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    http://psc.sagepub.com/Philosophy & Social Criticism

    http://psc.sagepub.com/content/37/1/95The online version of this article can be found at:

    DOI: 10.1177/0191453710384363

    2011 37: 95Philosophy Social CriticismMiriam Bankovsky

    objectionsSocial justice: Defending Rawls' theory of justice against Honneth's

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    Social justice:Defending Rawlstheory of justice againstHonneths objections

    Miriam BankovskyPolitics Program, La Trobe University, Melbourne, Australia

    AbstractThis article argues that Honneths plural conception of justice, founded on a theory of

    recognition, does not succeed in distancing itself from Rawls liberal theory of justice. The

    article develops its argument by evaluating three major objections to Rawls liberalism raised by

    Honneth in his recent articles on justice: namely, first, that the parties responsible for choosing

    principles of justice are too individualistic and their practical reasoning too instrumentalist;second, that by taking as its object-domain the negative liberty of persons, Rawls theory fails

    to promote the actual realization of liberty; and finally, that Rawls method of principle

    justification undermines the priority of its Kantian formality by presupposing a substantive

    commitment to a conception of individual good. Arguing that Honneths interpretation of

    Rawls theory contains important errors, the article concludes that both theories share the

    basic intention of securing for all citizens the material and institutional conditions for the

    actualization of otherwise merely formal liberties or, in Honneths terms, mutual self-realization.

    KeywordsAxel Honneth, justice, liberalism, John Rawls, recognition, redistribution, self-realization

    Introduction

    Since the publication of The Struggle for Recognition: The Moral Grammar of Social

    Conflicts (1995a), Axel Honneth has produced a number of articles dealing with the

    implications of his theory for political and social justice.1 Using the framework he had

    developed for determining the normative content of claims raised in individual and

    Corresponding author:

    Miriam Bankovsky, Politics Program, La Trobe University, Melbourne, VIC 3086, Australia.

    Email: [email protected]

    Philosophy and Social Criticism

    37(1) 95118

    The Author(s) 2011Reprints and permission:

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    social struggle, Honneth now outlines a plural theory of justice which he hopes will

    break the theoretical deadlock between, on the one hand, formal, Kantian and liberal

    theories of justice and, on the other hand, axiological, Hegelian and civic republican

    theories of ethical life. Where Kantian theories (like those of John Rawls and Ju rgenHabermas) defend egalitarian norms which hold independently of actors commitments

    to specific values, and where Hegelian theories (like those of Charles Taylor, Alasdair

    MacIntyre and Michael Sandel) seek instead to promote the qualitative conditions of

    human flourishing defined within specific communities, Honneths plural theory of jus-

    tice intends to walk the fine line between the two positions. More precisely, it seeks first

    to articulate and then to promote those structural elements of human flourishing which

    can be normatively extricated from the plurality of all particular forms of human life

    (Honneth, 1995a: 172).

    In this article, I propose to focus attention on only one part of Honneths intention.

    I want to determine whether Honneth succeeds in distancing himself from Rawls lib-

    eral theory of justice. I undertake this task by presenting and evaluating, in each of

    three sections, three major criticisms of Rawls liberalism found in Honneths recent

    articles on justice.

    Honneths first criticism targets the ideal of the person which Rawls constructivist

    decision procedure incorporates. The liberty of the parties who are responsible for choos-

    ing principles of justice is too individualistic and the practical reasoning of these parties

    is too instrumentalist (Honneth, 1991: 202, 27, 29; Honneth and Anderson, 2005: 12731,

    138, 1425). Real and effective liberty (or human flourishing) depends, Honneth argues,

    on the existence of certain types of selfother relations which support the development ofpractical relations-to-self. Consequently, insofar as the realization of individual liberty

    depends on instituting supportive selfother relations, the practical reasoning of Rawlsian

    parties should not be instrumentalist.

    Honneths second criticism targets the object-domain of Rawls theory of justice.

    The theorys object of concern is negative liberty or freedom from external interference

    in individual choice (Honneth and Anderson, 2005: 129, 133). Insofar as material and

    institutional disadvantage is equivalent to external interference in the free choice of the

    individual, the theory seeks to protect the individual from such disadvantage. For

    Honneth, however, preventing external interference in individual life- projects in no wayguarantees the realization of individual liberty (that is, positive or social liberty) which

    remains, for Honneth, the true object-domain of a theory of justice. An appropriate the-

    ory would not merely distribute advantages (as does Rawls theory) but would also bring

    into effect those supportive intersubjective relations on which real and effective freedom

    depends (ibid.: 131, 137, 142, 144).

    A third criticism targets the ideal Rawls employs in his method of principle justifica-

    tion. Justified by reference to their form, principles refer to a formal Kantian ideal of

    impartiality or neutrality: they are justified when deemed acceptable by those free and

    equal persons who are affected by them. Principles can then be said to apply to all in thesame way, formally maintaining egalitarian right, hence Rawls claim that right lim-

    its the different substantive conceptions of the good life which may legitimately be pur-

    sued. Reversing the justification procedure, Honneth argues that Rawls theory cannot

    maintain its claim to neutrality because it implicitly requires an anterior commitment

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    to a conception of the good: seeking to guarantee individual liberty, egalitarian right

    presupposes an ideal of individual human flourishing (Honneth, 1991: 2931; Honneth,

    2004a: 357). However, by prioritizing right, Rawls ideal of human flourishing is too

    individualistic (Honneth, 2004b: 389). The theory thus misunderstands its true objec-tive: instead of securing individual rights to freely pursue a project, a theory of social

    justice should critically identify, diagnose and redress those concrete experiences of

    injustice which prevent individual human flourishing. Instead of principles justified

    by reference to a formal Kantian ideal of impartiality (right), Honneth recommends

    principles which amend social pathologies and ensure mutual self-realization (the

    good). This, Honneth and Anderson write, is a profoundly different and largely

    unexplored way of thinking about social justice (Honneth and Anderson, 2005:

    144; see also Honneth, 2004a: 353).

    Honneths alternative model promises in this way to focus theoretical attention on

    everyday cases of disrespect and humiliation which disable real freedom, cases that

    Rawls theory might appear to overlook (Honneth, 1997: 323). However, I intend to

    show that Honneths criticisms of Rawls should not be so easily accepted and that

    Honneths interpretation of Rawls theory contains important errors. To this end, I will

    now examine more closely Honneths three criticisms of Rawls liberalism. Concluding

    that Honneth does not succeed in distancing himself from Rawls theory, the article will

    show, by means of its analyses, that the theories of both thinkers indeed share the basic

    intention of securing for all citizens the material and institutional conditions for the

    actual exercise of otherwise merely formal rights and liberties or, in Honneths terms,

    mutual self-realization.2

    I The ideal of the person in Rawls constructivism:

    individualistic and instrumentalist?

    Let us examine, first, Rawls ideal of the person, which Honneth argues misrepre-

    sents the autonomy of real persons and fails to appreciate the nature and extent of the

    various threats to autonomy. To evaluate Honneths objection, we must first under-

    stand the role Rawls himself attributes to the ideal of the person in constructivist the-

    ory. While certainly implied by A Theory of Justice (1971a),3

    the defining features ofthis ideal are explicitly clarified only later in Kantian Constructivism in Moral The-

    ory (1980), in The Independence of Moral Theory (1975) and in Political Liberalism

    (1993). Honneths reconstruction of Rawls theory overlooks Rawls developed

    account of the role of personhood ideals in theory and, consequently, Honneths criti-

    cisms miss their true target.

