How political is Rawls's political liberalism? By calling his
theory “political liberalism,” he means something, as
he says, “quite different … from what the reader is likely to
suppose.” In particular, he distances his theory from the
hurly-burly of electoral contests and the deal-making of legislative
log-rolling. By “political”, Rawls mainly intends to contrast
his theory with those that rely on metaphysical foundations. But
Rawls's theory is political in at least one ordinary sense: it is not
meant to be only a theory. He does not intend to offer the kind
of utopian account that stands across an unbridgeable gap from the
sentiments, opinions, and institutions of everyday politics. On the
contrary, as a “realistic utopia” his theory is a blueprint
for a building that can in fact be built. What part does politics play in
this picture? How much distance does Rawls put between political
liberalism and “what the reader is likely to suppose”? Does
politics as it is normally understood both popularly and in much
democratic theory recede into the far distance? Does it disappear
altogether?Russell Muirhead is Associate
Professor of Government at Harvard University (muirhead@fas.harvard.edu);
Nancy L Rosenblum is Senator Joseph Clark Professor of Ethics in Politics
and Government at Harvard University (nrosenblum@latte.harvard.edu). The
authors would like to thank Corey Brettschneider and Erin Kelly for
helpful comments.
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