I derive from my sense of Peirce and my own thinking that democracy is a
scalable and universal polity, that it contains other values essential to
the promulgation of goodness, truth and beauty, and that any effort to see
it as valid only at certain scales or under certain conditions is as futile
as seeking to see anything outside of the contexts of fallibility and
continuity which are the underpinnings of slow but sure progress, aided by
logic. Democracy is human destiny as we move in the direction of goodness.
I think pragmaticism is a step in the direction Wittgenstein also had in
mind. Both men proceeded from mystical premises they recognized could not
easily be spoken of. Mysticism is as democracy is inherently egalitarian.

Books http://buff.ly/15GfdqU

On Sat, Nov 19, 2016 at 4:20 PM, Gary Richmond <gary.richm...@gmail.com>
wrote:

> Edwina, list,
>
> You've clearly given this a lot of prior thought, Edwina. I want to
> reflect on wht you wrote and see what others think before commenting
> further. Btw, would looking again at your book, *Architectonics of
> Semiosis*, for example, Chapter 2, "Purity and Power," be of any value in
> this discussion (as I initially began reading it I recall that in an
> off-list message you commented that in some ways you were now seeing things
> quite differently than you did in 1998)?
>
> Best,
>
> Gary R
>
>
> [image: Gary Richmond]
>
> *Gary Richmond*
> *Philosophy and Critical Thinking*
> *Communication Studies*
> *LaGuardia College of the City University of New York*
> *C 745*
> *718 482-5690 <718%20482-5690>*
>
> On Sat, Nov 19, 2016 at 4:01 PM, Edwina Taborsky <tabor...@primus.ca>
> wrote:
>
>> Gary R- that's an interesting topic.
>>
>> 1) I'd like to first comment that *democracy*, as a political system for
>> arriving at authoritative government decisions, is the 'right' method but
>> ONLY in a very large population with a growth economy and a growth
>> population. That is, political systems have FUNCTIONS; the function is: who
>> has the societal right to make decisions among this population?
>>
>> In economies which are *no-growth*, such as all the pre-industrial
>> agricultural and horticultural economies which dominated the planet until
>> the industrial age, democracy is dysfunctional. That is, all political
>> systems must privilege the wealth-producing sectors of the population. If
>> your economy is agricultural/horticultural - which can only produce enough
>> wealth to support a *steady-state* or no-growth population, then, the
>> political system must put the authority to make decisions in the control of
>> the owners of wealth production; i.e., the landowners. This control over
>> the land must be hereditary [you can't have fights over ownership], and
>> limited [you can't split up the land into minuscule small farms].
>> Democracy, which puts decision-making into the hands of the majority,
>> doesn't work in such an economy.
>>
>> When the economy moves to a *growth* mode [and enables a growth
>> population], the political system must empower those sectors of the
>> population which *make an economy grow*. This is the middle class - a
>> non-hereditary set of the population, made up of private individual/small
>> group businesses. This economic mode is highly flexible [new business can
>> start, succeed, fail]; extremely adaptable and enables rapid population
>> growth. As such an economic mode, political decision-making must fall into
>> the control of this middle class - and we have the emergence of elected
>> legislatures and the disappearance of hereditary authority.
>>
>> For a growth economy to work, it must support individual rights [to
>> invent, differ from the norm, to succeed AND fail] so that failure, for
>> example, will only affect those few individuals and not a whole
>> village/collective. Therefore, individualism must be stressed and
>> empowered; a growth economy must enable novelty, innovation, freedom of the
>> periphery....as well as success, which is measured by the adoption by the
>> collective of that product/service. FOR A WHILE.
>>
>> 2) But - it seems that the definition and function of democracy in Dewey
>> does not deal with the economy and the questions of the production of
>> wealth and size of population. Instead, it deals with social issues -
>> Talisse writes:
>>
>> "The core of Deweyan democracy can be stated as follows. Deweyan
>> democracy is *substantive *rather than proceduralist, *communicative *rather
>> than aggregative,and *deep *rather than statist. I shall take these
>> contrasts in order.Deweyan democracy is *substantive *insofar as it
>> rejects any attempt to separate politics and deeper normative concerns.