    In Kantian Constructivism and Moral Theory Rawls defines constructivism and the

    role it ascribes to personhood ideals. First, constructivisms real task is practical not

    epistemological (Rawls, 1980: 306, 341). Unlike moral realist views such as rational

    intuitionism, whose first principles are self-evident truths given by the nature of thingsand known by rational intuition (ibid.: 344), constructivism frames its first principles to

    meet particular social problems, providing a public basis by means of which citizens jus-

    tify their institutions to one another (ibid.: 347). Second, constructivisms methodbegins

    with the standpoint of persons as agents of construction. Whereas the rational intuitionist

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    method requires quite simply the correct recognition of first principles whose content is

    already fixed, constructivism establishes a framework for deliberation which relies on

    ourown powers of judgement, powers which are not fixed once and for all but are devel-

    oped and shaped by a shared public culture (ibid.). Constructivism seeks in this way toestablish a suitable connection between a particular ideal of the person and first princi-

    ples of justice using a procedure of construction (ibid.: 304). Moreover, if constructivism

    is to generate an appropriate public basis for justification, it must also be coherentist: it

    must coincide with those considered moral and non-moral judgements which we are

    unlikely to give up, thus clarifying the reason for our refusal to renounce them. Conse-

    quently, whereas rational intuitionism implies a sparse notion of the person as one who

    cognizes moral truth, constructivism requires a complex ideal of the person as an agent

    of construction. Principles result from a construction which expresses conceptions that

    citizens have of themselves and of their society.

    Now, there are as many constructivisms as ideals of persons. Examining average uti-

    litarianism and Hobbes contractarianism from the perspective of what Rawls refers to as

    the original position, Rawls concludes that both are compatible with constructivism.4

    Both can be said to refer to a particular ideal of the person as part of a contract device,

    whose outcome determines the content of justice. Rawls Kantian constructivism seeks

    the principles on which free and equal moral persons would all agree when fairly repre-

    sented as such (Rawls, 1980: 305). The moral person is endowed with two moral facul-

    ties rationality and social cooperativeness which make justice both necessary and

    possible. The capacity for formulating and pursuing a conception of ones rational

    advantage makes justice necessary since it leads persons with different life-plans tomake conflicting claims on the available natural and social resources (Rawls, 1971a:

    127/110 rev.). The capacity for formulating and abiding by a conception of justice (or

    the Reasonable), makes justice possible, describing a willingness to live by principles

    of justice even when their contravention might bring personal advantage.

    Rawls constructivism thus varies with alternative constructivist views on account of

    this personhood ideal. Persons in a Hobbesian contract are, according to Rawls, atomistic

    and instrumental rational egoists. Hobbesian persons are unlike their Rawlsian counter-

    parts in that the former are endowed with the faculty of instrumental rationality alone

    whereas the latter are also endowed with the second moral faculty of social cooperative-ness. I will return to this point when dealing with Honneths first objection that the parties

    responsible for choosing principles of justice are too individualistic and their practical rea-

    soning too instrumentalist. Returning to Hobbes, Rawls suggests that self-, family- and

    group-interest is, for Hobbes, the only available political motivation (Rawls, 1971b:

    2045; Rawls, 1987: 4223). Consequently, Hobbesian partners choose principles of mere

    prudence and not of justice. Since cooperative institutions are extremely fragile persons

    might at any moment attempt to secure their own interests at others expense a powerful

    sovereign with effective penal machinery is required to guarantee the security of all

    (Rawls, 1963: 104; Rawls, 1971a: 240/211 rev.).It is also by reference to a constructivist procedure that the principle of average uti-

    litarianism is defended against its classical version (Rawls, 1971a: 27 28). Only

    when a decision on principles is considered from the perspective of free and equal per-

    sons, whose moral relevancy depends, in this case, on their capacity to satisfy desires and

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    on their willingness to take the same risks, can the average utility principle be favoured

    over its classical alternative. Given the choice, such persons would choose to maximize

    their individual total utility (the average utility principle), having no interest in total util-

    ity sum (the classical utility principle) which ignores the large differences in well-beingwhich can exist among individuals.

    As for the Rawlsian decision procedure, moral persons are represented by contractual

    parties who are modelled as free, equal and rational and who are placed in a decision

    situation, the original position, which interprets the idea of a fair agreement. To prevent

    parties from choosing only those principles to their individual advantage, a veil of

    ignorance models the reasonable the sense of justice (Rawls, 1971a: 24). Behind this

    veil, parties lack knowledge of those particular facts about their individual situation

    which would position them unequally. Parties are unaware of their class, social status,

    particular generation and natural abilities. They do not know the nature of their particular

    conception of the good, nor are they aware of their individual psychological tendencies.

    Representatives of real citizens, parties must choose those principles which citizens

    would find acceptable when they finally have full knowledge of the particularities of

    their situation.

    Are parties characterized by individualistic liberty? Does the veil of

    ignorance fall too low?

    Honneth objects to the description of the liberty of parties behind the veil of ignorance.

    The notion of an autonomous and atomistic individual selecting personal projects in apurely monological manner is, says Honneth, unrealistic (Honneth, 1991: 202, 267,

    29). The veil of ignorance falls too low: Rawls insists that the parties in the original

    position should not have knowledge of what people in the society are like, except the

    most basic features of their instrumental rationality (Honneth and Anderson, 2005:

    1401). However, if principles are to be adequate to the needs of real persons, parties

    need to know that they cannot actually realize their liberty without the support of others

    (ibid.: 12731, 138, 1425).

    In Honneths own theory, real and effective freedom depends on developing certain

    practical relations to self, relations which themselves depend on the validation of onescapacities by ones peers. Drawing on the distinction that Hegel makes within Objective

    Spirit between the family, the state and civil society, Honneth abstracts three practical

    relations to self (each with their mode of intersubjective validation) from the social

    life-world of modern societies. The first is self-confidence or the ability to trust in ones

    own feelings and desires, insofar as these are validated by the solicitude of others (in the

    intimate, affective relations of love and friendship). The second is self-respect or the

    belief that one has an authority equal with others to make claims and demands, insofar

    as this authority is validated by others (who mutually accord each other egalitarian

    rights). The third is social esteem, social achievement, or the feeling of belonging,insofar as this feeling is validated by others (in relations of solidarity) (Honneth and

    Anderson, 2005: 12731, 138, 1425).

    For Honneth, the concept of justice has plural meanings: moral claims can be

    raised in all three spheres of intersubjective relation (affective, reciprocal, or

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    cooperative). The content of what we call just is here to be measured according to the

    respective kind of social relationship that subjects maintain with one another. If the con-

    cern is with a relationship shaped by an appeal to love, then the principle of need has

    priority, whereas in legally shaped relationships the principle of equality takes priority,and in cooperative relationships the principle of merit (Honneth, 2004a: 358; see also

    Honneth and Fraser, 2001: 170, 1745, 1801). In the affective sphere, appeal to

    mutually attested love can ground a demand for the affective recognition of newly devel-

    oped or previously unconsidered needs in what Honneth refers to as a different or

    expanded kind of care (ibid.: 144).5 In the sphere of egalitarian right, appeal to the basic

    idea of equality can ground a demand for the legal recognition of previously excluded

    groups or of previously neglected facts (ibid.). In the sphere of cooperative and social

    recognition, appeal to the achievement principle can ground a demand for the consider-

    ation of hitherto neglected or underappreciated activities and capacities which contribute

    to the common good and are deserving of greater social esteem and material resources

    (ibid.). Justice always concerns the individual requirements for effective freedom,

    dependent on social patterns of mutual recognition. The justice or well-being of a soci-

    ety is proportionate to its ability to secure the conditions of mutual recognition under

    which personal identity-formation, hence individual self-realisation, can proceed ade-

    quately (ibid.: 174).

    It is because principles must respond adequately to real vulnerabilities and needs that

    Honneth speaks of his theory as an attempt to reinvigorate the project of a social philo-

    sophy which would elucidate and diagnose social pathologies. As Christopher Zurn

    explains, in contrast both to moral philosophy, which deals with questions of individualobligation and right action, and to political philosophy, which attends to those of law and

    fair distribution, social philosophy is concerned with the structural conditions necessary

    for human flourishing and the social deformations in those conditions which damage sub-

    jectivity (Zurn, 2000: 118).6 Social philosophy is a therapeutic critique of pathological

    social practices and, as such, requires a standard of social normalcy for evaluation, namely,

    a standard which extrapolates, from all particular substantive conceptions of the good life

    in developed societies, the formal conditions necessary for a healthy identity or, in other

    words, a formal conception of ethical life (Honneth, 1995a: 1719).7 As concerns Rawls

    theory, Honneth argues that for principles of justice to take account of the real vulnerabil-ities and needs of parties, the latter must be aware of their subjective dependence on inter-

    subjective recognition relations (Honneth and Anderson, 2005: 140).

