Institutional Values, or How to Say What Democracy Is

Southwest Philosophy Review 30 (1):235-242 (2014)
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Abstract

In this paper, I describe a category of political values that I call “institutional values.” An institutional value (the quintessential examples of which are democracy and the rule of law) is distinct from an ordinary (or “abstract”) political value like justice by having both descriptive and evaluative components. I defend a method of sorting out correct from incorrect conceptions of an institutional value that relies on two ideas: coherence and verisimilitude.

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Paul Gowder
Northwestern University

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