>> More precisely, Dewey held that the democratic political order is
>> essentially a *moral *order, and, further, he held that democratic
>> participation is an essential constituent ofthe good life and a necessary
>> constituent for a “truly human way of living”.... Dewey rejects the idea
>> thatit consists simply in processes of voting, campaigning, canvassing,
>> lobbying, and petitioning in service of one’s individual preferences; that
>> is, Dewey held democratic participation is essentially *communicative*,
>> it consists in the willingness of citizens to engage in activity by which
>> they may “convince and be convinced by reason” (MW 10:404) and come to
>> realize“values prized in common” (LW 13:71).
>>
>> The above seems to me, to be a social relations account - and doesn't
>> deal with the fact that democracy as a political system, empowers a
>> particular segment of the population - the middle class, in an economy
>> based around individual private sector small businesses. It has nothing to
>> do with 'the good life' or a 'truly human way of living'. Nomadic
>> pastoralists, and land-based feudal agriculture were also 'human ways of
>> living.
>>
>> 3) From the Stanford Encyclopaedia, I found the following on Dewey:
>>
>> "As Dewey puts it, ‘men are not isolated non-social atoms, but are men
>> only when in intrinsic relations’ to one another, and the state in turn
>> only represents them ‘so far as they have become organically related to one
>> another, or are possessed of unity of purpose and interest’ (‘The Ethics of
>> Democracy’,*EW*1, 231-2).
>>
>> Dewey is anti-elitist, and argues that the capacity of the wise few to
>> discern the public interest tends to be distorted by their position.
>> Democratic participation is not only viewed as a bulwark against government
>> by elites, but also as an aspect of individual freedom– humanity cannot
>> rest content with a good ‘procured from without.’ Furthermore, democracy is
>> not ‘simply and solely a form of government’, but a social and personal
>> ideal; in other words, it is not only a property of political institutions
>> but of a wide range of social relationships.
>>
>> The above, seems to me, at this first glimpse, to totally ignore the
>> economic mode - and again, some economies whose wealth production rests in
>> stable, no-growth methods  [land food production] MUST ensure the stability
>> of this economy by confining it to the few, i.e., those elites'...the wise
>> few if you want to call them that'.
>>
>> That is - the to put power in the majority/commonality rests with the
>> economic mode. Certainly, Peirce's *community of scholars* was a method
>> of slowly, gradually, arriving at 'the truth'. But this has nothing,
>> absolutely nothing, to do with governance and the question of who in a
>> collective has the ultimate authority to make political decisions. That is,
>> political decisions are not really, I suggest, the same as scientific or
>> 'truth-based' inquiries. There is no ultimate 'best way' for much is
>> dependent on resources, population size, environment..
>>
>> And, I don't see a focus on the required capacity of a growth economy for
>> rapid flexible adaptation - which HAS to be focused around the individual.
>> That is, risk-taking shouldn't involve the WHOLE collective, but only a few
>> individuals.
>>
>> 4) As for Peirce's philosophy of democracy - again, Talisse writes:
>>
>> "the Peircean view relies upon no substantive
>> *moral *vision. The Peircean justifies democratic institutions and norms
>> strictly in terms of a set of substantive *epistemic *commitments. It
>> says that *no matter what one believes *about the good life, the nature
>> of the self, the meaning of human existence, or the value of community, one
>> has reason to support a robust democratic political order of the sort
>> described above simply in virtue of the fact that one holds beliefs. Since
>> the Peircean conception of democracy does not contain a doctrine about “the
>> one, ultimate, ethical ideal of humanity” (EW 1:248), it can duly
>> acknowledge the fact of reasonable pluralism. p 112
>>
>> This seems to suggest that a societal system that enables exploratory
>> actions by individuals is a 'robust democracy'. And, since a growth
>> economic mode, that can support growth populations, requires risk-taking by
>> flexible individuals to deal with current pragmatic problems - then, this
>> seems to be a stronger political system.
>>
>> My key point is that the political system, economic mode and population
>> size are intimately related.