    To what extent are parties in Rawls original position aware of human vulnerabilities

    and needs? And, more generally, what kind of knowledge do they actually have access

    to? Rawls response is very clear and indicates an error in Honneths interpretation. There

    are no limitations on general information: parties know everythingthey need to about their

    society in order to decide upon its principles (Rawls, 1971a: 1378/119 rev.).

    Parties know, first, that their society is defined by the circumstances of justice

    objective and subjective alike which define the role that justice is to play (Rawls,1971a: 126/109 rev.). Objective circumstances are the relevant facts about the object

    of cooperation: that many individuals coexist together; that their geographical territory

    is finite; that there exists moderate scarcity in natural and other resources so that, while

    mutually advantageous arrangements are feasible, benefits fall short of the demands put

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    forward. Subjective circumstances are the relevant facts about the subjects of cooperation:

    that subjects have their own conception of the good which leads them to make conflicting

    claims on available resources; that subjects regard their own life-projects as worthy of rec-

    ognition; that persons have similar needs and interests as determined by the positivesciences for example, persons need the recognition of others in order to even want to

    pursue a conception of the good; that persons are able to abide by a conception of justice;

    and that persons suffer shortcomings of knowledge, thought and judgement such that there

    exists a diversity of belief and a conflict of interests. Unless these circumstances existed

    there would be no occasion for the virtue of justice (ibid.: 128/110 rev.). Moreover, parties

    are also presumed to know general facts about their particular society: facts about political

    affairs, the general principles of economic theory, the basis of social organization, the laws

    of human psychology, and the empirical findings of the human and social sciences.

    Honneth misinterprets the role which the veil of ignorance is to play. Rawls clearly

    states that the parties are presumed to know whatever general facts affect the choice

    of the principles of justice (Rawls, 1971a: 137/119 rev.). If relevant, then, such knowl-

    edge certainly includes the general findings about subjective interdependency as deter-

    mined by the positive sciences. As a procedural device, the veil of ignorance interprets

    the second moral faculty the sense of justice by modelling the inadmissibility of any

    unilateral defence of purely individual interests. The veil does not block out facts in gen-

    eral, but only knowledge of those particularfacts about ones own context which would

    situate parties unequally: each person abstracts from his or her individual interests,

    impartially considering the interest of all.

    Rawls explains why parties are to have access to these general facts: constructivismdefends its ideal of the person by reference to a coherentist theory of justification which

    means that personhood ideals are themselves justified relative to different bodies of evi-

    dence. A personhood ideal must satisfy two requirements. First, it must cohere with non-

    moral judgements about normal empirical identity established by the human sciences,

    insofar as these conclusions refer to the ideal of scientific impartiality. Second, it must

    cohere with considered moral judgements about justice which we are unlikely to give up,

    insofar as these judgements refer to the ideal of moral impartiality. If a constructivist

    solution did not satisfy such coherentist requirements, it would not respond to the prac-

    tical problem for which it is designed.As regards the first requirement, Rawls explains that the conclusions of the human

    sciences impose feasibility requirements on personhood ideals (Rawls, 1975:

    295301). Whereas the human sciences provide descriptions of human needs and capa-

    cities, moral and political theory produces normative ideals of the type of person we

    aspire to be.8 The descriptions of the human sciences represent the constraints that any

    sound criterion of identity must satisfy (ibid.: 296), detailing minimal conditions of

    mental and physical health necessary for any social cooperation whatsoever. The human

    sciences identify conditions for physical and mental continuity, the capacity to reason

    and use language and, most importantly, the ability to cooperate with others. A moraltheory must be rejected if its incorporated personhood ideal requires physical or psycho-

    logical characteristics which would violate the minimal conditions that descriptivist con-

    ceptions indicate are necessary for personal identity, survival and intersubjective

    cooperation (ibid.: 296; Rawls, 1980: 321).

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    The empirical conditions of intact identity which Honneth provides are clearly

    descriptivist. He uses the idea of recognition in a merely descriptive sense, pinpointing

    minimal conditions of mental and physical health necessary for undamaged social interac-

    tion (Honneth, 2004a: 354; see also Honneth and Fraser, 2001: 173). Rawls would certainlyagree that parties in the original position should be aware of such conditions. As Rawls him-

    self notes, parties indeed know that without the pre-requisite experience of social recogni-

    tion, no one would even wish to formulate and pursue a conception of the good.9 As

    coherentist requirements specify, should Rawls ideal of the person prevent the production

    of the practical relations to self which are minimally necessary for valuing both our pursuits

    and our own capacities for pursuing them, then the ideal would need to be rejected.

    However, says Rawls, the first feasibility constraint imposed by the non-moral jud-

    gements of the human sciences is rather weak: most standard moral theories tend to sat-

    isfy it (Rawls, 1975: 296).10 The feasibility constraint imposed by non-moral scientific

    findings thus underdetermines choice among the different ideals Hobbesian, average

    utilitarian and Kantian because such findings are consistent with the available ideals

    and provide no conclusive evidence for the validity of one over another. The instrumen-

    tal self-interest of the Hobbesian person is fully compatible with the conclusions of the

    human sciences: in Hobbes social context, the desire to pursue a rational life-project and

    to seek the positive recognition of certain significant others is the very reason why indi-

    viduals require a powerful sovereign to guarantee all the necessary conditions for sur-

    vival and basic social cooperation. Equally compatible with the empirical descriptions

    of the human sciences is the average utilitarian personhood ideal: the interest of persons

    in satisfying their desires leads them to defend the average utility principle so as to guar-antee for themselves the right to survival and the right to pursue life-projects in satisfying

    cooperative forms. And, finally, the Rawlsian persons interest in her or his two moral

    faculties (for formulating and pursuing a conception of the good and for formulating and

    abiding by a conception of justice) also concords with descriptivist feasibility require-

    ments: by acting in accordance with principles of justice, persons express their nature

    as free, equal, rational and socially cooperative beings subject to the general conditions

    of human life (Rawls, 1971a: 253/222 rev.).

    It is because the first feasibility constraint provides no conclusive evidence for the

    validity of one personhood ideal over another that a second feasibility constraint comesinto play: a personhood ideal must also cohere with the considered moral judgements of

    the society in question.11 Such judgements are provisional fixed points which we pre-

    sume any conception of justice must fit (Rawls, 1971a: 20/18 rev.; see also 9), and

    they include the convictions that religious intolerance, racial and sexual discrimination,

    the institution of slavery, manipulation and torture are unjust. It is because the Kantian

    ideal of the person coheres more clearly with such judgements that Rawls prefers it to the

    alternatives. The average utility principle, he argues, runs the risk of authorizing judge-

    ments which we think unjust: persons, represented by parties who without exception fol-

    low the principle of insufficient reason in their calculations and thus take the same risks,might well justify to each other the institution of slavery on the basis that it produces the

    greatest average happiness, and that each, in the initial contractual situation, would

    choose the average utility principle even at risk of subsequently being enslaved (ibid.:

    167/145 rev.). This judgement being intolerable to persons in modern liberal democratic

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    societies, the average utility personhood ideal must be rejected. Equally untenable in

    todays society is the Hobbesian view that purely instrumental interest is the only avail-

    able, or the only politically relevant, motivation. Our democratic society, argues Rawls,

    is no longer fragmented by those sectarian divisions and conflicts of interest which oncecharacterized Hobbes historical moment (Rawls, 1987: 422).

    Against Honneth, then, I argue that the veil of ignorance does not fall too low.

    Parties in the original position know whatever facts affect their choice of principles,

    including the empirical findings about persons which the human sciences describe and

    the considered moral judgements about justice of the society in question. I shall suppose

    that the parties possess all general information. No general facts are closed to them

    (Rawls, 1971a: 142/122 rev.).

