Overview
- Only book dealing with the cognitive processes that underlie non-conscious distortions in applying justice
- Explains how our beliefs about a good life can be distorted and lead us to follow a life centered in consumerism
- Introduces a perspective which has not been intensively developed in the social pathologies debate
Part of the book series: Philosophy and Politics - Critical Explorations (PPCE, volume 9)
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Table of contents (7 chapters)
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Rationality Bursting Its Banks
Keywords
- Social structures and relationships
- Concept of practical imagination
- Relationship between practical rationality and imagination
- Kant in moral imagination
- Hume in moral imagination
- Plato’s government of the wise
- Marx’s classless society
- Universal suffrage and the universal basic income
- Practical rationality and imagination
- Articulating element of practical life is reflection
- Intrapersonal relationships established in practical life
- Interpersonal relationships established in practical life
- Imagination, autonomy and reflection as normative criteria
- Social pathologies as a blockage to the imagination
- Counteracting social pathologies
- Normative friction and anonymous injustice
- Civil society, institutions and democratic ethical life
- Superficial and deep reflection
About this book
Social pathologies are social processes that hinder how individuals exercise their autonomy and freedom. In this book, Gustavo Pereira offers an account of such phenomena by defining them as a cognitive failure that affects the practical imagination, thus negatively interfering with our practical life. This failure of the imagination is the consequence of the imposition of a type of practical rationality on a practical context alien to it, caused by a non‑conscious transformation of the individuals’ set of beliefs and values. The research undertaken provides an innovative explanation in terms of microfoundations based on the mechanism of “availability heuristic”, by which the diminished exercise of the imagination turns the intuitively available or prevailing rationality into the one that regulates behaviour in inappropriate contexts. Additionally, this incorrect regulation results in a progressive distortion of the shared sense of the affected practical contexts, which becomes institutionalized.
Consumerism, bureaucratism, moralism, juridification, some forms of corruption and the particular Latin American case of “malinchism” can be interpreted as social pathologies insofar as they imply such distortion. This way of conceptualizing social pathologies integrates the traditional sociological macro‑explanation manifested through the negative consequences of the processes of social rationalization with a micro‑explanation articulated around the findings of cognitive psychology such as availability heuristic.
Understanding social pathologies as a cognitive failure allows us to identify the introduction of normative friction as the main way to counteract their effects. One of the potential effects of normative friction, as a specific form of cognitive dissonance, is the intense exercise of the imagination, thus operating as a condition of possibility for the exercise of autonomy and reflection. Democratic ethical life, understood as a shared democraticculture, as well as social institutions and narratives, are the privileged social spaces and means to trigger reflective processes that can counteract social pathologies through a reflective reappropriation of the meaning of the shared practical context.An extraordinary contribution by a Critical Theorist to the return of the concept of imagination today. It takes up the challenge once taken by Kant to think about imagination as the pivotal activity not only of knowledge and experience, but above all, for action. The author claims that imagination makes criticism possible (pathologies) and it allows us to envision alternative views into the path for social transformation. Without imagination nothing is possible.
María Pía Lara, Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana-Iztapalapa, Mexico
Authors and Affiliations
About the author
Gustavo Pereira is Professor of Ethics and Political Philosophy and Director of the Department of Philosophy of Praxis at the Faculty of Humanities, Universidad de la República (Uruguay). He has founded and is co-director of the interdisciplinary research group “Ethics, Justice and Economy” at the same University. His research has been mainly focused on social justice and theory of democracy, and more recently on social philosophy, in particular social pathologies, alienation and the cognitive microfoundations of those social phenomena. Some of his books are Medios, capacidades y justicia distributiva (UNAM, 2004), Las voces de la igualdad (Proteus, 2010) and Elements of a Critical Theory of Justice (Palgrave-Macmillan, 2013).
Bibliographic Information
Book Title: Imposed Rationality and Besieged Imagination
Book Subtitle: Practical Life and Social Pathologies
Authors: Gustavo Pereira
Series Title: Philosophy and Politics - Critical Explorations
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-26520-5
Publisher: Springer Cham
eBook Packages: Religion and Philosophy, Philosophy and Religion (R0)
Copyright Information: Springer Nature Switzerland AG 2019
Hardcover ISBN: 978-3-030-26519-9Published: 06 November 2019
Softcover ISBN: 978-3-030-26522-9Published: 06 November 2020
eBook ISBN: 978-3-030-26520-5Published: 24 October 2019
Series ISSN: 2352-8370
Series E-ISSN: 2352-8389
Edition Number: 1
Number of Pages: XV, 190
Number of Illustrations: 4 b/w illustrations
Topics: Social Philosophy, Political Theory, Critical Theory, Social Justice, Equality and Human Rights, Political Philosophy, Humanities and Social Sciences, multidisciplinary