Philosopher Michael Huemer: ‘Don’t Trust the Media’

Huemer writes June 14, 2026:

Here is why I don’t trust the media, and you shouldn’t either. As near as I can tell, this is how the system works:

Step 1: Something happens in the non-media world.

Step 2: A journalist talks to one or a few people involved in that event. Sometimes they approach the journalist; sometimes the journalist approaches them. There are many other people involved in the event who don’t talk to the journalist. There is physical evidence about the event, but the journalist doesn’t have it; he just has what a few people told him. It doesn’t matter if the person has an obvious bias. For instance, if the U.S. military just blew up a hospital, the journalist will call up a military spokesperson to find out what happened.

Step 3: The journalist basically prints what that person told him, but with a sensationalistic, ideological, or playing-to-stereotypes spin that the journalist came up with. The goal is to get people to click on or share the story.

Step 4: A hundred other journalists copy the first one’s story, with varying degrees of distortion. They typically have the same spin, sometimes escalating the spin. This spin is completely different from, and sometimes the opposite of, what people who actually have direct knowledge of the event would think.

Why do they do this? I explain the media business model in my post, “The Anger Merchants”. They just want to capture attention, so they can sell it to advertisers. For this purpose, truthfulness is mostly irrelevant. They also want to do this with minimal expense and effort, which is why they copy from each other.

Huemer is right about the machine. A reporter works from one or two sources, often interested ones, then a hundred outlets copy the first story and push the spin a notch further for clicks. That pattern is well documented. His three-article AI chain shows it. The Facebook program broke, and by the third rewrite it became Skynet.
The trouble is that he runs the same engine he condemns. He picks the cases that fit his thesis and tells you they came to mind. That is selection. A critic who curates his evidence to confirm a prior is doing what he accuses the press of doing, and he never reckons with it.
The Gaza section is his weakest, and it gives the game away. He tests genocide by nuclear capacity. If Israel wanted to wipe out Gaza it could use its warheads, so no genocide. That is not the legal definition and not how the scholarly fight over intent runs. Then he closes on a cheap line about Jews. “It’s only a genocide if it’s done by Jews.” He drops his own standard of care at the exact point the topic turns hot. The 10-to-1 ratio claim sits there with no citation behind it.
The deeper problem is the move underneath the whole essay. “Don’t trust the media” resolves into “trust my filtering instead,” and he offers no account of why his filter beats theirs. He writes with confidence, vivid examples, and a unifying narrative built to capture attention and flatter a reader’s suspicion. That is the profile he warns you about.
What are some useful heuristics for figuring out truth and who you can trust?
Start with incentives. The first thing to ask about any source is what he gets paid for and what error costs him. A man rewarded for attention will trade accuracy to get it. A man who loses money, standing, or his job when he is wrong has reason to be careful. Skin in the game beats credentials. The forecaster who bets and keeps score tells you more than the pundit who never grades his own record.
Find the track record before you weigh the reputation. Has the person made checkable predictions, and how did they come out? Tetlock’s forecasting work shows confidence and accuracy correlate little, and the loudest experts often score worst. Look for the quiet ones who hedge, update, and keep count.
Watch for costly honesty. A source who says things against his own side, or against his own interest, carries more information than the loyalist. The man who breaks with his coalition pays a price, and the price is the signal. When someone reaches only the conclusions that raise his standing inside his group, hold those conclusions as suspect even when they turn out correct, because he would arrive at them either way.
Separate honesty from competence. They fail on their own. A man can be truthful and wrong, or expert and lying. Score both, and do not let warmth toward one paper over a hole in the other.
Go upstream. Distance from the event breeds distortion. Read the transcript, the study, the filing, the raw footage before you read anyone’s summary of it. Each retelling adds spin. Huemer gets this part right even where the rest of him fails.
Give it time. Early reports on a fast-moving event are usually wrong. The first day’s account and the third week’s account seldom match. Patience costs nothing but the urge to have an opinion right now.
Distrust the flattering story. The claim that confirms what you already believe deserves more scrutiny, not less, and the one that irritates you deserves a fair hearing. Most people do the reverse. That is how they get captured.
Mind base rates. A claim that would be enormous if true is usually false, because enormous things are rare and exciting falsehoods are common. Hold the extraordinary claim to a higher bar than the ordinary one.
Reward error-correction. A man or an institution that admits mistakes and retracts them beats one with a spotless record, because the spotless record usually means nobody is checking. How a source handles getting caught wrong tells you most of what you need.
Ask the hard question of yourself and others: how would I know if I were wrong? A belief with no answer to that gets held for reasons apart from truth.
Triangulate across interests. Agreement among people who would gain from disagreeing is strong evidence. Agreement among allies is weak, because they might be copying one another.
Strip the adjectives. Sources often get the facts roughly right and the framing wrong. Pull apart what happened from how it gets described, and you can keep the first while throwing out the second.
None of these heuristics frees you from trusting somebody. You cannot verify everything yourself. The work is not to trust no one but to trust well, and to know which of your beliefs rest on your own checking and which rest on someone else’s word.

