Journal article

Is The United States A ‘Racial Democracy’

Year:

2014

Published in:

New York Times
liberty
democracy
philosophers
dignity
voice

Plato’s “Republic” is the wellspring from which all subsequent Western philosophy flows, and political philosophy is no exception. According to Plato, liberty is democracy’s greatest good; it is that which “in a democratic city you will hear… is the most precious of all possessions.” Subsequently, two notions of liberty emerged in the writings of democratic political philosophers. The dispute about which of these two notions of liberty is most central to human dignity is at the heart of Western philosophy. Both are central to American democracy. Indeed, it is best to think of these as two different aspects of the conception of liberty at the heart of American democracy, rather than distinct concepts. The standard source of the distinction between two senses of “liberty” is a speech in 1819 by the great political theorist Benjamin Constant. The first,“the liberty of the ancients,” consists in having a voice into the policies and representatives that govern us. The second,“the liberty of the moderns,” is the right to pursue our private interests free from state oversight or control.