    The publicity condition requires the parties to assume that as members of society they will

    also know the general facts. The reasoning leading up to the initial agreement is to be acces-

    sible to public understanding. Of course, in working out what the requisite principles are, we

    must rely upon current knowledge as recognized by common sense and the existing scien-

    tific consensus. But there is no reasonable alternative to doing this. We have to concede that

    as established beliefs change, it is possible that the principles of justice which it seems

    rational to acknowledge may likewise change. (Rawls, 1971a: 548/480 rev.)

    Principles of justice must thus cohere with these non-moral findings and moral

    judgements. There is no reason to rule out these facts . . . since conceptions of justice

    must be adjusted to the characteristics of the systems of social cooperation which theyare to regulate (Rawls, 1971a: 138/119 rev.). Moreover, in anticipation of Honneths

    next criticism, it appears that Rawls ideal, in contrast to that of Hobbes, does not attri-

    bute to persons a merely instrumental capacity for practical reasoning.

    Are persons endowed with merely instrumental reason?

    According to Honneth, Rawls commits a second error when defining his personhood

    ideal: he attributes to the parties merely instrumental capacities for practical reasoning,

    in order to avoid having to take up complex and controversial claims about the moralcharacter of humans (Honneth and Anderson, 2005: 140). Consequently, it is difficult

    to explain why the parties should subsequently be motivated to abide by the agreed-upon

    principles (ibid.: 140).

    Now, insofar as parties in the original position are not fundamentally motivated by

    any sense of obligation towards other persons and are, in contrast, only concerned to

    advance their own interests, their reasoning is purely instrumental, says Honneth, and not

    moral.12 Parties behind the veil of ignorance are motivated solely by their instrumental

    desire to secure what Rawls calls primary goods. With more primary social goods (lib-

    erties and opportunities, income and wealth, and the social bases of self-respect, etc.) andwith more primary natural goods (health and vigour, intelligence and imagination, etc.),

    persons are generally assured greater success in advancing their ends (Rawls, 1971a: 62/

    545 rev., 92/79 rev.). Lacking all knowledge of their particular situation, parties choose

    to guarantee for all a fair distribution of these goods, thereby protecting themselves from

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    being subsequently disadvantaged either by their particular end or by the lottery of birth.

    As Rawls himself says, parties are conceived as not taking an interest in one anothers

    interests and the concept of rationality is interpreted in the narrow sense, standard in

    economic theory, of taking the most effective means to ends (ibid.: 1314/12 rev.).However, there are two ways that Rawls could respond to Honneths criticism.13 First

    of all, Honneth overlooks the distinction Rawls draws between party, personhood

    ideal and citizen. The motivation of the parties should not be confused with that of the

    moral person (the personhood ideal) whose two moral faculties are interpreted by two

    very different procedural devices (Rawls, 1980: 316). The original position procedurally

    renders the first faculty (the Rational) by describing parties artificial representatives of

    real citizens as agents who pursue their own rational advantage. In this respect,

    Honneths criticism appears to hold. However, the second faculty (the sense of justice)

    is procedurally rendered by the constraints imposed on deliberation by the veil of ignor-

    ance, constraints which situate parties symmetrically such that the outcome can be said

    to be fair (ibid.: 308). Although the first device does appear to model merely instrumen-

    tal interest, the second device represents the obligation to cooperate in view of mutual

    good. By conflating party and moral person Honneth overlooks the procedural role

    of the veil of ignorance which is intended to abstract from instrumental private ends and

    instead represent the non-instrumental sense of justice.

    It is because he also confuses party and citizen that Honneth finds it difficult to

    explain why citizens Honneth and Anderson unfortunately use the term party

    should subsequently be motivated to abide by the agreed-upon principles. Indeed, a cit-

    izens desire to live in accordance with a normative personhood ideal is neither instru-mental nor difficult to grasp: this motivation is already included in the ideal of the

    person which real citizens implicitly affirm in a well-ordered society.

    Second, one can indeed argue and Rawls suggests as much himself that even the

    purely rational interest of parties equates to interest in both moral faculties, including

    instrumental and non-instrumental interest alike. Rational interest in this enlarged sense

    concerns the realization not only of instrumental advantage but also the sense of justice.

    The rational is interpreted by the original position in reference to the desire of persons to

    realise and to exercise their moral powers and to these powers correspond two highest-

    order interests (Rawls, 1980: 316). Our good is ultimately determined by the plan of lifewhich we would adopt with full deliberative rationality if the future were accurately

    foreseen and adequately realized in the imagination (Rawls, 1971a: 421/370 rev.). Pur-

    suing both of the higher-order interests, full deliberative rationality appears to coincide

    with the Hegelian and Honnethian ideal of self-realization in that it concerns the reali-

    zation of effective liberty in association with others. From which it follows that rational

    desire for primary goods is desire for those goods which are necessary for the pursuit of

    both instrumental and moral ends alike.

    II The object-domain of Rawls theory: merely negative liberty?

    I will now examine the object-domain of Rawls theory. Following Honneth, Rawls the-

    ory takes as its object the purely negative liberty of individuals (Honneth and Anderson,

    2005: 129, 133). Rawls theory seeks to protect individuals from the external

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    interference represented by material and institutional disadvantages such as inadequate

    access to food and shelter, education, opportunities for participating in ones culture and

    so on, hence the term redistributive justice.

    According to Honneth, Rawls commits two errors. First, his theory limits itself to thelanguage of egalitarian right, that is, equal right to the same formal liberty to develop

    ones faculties and pursue life-projects or, in Rawls vocabulary, right to a fully ade-

    quate scheme of equal basic liberties, which scheme is compatible with the same scheme

    of liberties for all (Rawls, 2001: 42). For Honneth, this language of right misses its tar-

    get (Honneth and Anderson, 2005: 138): although egalitarian right may well protect

    individuals from external interference, thus formally guaranteeing the liberty to develop

    ones faculties, protection alone does little to guarantee the realization of these faculties.

    Such faculties cannot be actualized without the development of practical relations to self

    (self-confidence, self-respect and self-esteem) which themselves require validation in

    the form of supportive intersubjective relations. In this sense, the object-domain of

    Rawlsian egalitarian right equates to negative, not positive, liberty (ibid.: 131, 137,

    142, 144).

    Second and consequently, Rawls theory of justice maintains egalitarian right by the

    fair distribution of primary goods which means, again, that it does not deal with the real

    source of positive, social liberty. Realized liberty results not from a fair distribution of

    goods but rather from the existence of practical relations to self, conditioned by suppor-

    tive communicative relations. For Honneth, the true object-domain of a theory of social

    justice is the quality of communicative relations (Honneth, 2004a: 351). The broad rele-

    vance of recognitional conditions necessitates a shift away from exclusively distributiveissues (Honneth and Anderson, 2005: 142; see also Honneth, 2004b: 387). Justices

    object-domain is not the negative liberty to seek the recognition which permits the

    self-confidence, self-respect and self-esteem that are necessary for liberty to be actua-

    lized, but rather, the actualization of liberty (that is, positive or social liberty).

    So, then, do the egalitarian rights of Rawls constructivist procedure undertake to

    guarantee the mere right to seek the realization of liberty and of the moral faculties

    (which, as Honneth claims, in no way guarantees this realization), or do such rights

    undertake to guarantee the realization of this liberty and of the moral faculties?

    Against Honneth, I argue that Rawls constructivist procedure aims at least in inten-tion to guarantee the actual realization of these faculties to a certain minimal level of

    functioning.14 A well-ordered society should ensure that citizens capacities do not fall

    below the minimum essential capacities for being normal and fully cooperating mem-

    bers of society (Rawls, 2001: 1712). For Rawls then, a theory of justice should allow

    citizens to realize the basic capabilities necessary for normal functioning (ibid.: 169).

