Published online by Cambridge University Press: 18 September 2015
In Democracy's Discontent, Michael Sandel argues for a revival of the republican tradition in order to counteract the pernicious effects of contemporary liberalism. As in his earlier work, Sandel charges that liberals who embrace the ideals of political neutrality and the unencumbered self are engaged in a self–subverting enterprise, for no society that lives by these ideals can sustain itself. Sandel is right to endorse the republican emphasis on forming citizens and cultivating civic virtues. By opposing liberalism as vigorously as he does, however, he engages in a self–subverting enterprise of his own. That is, Sandel is in danger of undercutting his position by threatening the liberal principles upon which he implicitly relies. This danger is greatest when he presses his case against the unencumbered self, when he appeals to the obligations of membership, and when he treats republicanism and liberalism as adversaries rather than allies.
James Farr's invitation to participate in a panel on “Sandel and His Critics” prompted me to write this paper and present an earlier version of it at the 1998 meeting of Midwest Political Science Association. I am grateful to Professor Farr and to Terence Ball, the anonymous referees for The Review of Politics, and my colleagues in the ASUMPL reading group, especially Avital Simhony, for their advice and encouragement.
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8. See also Liberalism and the Limits of Justice, pp. 147–54, where Sandel develops this argument.
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28. Or so I argue in Civic Virtues, chap. 11.
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