Truth versus ignorance in democratic politics: An existentialist perspective on the democratic promise of political freedom
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Abstract
Existentialist philosophy offers an understanding of how trying to eliminate ambiguities that inevitably mark the human condition only seemingly leads to freedom. This existentialist outlook can also serve to shed light on how democratic politics may similarly show tendencies which aim at overcoming immanent tensions. Such tendencies in democratic politics can be clarified using Sartre’s notion of ignorance – and truth as its counterpart. His concept of ignorance goes beyond merely facts or knowledge and refers to a mode of being. It expresses a subject’s desire to avoid, rather than confront, resistances stemming from the world. Based on a distinction of different forms in which this orientation can manifest itself, this article shows how democratic politics, too, can be threatened by ignorance as a way of doing politics. This ignorance comes in different guises which all express a desire to eliminate tensions that democratic politics cannot overcome without undermining itself. © 2020, The Author(s).
Subject
Ignorance
Truth
Existentialism
Freedom
Liberal democracy
Publication Title
Publication Year
2020
Publication Date
2020
Source
Scopus
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Short Title
Truth versus ignorance in democratic politics