    As we saw earlier, the theory must abide by the conclusions established by the human

    sciences regarding the nature of these basic capabilities, and this requirement demands

    that the theory be realistic: it must actually realize these capacities to the required min-

    imum level.On one occasion, Honneth does suggest that Rawls implicitly shares his own commit-

    ment to the actualization of the social and psychological preconditions for the realization

    of individual autonomy. Honneth suggests that the commitment is implied by Rawls list

    of basic goods because Rawls believes that such goods express the conditions that, to

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    the best of our knowledge, are indispensable to giving every individual an equal chance

    to realise his or her personality (Honneth and Fraser, 2001: 177). Moreover, Honneth

    refers albeit rather briefly to the importance of the basic good of self-respect for

    the moral-psychological development of the person (ibid.: 179). He nonetheless con-cludes that by focusing exclusively on distributive issues Rawls does not follow this

    implied commitment to its logical conclusion.

    And yet, Honneth seems unaware of the extent to which Rawls sociologically

    informed description of the stages of moral development indeed resembles his own.

    Rawls explicitly foregrounds the Honnethian idea that intersubjectively developed

    practical relations to self are conditions for the actualization of freedom, and that a just

    society must secure realized freedom to the required minimum degree.

    Let us consider the development of self-confidence, the first of Honneths condi-

    tions for social freedom and the first stage in the sequence of moral development for

    Rawls (Rawls, 1971a: 70). Where Honneth attributes to intimate, affective relations

    of love and friendship the task of confirming or correcting the feelings and desires of the

    individual, Rawls in a similar vein entrusts the family in one of various forms with

    the role of validating, by precepts and injunctions, the moral attitudes of children (ibid.:

    4623/405 rev.). Given that the child does not yet understand moral distinctions, the

    reactions of parents or carers to his or her instincts, desires and behaviours function as

    validations or injunctions. Drawing on the human sciences in a manner which closely

    resembles Honneths, Rawls explains that these reactions enable the child to trust in her

    or his feelings, to trust in others, and to have confidence in his or her abilities, enabling

    the child to launch out and test maturing abilities and skills (ibid.: 464/406 rev.). Thetransmission of socially acceptable behaviour contributes to the orderly reproduction

    of society, its values and its culture from one generation to the next (Rawls, 1997:

    595; Rawls, 2001: 162). The family can, of course, exert an unfavourable influence

    on the child, infringing the latters basic liberties and opportunities as a future citizen.

    In a manner similar to Honneths, Rawls maintains that a public conception of justice

    requires the family to guarantee the reproduction of basic capabilities: the abuse and

    neglect of children is thus prohibited by family law (Rawls, 2001: 165). While it would

    be inappropriate to require that the internal life of families be fully regulated by political

    public principles, a public conception does bind the family indirectly because it requiresthe prevention of mental and physical precariousness so as to ensure that the minimal

    essential capacities for normal functioning and for achieving voluntarily organized,

    reciprocal relations are maintained (ibid.: 1011, 1637).

    According to Honneth, Rawls account of the indirect regulation of internal family

    life by principles of justice is not sufficient because it does not stress the fact that

    justice in families makes internally necessary another, more just, division of labour in

    families (Honneth, 2004b: 387), one that demands concrete guarantees of the intersub-

    jective conditions of effective freedom. In the context of the family, this means that

    social measures must actively encourage the production and maintenance of reciprocalintimate relations and this requires, for Honneth, the familial institutionalization of reci-

    procity of labour. For Honneth, the normative requirement that reciprocal intimate rela-

    tions be securedwithin the family means that the problem of justice in families does not

    simply include the negative Rawlsian task of merely reducing social and economic

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    conditions which support a certain unjust division of labour but also includes the

    enforcement(ibid.) of a certain understanding of the normative infrastructure of families

    so that participants themselves come to see that they shouldaccept a fair distribution of

    labour in families (ibid.). According to Honneth, Rawls defends the position that a nor-mative understanding of families should not be enforced and that a shared concept of

    justice will probably suffice to guarantee social conditions under which the division

    of labour in families is organized voluntarily. Honneth says, explicitly, that this is not

    sufficient (ibid.).

    Against Honneth, I have attempted to show that Rawls public conception does

    require a normative conception of family life ensuring the development and maintenance

    of minimal essential capacities and seeking to guarantee voluntary organization. Albeit

    not as thick as Honneths, this conception nonetheless intends to guarantee the reciprocal

    intimate relations which Honneths theory emphasizes. Rawlsian justice should guaran-

    tee social conditions under which the division of labour in families may be organized

    voluntarily, that is, in terms of structures which are mutually recognized. In this sense,

    justice is to protect the individual from physical and psychological abuse while at the

    same time protecting the family from the external interference of an overly paternalis-

    tic state. If intimate relations are mutually and voluntarily recognized within families

    in this way, then it seems undesirable to enforce as Honneth appears to suggest a

    thicker normative conception of family life (Honneth, 2004b: 387). Rawls normative

    conception of family life need not include more than the guarantee of minimal essential

    capacities for pursuing and maintaining reciprocal relations (which includes protective

    measures against both intra-familial physical and psychological abuse and extra-familial state paternalism).

    Let us consider, next, the development of self-respect, the second condition accord-

    ing to Honneth of realized liberty. For Honneth, juridical relations function to confirm

    the belief in ones authority equal to that of all others to make claims and demands.

    This view is mirrored in Rawls description of the way in which egalitarian right distri-

    butes liberties and the social bases of self-respect. This intersubjective validation of

    ones equal authority allows one to see oneself as entitled to the same status and treat-

    ment as all others. Indeed, Honneth himself remarks that Rawls account of egalitarian

    right is an important step in the right direction (Honneth and Anderson, 2005: 129)because it supports the development of self-respect, the second practical relation to self

    necessary for realized liberty.

    Let us consider, finally, the development of self-esteem, the third condition accord-

    ing to Honneth of realized liberty. Solidarity, for Honneth, describes a cultural climate

    where the acquisition of a sense of belonging and of interdependence is possible: no

    member of society is denied social esteem for her or his contribution to the common

    good. Again, in intention, Rawls theory is not dissimilar: the second stage of moral

    development (the morality of association [Rawls, 1971a: 71]) describes the internali-

    zation of norms of conduct imposed by the reactions of approval and disapproval ofgroup members, or of those in authority, to ones behaviour, a description supported

    by the companion principle of the Aristotelian Principle (ibid.: 4401/3867 rev., see

    also 65 and 67). Without the pre-requisite experience of social recognition, no one

    would even wish to formulate and pursue a conception of the good. By internalizing

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    normative patterns of social recognition, one learns the virtues of a good student and

    classmate, the ideals of a good sport and companion and even of a good citizen (ibid.:

    4678/40910 rev.). Seeking to secure for all the opportunities to strive to perfect ones

    conception of the good and to seek recognition for this good among ones peers, Rawlstheory formulates the Honnethian idea that expressing ones nature in mutually sustain-

    ing forms is a fundamental element of ones good. Speaking of the idea of social union,

    Rawls explains that people need one another since it is only in active cooperation with

    others that ones powers reach fruition. Only in the social union is the individual com-

    plete (ibid.: 525 n./460 n. rev.), like a group of musicians, says Rawls, who by tacit

    agreement set out to perfect their skills on a chosen instrument so as to realize the powers

    of all in a joint orchestral performance (ibid.: 524 n./459 n. rev.). In this respect, Rawls

    theory intends to realize the sense of belonging and social esteem which the human

    sciences reveal to be minimally necessary for normal functioning. It is through social

    union founded upon the needs and potentialities of its members that each person can par-

    ticipate in the total sum of the realized natural assets of the others. . . . [Members] recog-

    nize the good of each as an element in the complete activity, the whole scheme of which

    is consented to and gives pleasure to all (ibid.: 523/459 rev.).

    In intention, then, Rawls theory surely aims to actualize real and effective powers

    and not simply to protect the merely negative and empty liberty to seek such actualiza-

    tion. Since a democracy aims for full equality of all its citizens, it must include arrange-

    ments to achieve it (Rawls, 1997: 600; emphasis added). If a democracy did not realize

    the faculties to a minimal degree, it would not facilitate a relatively well-ordered society.

