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Preliminary communication

https://doi.org/10.20901/an.12.05

The division of epistemic labor in democracy

Snježana Prijić Samaržija ; Department of Philosophy, Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences, University of Rijeka, Croatia


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Abstract

Thomas Christiano claims that one of the fundamental challenges democracy is faced with is the appropriate division of epistemic labor between citizens and experts. In this article I try to present and analyze Christiano’s solution from the perspective of social epistemology while utilizing the concepts and tools provided by this discipline. Despite fundamentally agreeing with his position, I attempt to propose a certain addition which might enrich this solution with additional epistemic and political responsibility. In the first part, I briefly elaborate on the relevance of social epistemology in discussions regarding the epistemic justification of deliberative democracy. In the second part, I contextualize Christiano’s view within discourses regarding social epistemology and identify his approach as reliability democracy due to his belief that truth-sensitive decision-making processes are ensured through the usage of reliable mechanisms (which allow for expertise to generate the epistemically best decisions possible). In the third part I attempt to provide arguments that support further elaboration of Christiano’s proposals in the direction of ensuring additional epistemic and democratic quality of decisions.

Keywords

deliberative democracy; division of epistemic labor; reliability democracy; epistocracy; fundamental and derivative epistemic authority

Hrčak ID:

160886

URI

https://hrcak.srce.hr/160886

Publication date:

30.6.2016.

Article data in other languages: croatian

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