: Artigo
Idioma: eng
Título da fonte: Brazilian Political Science Review
Texto Completo: http://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1981-38212018000200201
Resumo: John Stuart Mill and José de Alencar lived at the same time and wrote about the same issues, and yet the connections between their political theories remain unexplored. Seeking to offer a comparison of both theories, this article argues that reading Mill's “Considerations on Representative Government” (1977b) vis-à-vis Alencar's “Systema representativo” (1868) brings to the fore two aspects of Mill's political theory that Mill scholars usually overlook: 01. political representation is endowed with constructivist power; 02. epistemic democracy and agonistic democracy can be mutually reinforcing. A comparative reading between Mill and Alencar reveals that representation does not simply reproduce or mirror pre-given ideas and identities, but also constructs them. In addition, it reveals that epistemic democracy is not at odds with agonistic democracy. To be sure, both Alencar and Mill were agonistic democrats precisely because they were epistemic democrats. They recognized conflict as a fundamental aspect of democracy because they believed political disagreement weeds out inaccurate information, expands the knowledge of politicians, and leads to the construction of more reasonable, wiser decisions. Thus, Alencar and Mill thought political parties were crucial to democracy insofar as they injected conflict into political debate.
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spelling Representation, Epistemic Democracy, and Political Parties in John Stuart Mill and José de AlencarJosé de AlencarJohn Stuart Millrepresentative constructivismepistemic democracypolitical partiesJohn Stuart Mill and José de Alencar lived at the same time and wrote about the same issues, and yet the connections between their political theories remain unexplored. Seeking to offer a comparison of both theories, this article argues that reading Mill's “Considerations on Representative Government” (1977b) vis-à-vis Alencar's “Systema representativo” (1868) brings to the fore two aspects of Mill's political theory that Mill scholars usually overlook: 01. political representation is endowed with constructivist power; 02. epistemic democracy and agonistic democracy can be mutually reinforcing. A comparative reading between Mill and Alencar reveals that representation does not simply reproduce or mirror pre-given ideas and identities, but also constructs them. In addition, it reveals that epistemic democracy is not at odds with agonistic democracy. To be sure, both Alencar and Mill were agonistic democrats precisely because they were epistemic democrats. They recognized conflict as a fundamental aspect of democracy because they believed political disagreement weeds out inaccurate information, expands the knowledge of politicians, and leads to the construction of more reasonable, wiser decisions. Thus, Alencar and Mill thought political parties were crucial to democracy insofar as they injected conflict into political debate.Associação Brasileira de Ciência Política2018-01-01info:eu-repo/semantics/articleinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersiontext/htmlhttp://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1981-38212018000200201Brazilian Political Science Review v.12 n.2 2018reponame:Brazilian Political Science Reviewinstname:Associação Brasileira de Ciência Política (ABCP)instacron:ABCP10.1590/1981-3821201800020004info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessDalaqua,Gustavo Hessmanneng2018-05-18T00:00:00Zoai:scielo:S1981-38212018000200201Revistahttps://brazilianpoliticalsciencereview.org/https://old.scielo.br/oai/scielo-oai.phpbpsr@brazilianpoliticalsciencareview.org||bpsr@bpsr.org.br1981-38211981-3821opendoar:2018-05-18T00:00Brazilian Political Science Review - Associação Brasileira de Ciência Política (ABCP)false
dc.title.none.fl_str_mv Representation, Epistemic Democracy, and Political Parties in John Stuart Mill and José de Alencar
title Representation, Epistemic Democracy, and Political Parties in John Stuart Mill and José de Alencar
spellingShingle Representation, Epistemic Democracy, and Political Parties in John Stuart Mill and José de Alencar
Dalaqua,Gustavo Hessmann
José de Alencar
John Stuart Mill
representative constructivism
epistemic democracy
political parties
title_short Representation, Epistemic Democracy, and Political Parties in John Stuart Mill and José de Alencar
title_full Representation, Epistemic Democracy, and Political Parties in John Stuart Mill and José de Alencar
title_fullStr Representation, Epistemic Democracy, and Political Parties in John Stuart Mill and José de Alencar
title_full_unstemmed Representation, Epistemic Democracy, and Political Parties in John Stuart Mill and José de Alencar
title_sort Representation, Epistemic Democracy, and Political Parties in John Stuart Mill and José de Alencar
author Dalaqua,Gustavo Hessmann
author_facet Dalaqua,Gustavo Hessmann
author_role author
dc.contributor.author.fl_str_mv Dalaqua,Gustavo Hessmann
dc.subject.por.fl_str_mv José de Alencar
John Stuart Mill
representative constructivism
epistemic democracy
political parties
topic José de Alencar
John Stuart Mill
representative constructivism
epistemic democracy
political parties
description John Stuart Mill and José de Alencar lived at the same time and wrote about the same issues, and yet the connections between their political theories remain unexplored. Seeking to offer a comparison of both theories, this article argues that reading Mill's “Considerations on Representative Government” (1977b) vis-à-vis Alencar's “Systema representativo” (1868) brings to the fore two aspects of Mill's political theory that Mill scholars usually overlook: 01. political representation is endowed with constructivist power; 02. epistemic democracy and agonistic democracy can be mutually reinforcing. A comparative reading between Mill and Alencar reveals that representation does not simply reproduce or mirror pre-given ideas and identities, but also constructs them. In addition, it reveals that epistemic democracy is not at odds with agonistic democracy. To be sure, both Alencar and Mill were agonistic democrats precisely because they were epistemic democrats. They recognized conflict as a fundamental aspect of democracy because they believed political disagreement weeds out inaccurate information, expands the knowledge of politicians, and leads to the construction of more reasonable, wiser decisions. Thus, Alencar and Mill thought political parties were crucial to democracy insofar as they injected conflict into political debate.
publishDate 2018
dc.date.none.fl_str_mv 2018-01-01
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publisher.none.fl_str_mv Associação Brasileira de Ciência Política
dc.source.none.fl_str_mv Brazilian Political Science Review v.12 n.2 2018
reponame:Brazilian Political Science Review
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