Liberální universalismus dnes

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dc.contributor.author Cíbik, Matej cze
dc.date.accessioned 2019-05-22T08:38:28Z
dc.date.available 2019-05-22T08:38:28Z
dc.date.issued 2018 cze
dc.identifier.issn 1804-1302 cze
dc.identifier.uri https://hdl.handle.net/10195/72794
dc.description.abstract Liberal thought – especially when inspired by Kant – always had universalistic ambitions. Faith in its own philosophical dominance is a natural consequence of liberal thinking, starting with its inception during the enlightenment. However, these tendencies are deeply problematic. The relation of liberalism towards the future (postulating its “final victory”) and towards the past (adoption of ahistorical and acultural normative standpoint) is in the final analysis indefensible. However, the fact that liberal thinking cannot defend its commonplace presuppositions does not mean that it is indefensible as such. It might still be superior to other types of political regimes. The second part of the article consists of an argument that defends liberalism without its universalist ambitions. It starts from a concept of recognition and claims that liberal regimes are currently the only ones that can provide a generally acceptable recognition to their citizens. This is true not only for what is traditionally conceived as “western world”, but across the globe. The reason for this unique standing of liberal regimes is a fact (prominently defended by Charles Taylor) that people in contemporary societies do not understand their value as mediated through some external entity (tribe, church, family, nation). They perceive the source of their value as coming from “inside”. This is deeply problematic for illiberal regimes – a challenge they cannot overcome, but that liberal regimes can. cze
dc.format p. 64-79 cze
dc.language.iso cze cze
dc.relation.ispartof Acta Politologica, volume 10, issue: 3 cze
dc.rights open access cze
dc.subject liberalismus cze
dc.subject universalismus cze
dc.subject Kant cze
dc.subject Fukuyama cze
dc.subject liberalism eng
dc.subject universalism eng
dc.subject recognition eng
dc.subject Kant eng
dc.subject Fukuyama eng
dc.title Liberální universalismus dnes cze
dc.title.alternative Liberal universalism today eng
dc.type article cze
dc.description.abstract-translated Liberal thought – especially when inspired by Kant – always had universalistic ambitions. Faith in its own philosophical dominance is a natural consequence of liberal thinking, starting with its inception during the enlightenment. However, these tendencies are deeply problematic. The relation of liberalism towards the future (postulating its “final victory”) and towards the past (adoption of ahistorical and acultural normative standpoint) is in the final analysis indefensible. However, the fact that liberal thinking cannot defend its commonplace presuppositions does not mean that it is indefensible as such. It might still be superior to other types of political regimes. The second part of the article consists of an argument that defends liberalism without its universalist ambitions. It starts from a concept of recognition and claims that liberal regimes are currently the only ones that can provide a generally acceptable recognition to their citizens. This is true not only for what is traditionally conceived as “western world”, but across the globe. The reason for this unique standing of liberal regimes is a fact (prominently defended by Charles Taylor) that people in contemporary societies do not understand their value as mediated through some external entity (tribe, church, family, nation). They perceive the source of their value as coming from “inside”. This is deeply problematic for illiberal regimes – a challenge they cannot overcome, but that liberal regimes can. eng
dc.peerreviewed yes cze
dc.publicationstatus published cze
dc.identifier.doi 10.14712/1803-8220/26_2017 cze
dc.identifier.scopus 2-s2.0-85056656620
dc.identifier.obd 39882190 cze


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