Published online by Cambridge University Press: 04 August 2010
Liberal political theorists commend a comparatively orderly form of life. It is one in which individuals and groups who care about different things, and live in different ways, nevertheless share an overriding commitment to liberty and toleration, together with an ability to resolve conflicts and disagreements in ways that do not violate these values. Both citizens and states are taken to be capable of negotiating points of contention without resorting to forms of coercion such as abuse, blackmail, brainwashing, intimidation, torture or other types of violence. In explaining what makes such a state of affairs possible, such theorists have tended to present the citizens of liberal polities as more or less rational individuals who are aware of the advantages of a pluralist, yet co-operative way of life, and understand what it takes to maintain them. Liberalism works best, they have suggested, when, and because, individuals understand its benefits, and therefore act broadly in accordance with the norms it prescribes.
Among the things that this approach was traditionally less interested in, or at any rate had less to say about, were the emotional dispositions on which pluralism depends. While arguments designed to persuade individuals of the overriding importance of mutual respect and toleration were proposed and analysed, there was relatively little investigation of the emotions that might bind people to a broadly liberal way of life.
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