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Abstract

comprehensive moral doctrines, a second (and, if you will, higher) level for justifying the principles for shared political institutions. Finally, it ignores Rawls’s idea of ‘wide public reason’, developed in the second preface to PL (1996), which authorizes citizens to draw on preferred comprehensive doctrines and personal moral convictions in arguments about the constitution and about political policies in cases where there is not a firm agreement in such matters.

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2009-01-28

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Craig Bourne
University of Hertfordshire

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