Political theory is not a purely theoretical enterprise; it is intended to be
practical and action-guiding. To perform this role, the requirements of
political theory must be possible, and the standard of possibility it employs
must be appropriate to the political domain. Because human beings vary in their
capacity for morality and justice, a reasonably just society, as Rawls
understands it, must not be expected. Despite his concerns to the contrary, the
possibility of a just polity is not needed to ward off resignation and cynicism.
There is a principled path between a politics of complacency that thwarts
feasible progress and a politics of utopian aspiration that ends by inflicting
harm in the name of doing good.