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Amartya Sen: Economics as Moral Inquiry

Amartya Sen (b. November 3, 1933) works as an economist, a philosopher, and a public intellectual, and across more than seven decades he has reshaped how scholars and governments think about welfare, poverty, famine, democracy, justice, and human development. He argues that prosperity should be judged by the substantive freedoms people hold and the opportunities open to them, not by income, output, or growth alone. That argument carried him across economics, philosophy, political theory, public health, and development studies, and it earned him the 1998 Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences for his work in welfare economics and social choice theory. India awarded him its highest civilian honor, the Bharat Ratna, in 1999.

Sen was born in Santiniketan, in Bengal, then part of British India. He grew up inside the educational world that Rabindranath Tagore (1861-1941) built at Visva-Bharati University, and Tagore gave him his first name, which means immortal. His father, Ashutosh Sen, taught chemistry at Dhaka University and later at Visva-Bharati. His maternal grandfather, Kshiti Mohan Sen (1880-1960), was a scholar of Sanskrit, comparative religion, and Indian civilization. Santiniketan gave the boy an early and unusual mixture of Indian, Asian, and Western thought. That mixture later shaped his defense of pluralism and public reasoning.

Two experiences marked his early life. As a child he saw communal violence during the last years of British rule and the partition. The deeper mark came from the Bengal famine of 1943, which killed millions. Sen later remembered the suffering of laborers and poor families whose access to food collapsed while food supplies continued to flow. Those memories seeded his work on poverty, inequality, and hunger.

He studied at Presidency College in Calcutta, then a leading center of Indian higher education, before he entered Trinity College, Cambridge, in the 1950s. Cambridge threw him into hard arguments among Keynesians, Marxists, and neoclassical economists. He completed his doctorate under Joan Robinson (1903-1983), among the most forceful economists of the century. His dissertation examined the choice of technology and economic development in poorer countries, an early sign of his lifelong concern with how societies widen opportunity. During those years he read Kenneth Arrow (1921-2017), whose impossibility theorem later became a chief spur to Sen’s contributions to social choice theory.

His early career moved fast. At twenty-three he became professor and chairman of the economics department at Jadavpur University in Calcutta. He went on to teach at the Delhi School of Economics, the London School of Economics, Oxford, Cambridge, and Harvard. In 1998 he became Master of Trinity College, Cambridge, the first Asian to hold the office in the college’s long history, and he served until 2004. He then returned to Harvard University, where he holds the chair of Thomas W. Lamont University Professor of Economics and Philosophy and remains active in his nineties.

Sen first remade social choice theory, the field that asks how a society turns individual preferences into collective decisions. His book *Collective Choice and Social Welfare* (1970) built on Arrow’s work. Arrow had shown that no voting system can satisfy a set of reasonable democratic conditions at once. Many economists read this as a hard limit on collective decision-making. Sen pushed the field a different way. He argued that many of Arrow’s paradoxes came from a needless restriction on the information available for judging social outcomes. Standard theory barred interpersonal comparisons of well-being and treated utility as private and incomparable across persons. Sen showed that once a society permits even limited comparisons across persons, many of the apparent impossibilities dissolve. He reopened the case for rational democratic evaluation and pulled normative questions back to the center of economic analysis.

Among his celebrated results stands the Liberal Paradox, also called the Impossibility of a Paretian Liberal. In a rigorous proof, Sen showed that a society committed to even minimal individual liberty can collide with Pareto efficiency, the standard criterion under which an outcome counts as optimal when no one can be made better off without making another worse off. Personal freedom and economic efficiency do not always travel together. The result reshaped argument about liberty, welfare, and public policy.