    The question turns, then, around what constitutes the minimal degree for a relativelywell-ordered society.

    III Rawls method of principle justification: formal Kantian

    egalitarian right, or mutual self-realization (good)?

    I turn, finally, to examine the ideal Rawls employs in his method of principle justifica-

    tion. Rawls theory explicitly founds itself on a formal, Kantian ideal of impartiality

    (right). Honneth argues that Rawls theory cannot maintain its claim to be neutral among

    ends but instead involves an anterior commitment to a particular conception of mutualgood, namely, an ideal of individual human flourishing (Honneth, 1991: 2931;

    Honneth, 2004a: 357). Moreover, misunderstanding its fundamental commitment, the

    theorys implied ideal of human flourishing is overly individualistic (Honneth, 2004b:

    389): by prioritizing the fair distribution of equal rights, Rawls theory overlooks those

    concrete experiences of injustice which damage subjectivity and impede self-realization.

    In The Limits of Liberalism (1991), Honneth considers the contrasting assessments

    provided by Rawlsian liberalism and communitarianism to explain the accelerated plur-

    alization of individual life-orientations and the associated degeneration of cultural com-

    munities in contemporary western industrial societies. He situates his own assessmentbetween the two. Liberalism evaluates this trend with reference to a formal ideal of

    impartiality. If egalitarian right indeed limits substantive conceptions of the good life,

    then the trend is acceptable. Right endorses neutrality: the state should not privilege

    any one particular conception of the good be this individual or communitarian over

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    any another. In contrast, communitarians analyze the same trend with reference to the

    ideal of individual good. Drawing on the findings of the human sciences, Charles Taylor

    (1977) shows that the ability to objectively evaluate our own desires a condition for

    liberty to be effective depends on internalizing the confirmations or corrections ofthese desires by other people who also orient themselves towards our own good. Social

    trends are thus assessed by communitarians with reference to their ability to allow

    individuals to validate their values in relations of solidarity.

    For Honneth, Rawls defence of formal egalitarian right involves an implicit and

    anterior commitment to the ideal of freedom in association with others, that is, social

    freedom or mutual self-realization (Honneth, 1991: 279). Without this commitment,

    argues Honneth, persons would have no reason even to demand the formal protection of

    autonomy which egalitarian right offers. Rawls must concede that egalitarian right is

    necessary only insofar as it promises to safeguard the process of ethical self-assurance

    now conceived as intersubjective in nature against social and economic limitations

    (ibid.: 25). However, now that egalitarian right has been shown to derive from an ideal

    of individual good, Rawls theory can no longer maintain its commitment to neutrality

    among values: to orient itself towards its ideal, it must support those values which are

    structurally necessary for mutual human flourishing.

    Moreover, by prioritizing right, Rawls theory misunderstands its fundamental

    commitment. With respect to Rawls, for example, I would say there is already a certain

    pre-understanding of what the good life incorporates, namely, a quite individualistic one

    as some other critiques such as Thomas Nagels (1973) have made clear (Honneth,

    2004b: 389). If Rawls theory had correctly understood the fundamental ideal whichimplicitly informs it i.e. human flourishing in social interaction then it would have

    needed to sacrifice Kantian neutrality for the pursuit of those intersubjective values nec-

    essary for the realization of persons in their various communities (Honneth, 2004a:

    3578). Honneth thus reverses Rawls justification procedure: the defence of egalitarian

    right becomes necessary only insofar as a particular conception of the good discovers a

    limit to its applicability when faced with other, sometimes conflicting, conceptions of the

    good. As alluded to earlier, theorys task is, for Honneth, therapeutic rather than proce-

    dural. Misunderstanding its fundamental ideal, Rawls theory overlooks its real task.

    Instead of diagnosing and redressing those social deformations which give rise to concreteexperiences of injustice that injure subjectivity, Rawls theory presents mere procedures

    which are supposed to interpret the ideal of impartiality such that the fairness of the pro-

    cedure can be said to carry over to the results.

    My first response is to confess that I do not quite understand how Rawls theory of

    justice can be said to overlook the concrete experiences of injustice with which

    Honneths alternative theory supposedly begins. In other words, I cannot see the differ-

    ence that Deranty and Renault are driving at when, following Honneth, they write that

    the definition of justice will be provided by the criteria of the experiences of injustice

    rather than by a reconstruction of our intuitions of justice (Deranty and Renault, 2007:95). The reflections about justice which provide the starting point for Rawls construc-

    tivist, coherentist justification are precisely those judgements which arise in concrete

    situations that are experienced as just or unjust. Hence, Rawls judgements about jus-

    tice and Honneths concrete experiences of injustice are closely and internally related.

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    Rawls constructivist approach to judgement begins with judgements about justice

    which arise in concrete experiences, judgements which are then ordered, first, by means

    of a coherentist theory which requires that they also coincide with descriptivist and

    experiential conceptions of healthy subjectivity and, second, by the ideal of the personimplied by the most stable of such judgements. In so doing, normative standards can

    be determined that constructively account for this body of moral and non-moral judge-

    ments. Moreover, it is by reference to the constructivist formulation of immanent norma-

    tive standards that experiences themselves can be normatively judged. If Honneth is

    indeed to begin with concrete experiences of injustice then he requires a normative

    conception of justice immanently defined in relation to judgements about justice

    that would allow him to determine which experiences actually qualify normatively as

    experiences of injustice. In this sense, Rawls constructivist approach to the determina-

    tion of normative standards cannot be said to overlook the experiences with which Hon-

    neth begins.

    Second, Rawls model does appear to permit responses to these concrete experiences

    of injustice: if it did not, it would need to be rejected for constructivist reasons, since it

    would no longer respond to the problems for which it is designed. If, on the Honnethian

    model, an analysis of a concrete situation reveals that individual experiences of

    disrespect can be read as typical for an entire group and that a claim of justice is at stake

    (Honneth, 1995a: 16070), then, on the Rawlsian model, such groups would be entitled

    by reference to the principles of justice to demand that their rights to the social, mate-

    rial and institutional conditions of real freedom be reinstated. Such experiences would

    point to the fact that public institutions are not yet sufficiently ordered by the appropriatepublic conception of justice. Moreover, as the body of judgements about justice change,

    that is, as new experiences are taken up in judgement, constructivist requirements may

    well require adjustments to the public conception itself: as established beliefs change, it

    is possible that the principles of justice which it seems rational to acknowledge may like-

    wise change (Rawls, 1971a: 548/480 rev.). In my view, Rawls, like Honneth, must com-

    mit, in this sense, to a concept of progress in the determination of principles,

    acknowledging that the public conception on which an overlapping consensus should

    obtain is necessarily open to change. The public conception will need to respond, in

    Rawls case, to new judgements about justice and, in Honneths case, to those particularaspects of a persons context (his or her needs, her or his legal status, or the perceived

    value of his or her contributions) which have not been adequately considered.15

    Finally, as regards Honneths claim that an ideal of human flourishing is logically

    implied by Rawlsian egalitarian right, Rawls would certainly not disagree. Indeed, in

    Political Liberalism, Rawls himself affirms explicitly that the just and the good are

    complementary: no conception of justice can draw entirely upon one or the other, but

    must combine both in a definite way (Rawls, 1993: 172). Indeed, Rawls could remind

    Honneth that the defence which the latter offers for the supposed anteriority of the com-

    mitment to the ideal of mutual good itself invokes Rawls Kantian ideal of impartiality,thus confirming the Rawlsian claim that the just and the good are complementary.

    Honneth clearly states that his defence of the ideal of self-realization in association with

    others is notof a strictly communitarian nature: the commitment is rather to the individ-

    ual self-realization of all members of society, in their different communities, and thus

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    beyond any one particular community. Honneths ideal of the self-realization of all

    members of society already includes the Kantian ideal of impartiality, neutrality,

    formality and mutuality, that is, right (Honneth, 1991: 2931).

