The indeterminacy failures of moral cosmopolitanism and liberal nationalism

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Standard

The indeterminacy failures of moral cosmopolitanism and liberal nationalism. / Scavenius, Theresa.

I: Journal of Global Ethics, Bind 13, Nr. 2, 2017, s. 206-220.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Scavenius, T 2017, 'The indeterminacy failures of moral cosmopolitanism and liberal nationalism', Journal of Global Ethics, bind 13, nr. 2, s. 206-220. https://doi.org/10.1080/17449626.2017.1364659

APA

Scavenius, T. (2017). The indeterminacy failures of moral cosmopolitanism and liberal nationalism. Journal of Global Ethics, 13(2), 206-220. https://doi.org/10.1080/17449626.2017.1364659

Vancouver

Scavenius T. The indeterminacy failures of moral cosmopolitanism and liberal nationalism. Journal of Global Ethics. 2017;13(2):206-220. https://doi.org/10.1080/17449626.2017.1364659

Author

Scavenius, Theresa. / The indeterminacy failures of moral cosmopolitanism and liberal nationalism. I: Journal of Global Ethics. 2017 ; Bind 13, Nr. 2. s. 206-220.

Bibtex

@article{c2574747d9ad4a72bf8984ba5b4cd08e,
title = "The indeterminacy failures of moral cosmopolitanism and liberal nationalism",
abstract = "Much of the discussion on cosmopolitanism and nationalism has focused on their different normative views. The purpose of this article is to shift the attention away from the normative debate to the metatheoretical argument about how we determine moral and political principles independently of each other. I argue that the discussion among proponents of cosmopolitanism and contextualist models boils down to latent methodological and metatheoretical assumptions about what selection of facts are considered politically relevant. In the article, I explore what I call {\textquoteleft}the indeterminacy failure{\textquoteright} of moral cosmopolitanism, that is, the view according to which moral principles fail to determine what political-institutional level might be preferable; and the {\textquoteleft}indeterminacy failure{\textquoteright} of liberal nationalism, that is, the view according to which national identity fails to determine moral principles. In opposition to dichotomist cosmopolitan models (including various nonideal types of moral cosmopolitanism) and alternative contextualist approaches (including the practice-dependence thesis and liberal nationalism), I promote a {\textquoteleft}split-level{\textquoteright} model that is set to avoid the difficulties in the other approaches. The split-level corrects the indeterminacy failures of cosmopolitanism and contextualism by distinguishing clearly between the level of moral theorising and the level of political theorising.",
keywords = "Cosmopolitanism, global justice, liberal nationalism, Miller, Sangiovanni",
author = "Theresa Scavenius",
year = "2017",
doi = "10.1080/17449626.2017.1364659",
language = "English",
volume = "13",
pages = "206--220",
journal = "Journal of Global Ethics",
issn = "1744-9626",
publisher = "Routledge",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The indeterminacy failures of moral cosmopolitanism and liberal nationalism

AU - Scavenius, Theresa

PY - 2017

Y1 - 2017

N2 - Much of the discussion on cosmopolitanism and nationalism has focused on their different normative views. The purpose of this article is to shift the attention away from the normative debate to the metatheoretical argument about how we determine moral and political principles independently of each other. I argue that the discussion among proponents of cosmopolitanism and contextualist models boils down to latent methodological and metatheoretical assumptions about what selection of facts are considered politically relevant. In the article, I explore what I call ‘the indeterminacy failure’ of moral cosmopolitanism, that is, the view according to which moral principles fail to determine what political-institutional level might be preferable; and the ‘indeterminacy failure’ of liberal nationalism, that is, the view according to which national identity fails to determine moral principles. In opposition to dichotomist cosmopolitan models (including various nonideal types of moral cosmopolitanism) and alternative contextualist approaches (including the practice-dependence thesis and liberal nationalism), I promote a ‘split-level’ model that is set to avoid the difficulties in the other approaches. The split-level corrects the indeterminacy failures of cosmopolitanism and contextualism by distinguishing clearly between the level of moral theorising and the level of political theorising.

AB - Much of the discussion on cosmopolitanism and nationalism has focused on their different normative views. The purpose of this article is to shift the attention away from the normative debate to the metatheoretical argument about how we determine moral and political principles independently of each other. I argue that the discussion among proponents of cosmopolitanism and contextualist models boils down to latent methodological and metatheoretical assumptions about what selection of facts are considered politically relevant. In the article, I explore what I call ‘the indeterminacy failure’ of moral cosmopolitanism, that is, the view according to which moral principles fail to determine what political-institutional level might be preferable; and the ‘indeterminacy failure’ of liberal nationalism, that is, the view according to which national identity fails to determine moral principles. In opposition to dichotomist cosmopolitan models (including various nonideal types of moral cosmopolitanism) and alternative contextualist approaches (including the practice-dependence thesis and liberal nationalism), I promote a ‘split-level’ model that is set to avoid the difficulties in the other approaches. The split-level corrects the indeterminacy failures of cosmopolitanism and contextualism by distinguishing clearly between the level of moral theorising and the level of political theorising.

KW - Cosmopolitanism

KW - global justice

KW - liberal nationalism

KW - Miller

KW - Sangiovanni

U2 - 10.1080/17449626.2017.1364659

DO - 10.1080/17449626.2017.1364659

M3 - Journal article

AN - SCOPUS:85029702430

VL - 13

SP - 206

EP - 220

JO - Journal of Global Ethics

JF - Journal of Global Ethics

SN - 1744-9626

IS - 2

ER -

ID: 197803618