His broad fame came first through famine. In *Poverty and Famines: An Essay on Entitlement and Deprivation* (1981) he challenged the old belief that food shortage causes famine. He examined Bengal, Ethiopia, Bangladesh, and other cases, and he argued that famine often follows a failure of entitlement rather than absolute scarcity. People starve not because food vanishes but because they lose the means to command it through wages, work, property, or exchange. This entitlement account changed famine studies and moved development policy, disaster response, and food-security planning around the world.

The idea most closely tied to his name is the capability approach, which changed how scholars think about welfare and human development. Older economics measured well-being through income, consumption, or utility. Sen argued that these measures miss the question that counts. The question is not how many resources a man holds, but what he can do and be.

His framework turns on a distinction between functionings and capabilities. Functionings are the states and activities that make up a life, such as health, education, mobility, nourishment, and political engagement. Capabilities are the real opportunities a man has to reach those functionings. Two men may share the same functioning yet hold very different capabilities. A wealthy man who fasts and a poor man who has no food both have empty stomachs, yet their freedom and their options stand far apart. Poverty, in this account, becomes a deprivation of capability rather than a shortage of income.

The capability approach reached deep into development economics, political philosophy, public health, education, and international policy. It gave much of the intellectual foundation for the Human Development Index, built by the Pakistani economist Mahbub ul Haq (1934-1998) and adopted by the United Nations Development Programme. The index turned international attention away from gross domestic product alone and toward wider measures of human well-being.

Sen treats economics as a branch of moral inquiry, which sets him apart from many in the discipline. He draws on a long line that runs from Aristotle (384-322 BC) and Adam Smith (1723-1790) through John Stuart Mill (1806-1873) and John Rawls (1921-2002), and through classical Indian philosophy. In *Development as Freedom* (1999) he argued that development means the expansion of human freedom rather than economic growth alone. Political liberty, education, health care, social security, and public participation serve not only as tools of development but as parts of development.

His later political philosophy gathered in The Idea of Justice (2009). There Sen broke with approaches that search for perfectly just institutions. He proposed instead a comparative method that judges societies by how far they reduce observable injustice. He drew on Western and Indian traditions of public reasoning alike, and he pressed for democratic discussion, practical reform, and the relief of avoidable suffering.

Democracy and human welfare run through his scholarship as a steady theme. His most quoted claim holds that no substantial famine has occurred in a functioning democracy with a relatively free press. Democratic governments face political pressure to answer mass suffering, he argued, because citizens vote and journalists publish failures. The argument put accountability, transparency, and democratic government at the center of development debate.

He also reshaped the study of gender inequality. In a 1990 essay he introduced the idea of missing women. From demographic evidence he estimated that more than a hundred million women were absent from the world’s population through sex-selective abortion, unequal health care, malnutrition, infanticide, and other forms of discrimination. The idea became a leading frame for understanding the global toll of institutional gender bias, and it shaped international argument over women’s rights and public health.

His range carried him past economics into culture, identity, and political conflict. In *The Argumentative Indian* (2005) he traced the traditions of debate, skepticism, and pluralism in Indian intellectual history. In *Identity and Violence: The Illusion of Destiny* (2006) he argued against reducing a man to a single religious, ethnic, national, or cultural identity. Single-identity thinking, he warned, feeds sectarian conflict and hides the many affiliations that make up a human life. These themes grew sharper as nationalism and identity politics rose around the world. In *An Uncertain Glory: India and its Contradictions* (2013), written with the economist Jean Drèze (b. 1959), he examined India’s contradictions of growth and deprivation. His memoir, *Home in the World* (2021), recounts his early decades across Bengal, Calcutta, and Cambridge.

As a public intellectual Sen holds a place beside figures such as John Maynard Keynes, Isaiah Berlin, and Rawls. He moves between technical economics and broad philosophical reflection, and he takes up poverty, inequality, democracy, nationalism, globalization, public health, and human rights. His work has reached economists, philosophers, policymakers, development practitioners, and international bodies across the globe.

His personal life carries the same international and cross-disciplinary stamp as his work. He first married the Bengali writer and scholar Nabaneeta Dev Sen (1938-2019), and they had two daughters, Antara and Nandana. He later married the Italian economist Eva Colorni (1941-1985), whose family held deep roots in European anti-fascist politics, and they had two children, Indrani and Kabir. Her death from cancer in 1985 struck him hard. Since 1991 he has been married to the economic historian Emma Rothschild (b. 1948), and the two have shared ties between Harvard and Cambridge.