    Indeed, it is precisely so as to accentuate the formal nature of mutual good thatHonneth sketches a formal conception of ethical life, to be understood as a critical nor-

    mative standard which is both universal and substantively concrete (Honneth, 1995a:

    1719). The conception is universal in the Kantian sense because it applies in the limit

    to everyone in society (communities, groups and individuals). It is concrete and substan-

    tive in the communitarian sense because it includes those values particular to the society

    in question which are necessary for the realization of all members of that particular soci-

    ety (mutual good). Rawls conception of justice is likewise at once formal and substan-

    tive, cohering with the normative expectations at work in everyday intersubjective life

    and with the descriptivist conditions of healthy identity formation. Indeed, the normative

    conception of mutual good which it expresses theoretically resembles Honneths. Rawls

    writes: In the well-ordered society of justice as fairness, citizens share a common aim,

    and one that has high priority: namely, the aim of insuring that political and social insti-

    tutions are just, and of giving justice to persons generally, as what citizens need for them-

    selves and want for one another (Rawls, 1993: 146; emphasis added). Such a society

    realizes itself in activities that are intrinsically good and not merely cooperation for

    social or economic gain (Rawls, 1971a: 525 n./460 n. rev.). Honneth thinks that his own

    intersubjective determination of the good contrasts with Rawls insofar as subjects are

    also presumed to have an interest in the freedom of the others from whom they expect

    social recognition (Honneth and Fraser, 2001: 259) However, Honneth overlooks thefact that Rawls expresses his normative conception of mutual good in precisely these

    intersubjective terms, namely, as what citizens need for themselves and want for one

    another (Rawls, 1993: 146; emphasis added).

    On one brief occasion, Honneth himself concedes that Rawls, like Hegel, tie[s] a

    justification of [his] conception of social justice to an ethical theory that defines the

    socially influenced preconditions that must be available for individual subjects to real-

    ize their autonomy (Honneth and Fraser, 2001: 178). Honneth nonetheless believes that

    this dimension only ashamedly forms the hidden basis of Rawls liberalism (ibid.:

    180). It seems to me, however, that Rawls constructivist methodology explicitly yieldsa formal conception of mutual, substantive good which is not dissimilar to Honneths.

    Indeed, Rawls later presentation of justice as fairness is explicitly framed not merely

    by a formal conception of right but also by what Rawls takes to be a distinctly Hegelian

    insight, namely, the determination of the normative potential of historical institutions of

    social cooperation or, in Rawls words, the determination of the normative structures of

    societys historical form as a fair system of social cooperation over time from one gen-

    eration to the next (Rawls, 2001: 35; see also Rawls, 2000: 371). Like Honneth,

    Rawls thus ascribes to political philosophy what he takes to be an explicitly Hegelian

    task: political philosophy is to constructively formulate the fair and mutually recognizedconditions of cooperation which are implied by the main political and social institutions

    in which we find ourselves in a particular moment of historical time (Rawls, 2001:

    34).16 Both Honneth and Rawls agree that this task requires a methodological approach

    which is at once formal and substantive. For Rawls and Honneth alike, political

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    philosophy has the potential to illuminate the shared good and benefits of political

    society (Rawls, 2001: 4).

    Conclusion

    Honneth does not achieve the desired break with Rawls liberal theory of justice

    because Rawls political liberalism does not in fact resemble the interpretation which

    Honneth offers of it. Indeed, Rawls liberalism is far closer to Honneths own theory

    than the latter realizes.

    Rawlsian parties in the original position are not characterized by purely individua-

    listic liberty, as Honneth claims, but rather are fully aware that the citizens they rep-

    resent are subjectively interdependent, vulnerable to attack and unable to realize their

    liberty without the support of others. In this sense, the veil of ignorance does not fall

    too low.

    Moreover, Rawlsian parties in the original position are not endowed with merely

    instrumental reason, as Honneth argues, but rather are interested in realizing their full

    deliberative rationality which includes the real pursuit of their two higher-order interests

    in their capacity to formulate and pursue a conception of their goodandtheir capacity to

    formulate and abide by a non-instrumental conception of justice. In this sense, full delib-

    erative rationality coincides with the Hegelian and Honnethian ideal of self-realization

    in association with others.

    Furthermore, Rawlsian egalitarian right does not aim merely to protect the negative

    liberty of individuals to seek the realization of life-projects and faculties, as Honnethsuggests, but rather undertakes to secure the actual realization of such projects and pow-

    ers. Indeed, Rawls theory was shown to draw on the descriptions provided by the human

    sciences concerning subjective interdependence, the stages of moral learning and the

    need for self-confidence, self-respect and social esteem. And it was shown that Rawls

    conception of justice intends to ensure that citizens capacities do not fall below the min-

    imum essential capacities as specified by the human sciences which are necessary for

    existing as normal and fully cooperating members of society or, in Honneths terms, for

    pursuing and maintaining reciprocal recognition relations.

    Finally, the anterior commitment to an ideal of mutual good which Honneth argues isnonetheless implied by Rawls theory of impartial right is not too individualistic. Nor

    does Rawls misunderstand the ideal by focusing on the procedural rendering of the value

    of impartiality rather than on concrete experiences of injustice. Rather, the ideal of

    impartiality which founds Rawls theory is at once formal and substantive, informed

    by those very judgements about justice which arise within concrete experiences of injus-

    tice and by those judgements about the nature of healthy subjectivity which the human

    sciences provide. In this sense, Rawls ideal closely resembles Honneths formal con-

    ception of ethical life and is not so far removed from Honneths self-avowed pro-

    foundly different model (Honneth and Anderson, 2005).Indeed, by means of its analyses, this article has revealed that the theories of both

    thinkers in fact share a basic intention, namely, to guarantee for all citizens the social,

    material and institutional conditions for the actual exercise of otherwise merely formal

    rights and liberties or, in Honneths words, mutual self-realization. Consequently, both

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    thinkers commit to the idea of progress in the construction of principles of justice, so

    as to consider new judgements about justice or previously unconsidered injustices

    within a social context.

    Notes

    I thank Paul Patton, Christian Lazzeri, Sotiria Liakaki and an anonymous referee for their helpful

    comments on an earlier draft of this article. My thanks also go to Alice Le Goff, Marie Garrau and

    Christian Lazzeri for the opportunities offered by the research centre SOPHIAPOL. I acknowledge

    that this research was generously supported by the Bourse dexcellence Eiffel doctoratawarded by

    the French Ministry of Foreign and European Affairs. An earlier version of some of the ideas pre-

    sented here has been published in La Justice sociale: defendre Rawls contre les objections de

    Honneth (Bankovsky, 2009).

    1. Honneth deals with the question of political and social justice in the following articles: The

    Limits of Liberalism (Honneth, 1991), Recognition and Justice: Outline of a Plural Theory

    of Justice (Honneth, 2004a), From Struggles for Recognition to a Plural Concept of Justice:

    an Interview with Axel Honneth (Interviewed by Gwynn Markle) (Honneth, 2004b) and

    Autonomy, Vulnerability, Recognition and Justice, co-authored with Joel Anderson

    (Honneth and Anderson, 2005). Honneth also provides some perspectives for a

    recognition-theoretical concept of justice in his debate with Nancy Fraser in Redistribution

    or Recognition?: A Political-Philosophical Exchange (Honneth and Fraser, 2001: 17089).

    2. There are two further reasons why Honneths relation to Rawls must be assessed. First, to the

    best of my knowledge, the task has not yet been explicitly undertaken in the English second-

    ary literature. Second, Honneths claims regarding the differences between himself and

    Rawls tend to be merely repeated in the secondary literature without critical reflection.

    Nancy Frasers presentation of the apparent opposition is certainly cursory; intuitive rather

    than argued (Honneth and Fraser, 2001). And Jean-Philippe Deranty and Emmanuel Renault

    are not alone when they remark in passing, and again without real argument, that a political

    theory of recognition allows justice to be defined in terms that do include the real experi-

    ences of social injustice, whereas the different Kant-inspired theories of justice [e.g. Rawls]

    all end up devising theoretical models that seem unable to account for the modern phenom-

    ena of exclusion, oppression and domination (Deranty and Renault, 2007: 107). It is myview that Honneths claims should not be so easily accepted and that Honneths discussion

    of Rawls requires more careful consideration.