>>
>> Edwina
>>
>>
>>
>> ----- Original Message -----
>> *From:* Gary Richmond <gary.richm...@gmail.com>
>> *To:* Peirce-L <peirce-l@list.iupui.edu>
>> *Sent:* Saturday, November 19, 2016 2:59 PM
>> *Subject:* [PEIRCE-L] Peirce and Democracy
>>
>>  List,
>>
>> I read Robert B. Talisse's *A Pragmatist Philosophy of Democracy* (2007)
>> a few year ago and was thinking of it again today, in part prompted by an
>> op-ed piece in *The New York Times* by Roger Cohen which quotes H. L.
>> Mencken (see below). At the time of my reading PPD, I was not at all
>> convinced that Talisee had demonstrated his principal thesis, namely, that
>> we ought replace the inadequate, in his opinion, Dewyan approach to
>> thinking about democracy with a Peircean based approach.   This is how
>> David Hildebrand (U. of Colorado) outlined Talisse's argument in a review
>> in *The Notre Dame Philosophical Review. 
>> **http://ndpr.nd.edu/news/23707-a-pragmatist-philosophy-of-democracy/
>> <http://ndpr.nd.edu/news/23707-a-pragmatist-philosophy-of-democracy/>*
>>
>>
>> [Hildebrand] As I read PPD, I kept returning to two fundamental
>> propellants powering Talisse's argument for a Peircean-based democratic
>> theory. The first is constructive: his quest for a lean, non-normative
>> pragmatist inquiry to provide *just enough* of a philosophical basis for
>> a broadly effective conception of democracy. The second is destructive: the
>> argument that political theorists should reject Dewey's self-refuting
>> philosophy of democracy. Taken together, the insight is this: get over
>> Dewey and accept this particular Peirce and we get just what we need from
>> pragmatism for the purposes of democracy.
>>
>>
>> Hildebrand's review is a good introduction to the PPD. While I'm not much
>> of a Deweyan, and I wouldn't presume to argue for or against his ideas, yet
>> I don't think Talisse makes a strong case *for* a Peircean approach to
>> political theory on democracy,.
>>
>> I should add, however, that Talisse is, in my opinion, a very good
>> thinker and an excellent writer. Besides this book, over the years I've
>> read a number of his scholarly articles and heard him speak in NYC and
>> elsewhere. PPD is definitely worth reading, while those with a Deweyan
>> democracy bent will probably find themselves arguing with him nearly point
>> for point (as Hildebrand pretty much does). On the other hand, the
>> concluding chapter on Sidney Hook is valuable in its own right. As Talisse
>> writes:
>>
>> Hook's life stands as an inspiring image of democratic success; for
>> success consists precisely in *the activity of political engagement by
>> means of public inquiry*.
>>
>>
>> I haven't got my e-CP available, so I can't locate references, but it
>> seems to me that Peirce's view of democracy as I recall it is, if not
>> nearly anti-democratic (I vaguely recall some passages in a letter to Lady
>> Welby), it may at least be closer to H. L. Mencken's:
>>
>>
>> As democracy is perfected, the office represents, more and more closely,
>> the inner soul of the people. We move toward a lofty ideal. On some great
>> and glorious day the plain folks of the land will reach their heart’s
>> desire at last and the White House will be adorned by a downright moron.
>>
>>
>> I doubt that a discussion of PPD would be very valuable, but it might be
>> interesting to at least briefly reflect on Peirce's views of democracy. As
>> I recall,he hasn't much to say about democracy in what's published in the
>> CP and the other writings which have been made available to us. Perhaps
>> more will be uncovered in years to come as his complete correspondence is
>> published in W (I probably won't be alive for that as I understand that it
>> will probably be the last or near last volume in W, and at the snail's pace
>> the W is moving. . .)
>>
>> Meanwhile, can anyone on the list offer some Peirce quotations which
>> might help quickly clarify his views on democracy? I would, of course, hope
>> that if there is some discussion here that we keep to a strictly
>> theoretical discussion, especially in light of the strong feelings
>> generated by the recent American presidential election.
>>
>> Best,
>>
>> Gary R
>>
>> st Philosophy of Democracy
>> [image: Gary Richmond]
>>
>> *Gary Richmond*
>> *Philosophy and Critical Thinking*
>> *Communication Studies*
>> *LaGuardia College of the City University of New York*
>> *C 745*
>> *718 482-5690 <718%20482-5690>*
>>
>> ------------------------------
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