The dissertation investigates political philosophy’s practical function by focusing on its concerns with the desirability of its principles and on how it manages feasibility requirements. Different combinations between desirability and feasibility give rise to different methodological strategies. Merits and limits of similar methodologies are assessed with reference to a model of realistic utopianism outlined starting from Rawls’s approach, a model of realism based on Machiavelli’s reflection, and a model of utopianism drawn from Plato’s political thought. Realistic utopianism reveals unsatisfactory: its attempted synthesis between desirability and feasibility implies ambiguities and leads political philosophy to improperly adjust the theoretical adequacy of its principles to considerations of practical relevance. Realism and utopianism escape similar shortfalls and they satisfactorily vindicate their models. The dissertation also distinguishes between political philosophy’s prescriptive and evaluative functions, which rely on different notions of normativity – a comparative notion the former, a transcendent one the latter – and which envisage diverse roles for feasibility constraints. Examining the requirements of practical relevance connected to prescriptive principles and to evaluative models, the dissertation suggests that prescription is better served by realism, while evaluation better fits utopianism.

Precarious Equilibrium : Political Philosophy between Desirability and Feasibility

PASQUALI, FRANCESCA
2009

Abstract

The dissertation investigates political philosophy’s practical function by focusing on its concerns with the desirability of its principles and on how it manages feasibility requirements. Different combinations between desirability and feasibility give rise to different methodological strategies. Merits and limits of similar methodologies are assessed with reference to a model of realistic utopianism outlined starting from Rawls’s approach, a model of realism based on Machiavelli’s reflection, and a model of utopianism drawn from Plato’s political thought. Realistic utopianism reveals unsatisfactory: its attempted synthesis between desirability and feasibility implies ambiguities and leads political philosophy to improperly adjust the theoretical adequacy of its principles to considerations of practical relevance. Realism and utopianism escape similar shortfalls and they satisfactorily vindicate their models. The dissertation also distinguishes between political philosophy’s prescriptive and evaluative functions, which rely on different notions of normativity – a comparative notion the former, a transcendent one the latter – and which envisage diverse roles for feasibility constraints. Examining the requirements of practical relevance connected to prescriptive principles and to evaluative models, the dissertation suggests that prescription is better served by realism, while evaluation better fits utopianism.
31-mar-2009
Inglese
political philosophy ; desirability ; feasibility ; realism ; utopianism ; normativity ; Rawls ; Machiavelli ; Plato
BESUSSI, ANTONELLA
MARTELLI, PAOLO
Università degli Studi di Milano
File in questo prodotto:
Non ci sono file associati a questo prodotto.

I documenti in UNITESI sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14242/76661
Il codice NBN di questa tesi è URN:NBN:IT:UNIMI-76661