    3. As is customary, references to A Theory of Justice (Rawls, 1971a) will indicate page numbers

    for both the 1971 original edition and the revised edition (Rawls, 1999).

    4. Rawls writes that there are various forms of constructivism. A number of views not usually

    thought of as constructivist can be presented in this way (Rawls, 1980: 3223). He adds that

    average utilitarianism might be presented as a kind of constructivism (ibid.: 323). As Onora

    ONeill remarks, Rawls also contrasts his Kantian constructivism with a further version of

    non-Kantian constructivism, namely, the Hobbesian version of liberalism found in the workof David Gauthier (ONeill, 2003: 364; see also Rawls, 1987: 422). As ONeill explains,

    Gauthier views morality as constructed out of a process of rational bargaining which presup-

    poses the ideal of a person who seeks the satisfaction of antecedent individual preferences

    (ONeill, 2003: 364; see also Gauthier, 1997 and 1986).

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    5. Honneth now insists that normative claims to justice can indeed be raised in all three spheres

    of intersubjective relation, including that of the affective sphere. He thus corrects the thesis

    that he still maintained in The Struggle for Recognition according to which love does not

    admit of the potential for normative development (Honneth, 1995a: 282).6. For Honneths account of social philosophy as an endeavour distinct from moral and political

    philosophy, see Honneth, 1994. Christopher Zurn also directs us to consult Honneth, 1995b,

    especially pages xixxxii, and chs 3, 13 and 14.

    7. I will discuss the defining elements of Honneths formal conception of ethical life in Section

    III of this article.

    8. As concerns the difference between descriptivist conceptions and normative ideals of person-

    hood, Rainer Forst is correct to remark that the ideal of the person as free and equal with a

    conception of the good and a sense of justice is not a theory of the self . . . the concepts lie

    on different levels, one ontological, one abstract and normative. To argue for individual rights

    is not to argue for individualist life-plans: legal rights do not replace relations of love, affec-

    tion, friendship, and solidarity . . . they secure the needs of concrete persons (Forst, 1992:

    299). Unfortunately, the distinction between normative ideals of autonomous personhood

    and descriptivist theories of the self is overlooked by Bryce Weber when he uses the earlier

    work of Honneth to argue against liberal ideals of autonomous subjectivity (Weber, 2006).

    9. For Rawls account of the pre-requisite need for social recognition, I advise the reader to con-

    sult his discussion of the Aristotelian Principle and its companion effect: The conception of

    goodness as rationality allows us to characterise more fully the circumstances that support the

    first aspect of self-esteem, the sense of our own worth. These are essentially two: (1) having a

    rational plan of life, and in particular one that satisfies the Aristotelian Principle [i.e. one that

    calls upon natural capacities in an interesting fashion]; and (2) finding our person and deeds

    appreciated and confirmed by others who are likewise esteemed and their association enjoyed.

    . . . Unless our endeavours are appreciated by our associates, it is impossible for us to maintain

    the conviction that they are worthwhile (Rawls, 1971a: 4401/3867 rev., see also 41415/364

    rev., 65 and 67).

    10. For further discussion of the undetermined nature of personhood ideals in Rawls construc-

    tivist ethics, see David O. Brink (1987).

    11. Gerald Doppelt (1988, 1989) and William Galston (1982) argue that liberal democratic soci-

    eties are characterized by a variety of rival personhood ideals not only Kantian, but alsobourgeois-individualist and patriarchal ideals and that these alternatives are also rooted in

    modern political judgements and practices. Neither author believes that Rawls offers objective

    criteria for preferring one ideal over another. In contrast, I argue that Rawls does offer such

    criteria: constructivist conceptions must satisfy the two feasibility requirements, namely,

    coherence with non-moral judgements about the person established by the human sciences and

    coherence with considered moral judgements about justice of the society in question.

    12. Honneths argument that the reasoning for the principles is instrumental and not moral is

    not novel. The claim was first raised against Rawls in the context of the Kantian interpre-

    tation which he provided for his theory (Rawls, 1971a: 40). Critics like Oliver Johnson(1974, 1977), Andrew Levine (1974), Thomas Nagel (1973), Robert Paul Wolff (1977) and

    Homer Mason (1976) argued that Rawls personhood ideal was not Kantian enough: where

    Kant requires that principles be chosen on the basis of pure duty to persons, Rawlsian par-

    ties are motivated by purely instrumental desire for a greater stake in primary goods.

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    Honneth explicitly sides with the argument which Nagel develops in 1973 (Honneth,

    2004b: 389) (see Section III of this article). In contrast to such views, others, like Stephen

    Darwall (1976, 1980), have argued that Rawls description of the two moral faculties incor-

    porates both instrumental and non-instrumental reason alike. Clearly, I side with StephenDarwall in such debates.

    13. The defences which I offer for Rawls are inspired by the arguments of Stephen Darwall (1976,

    1980), arguments to which Rawls himself will refer when defending justice as fairness against

    the criticism that Schopenhauer makes of Kant, a criticism which resembles the one that

    Honneth here brings to Rawls (Rawls, 1980: 31819; Rawls, 1993: 1047). Schopenhauer

    argues that Kantian principles are those that egoism cunningly accepts as a compromise

    because it appeals to what rational agents, as finite beings with needs, can consistently will

    to be universal law.

    14. I maintain that Rawls constructivist procedure intends to guarantee the actual realization of

    the moral faculties. As to whether or not public institutions regulated by Rawls principles of

    justice would, in fact, achieve the actualization of these faculties is another question, beyond

    the scope of this article. If their institutionalization carefully sets its sights on their normative

    intention, then faith in or commitment to the success of the constructivist procedure is war-

    ranted. However, I refer the reader to Christian Lazzeris detailed and ultimately negative eva-

    luation within the framework of recognition theory of the capacity of Rawls two

    principles to satisfy the desire for realized liberty (2004). I do not deal with Lazzeris argu-

    ments here because my fundamental question is different. I do not seek, as does Lazzeri, to

    determine whether Rawls principles would, in fact, satisfy the desire of real individuals for

    realized liberty, but rather, I ask whether or not Rawls constructivism even intends to satisfy

    this desire because it is precisely the existence of such an intention in Rawls theory that Hon-

    neth calls into question. Against Honneth, I claim that Rawls theory does intend to satisfy

    such desires.

    15. For Honneths commitment to progress in the quality of recognition relations, see Honneth,

    2004a: 355, 35963; Honneth, 2002; and Honneth, forthcoming). For a consideration of the

    necessarily revisable character of theories of justice, and a reflection on the radical implica-

    tions of the Kantian faith in progress which I believe characterizes the constructivist,

    rational reconstructivist and normative reconstructivist theories of Rawls, Habermas and

    Honneth alike, I refer the reader to Perfecting Justice in Rawls, Habermas and Honneth:Constructivism from a Deconstructive Perspective (Bankovsky, forthcoming).

    16. It seems to me that the criticism Honneth here develops is the opposite of the one Habermas

    brings to Rawls in Reconciliation through the Public Use of Reason: Remarks on John

    Rawlss Political Liberalism (Habermas, 1995). For Honneth, Rawls method fails because

    it attempts a purely formal justification of principles (in terms of the idea of Kantian impar-

    tiality) where it should instead justify principles in terms of the substantive conception of

    mutual good which is implied by historical institutions. In contrast to Honneths take on

    Rawls, Habermas states that Rawls failure lies in the fact that his method depends on shared

    substantive assumptions which are contingent to a historical tradition and does not developitself in a strictly procedural manner as per Habermas discourse-theoretical approach

    (Habermas, 1995: 126). In my view, the fact that Honneth and Habermas each direct opposing

    criticisms at Rawls methodology is significant: Rawls political constructivism is neither

    simply formal nor simply historical and substantive.

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