His honors run well past the Nobel Prize and the Bharat Ratna. He has received the National Humanities Medal of the United States, the Johan Skytte Prize in Political Science, France’s Légion d’Honneur, and more than a hundred honorary degrees from universities across the world. Few living scholars have reached so far across disciplines and institutions.

Critics have pressed Sen from several directions. Some economists hold that capabilities resist measurement and operational use in policy. Some conservatives argue that his framework leans too hard toward redistribution and public intervention. Some Marxist critics charge that he slights class structure and political economy. Even many of his critics grant the breadth of his achievement and the reach of his ideas.

His lasting importance rests in his effort to rejoin economics and ethics. As much of the discipline grew specialized, mathematical, and remote from questions of human welfare, Sen held that economic inquiry must answer how people live, what opportunities they hold, and what freedoms they enjoy. More than any other economist of his generation, he turned attention from wealth toward the human capabilities that wealth can help build. In his nineties he stays at work in scholarship and public debate, and he keeps shaping argument over justice, freedom, democracy, and human flourishing.

Sen’s Hero System

Amartya Sen builds his life’s work on freedom, inequality, democracy, welfare, and the worth of a human life, and not one of these words carries a settled meaning on its own. Freedom toward what end. Inequality of what, against which good. Democracy as the floor of which kind of legitimacy. Each word ranks lives before it describes them, and a ranking of lives comes from a hero system.

The term is Ernest Becker’s (1924-1974). A hero system is a culture’s scheme for earning significance, the account of what makes a life worth living and a death bearable. Every culture hands its members a way to feel they count past the grave, a part in something that outlasts them. The scheme sorts men into the worthy and the wasted, the hero and the also-ran. A man cannot read his own hero system as one option among many, because a scheme he could shrug off could no longer hold his death at arm’s length. The hero system has to feel like the grain of the world.

Sen’s hero is the agent. The reasoning, self-authoring man who chooses his affiliations, holds power to account, and widens the range of what he and others can do and be. Significance comes from agency, from authorship of a life and a share in the public reason that shapes the common world. Sen denies death through the long climb of human progress, the expansion of freedom across the generations that the single man joins and outlives.

Here lies the move that hides the rest. Sen does not read his hero as one creed set beside others. He reads it as what remains once the lies fall away. Strip off the priest, the superstition, the accident of birth, the single inherited label, and the agent stands there, the natural man uncovered. So the hero system arrives as a subtraction, reality minus error, and never as a positive creed with content of its own. That self-understanding does the concealing. A creed that thinks of itself as the residue left after clearing falsehood will never count its own commitments as commitments, and will never price what it destroys, because what it removed was a lie and a lie is no loss. The trad sees the same thing and calls it a mutation, a strange new faith of the unencumbered self, rare in history, that dresses as the default. Subtraction to Sen, mutation to his enemy. The quarrel starts there.

You can watch the hero form. Sen grew up at Santiniketan inside the school of Rabindranath Tagore (1861-1941), in a mixture of Indian, Asian, and Western thought that taught him to prize the man who sorts and chooses among traditions over the man who inherits one whole. The Bengal famine of 1943 marked him, and he read it after as a failure of entitlement, an agency blocked, men who lost the power to command food while the food kept moving. The Argumentative Indian gathers a long line of debate and skepticism, Charvaka and the tolerant kings Ashoka (c. 304-232 BC) and Akbar (1542-1605), and names it the heritage worth claiming. That book is the origin myth of the hero. Sen needs a lineage for the reasoning self, so he finds one and calls it India. Identity and Violence: The Illusion of Destiny finishes the figure. There Sen attacks the single identity and seats the man who holds plural affiliations and sorts them by reason. The free man is the chooser. The chooser is the hero.

Set the rival hero against him whole, because everything turns on the collision. The dharmic and tribal world runs on a contrary picture of man. Sen’s hero presumes a reasoner who, given the chance, reasons his way to good ends. The trad denies that man at the root. Man is appetite and pride and fallenness, and left to himself he does what is right in his own eyes, which is ruin, so he needs the restraint of law and custom and shame and the sacred above him. The hero of that world does not author a life. He fills a place. He serves the order, reveres what stands over him, keeps faith with the dead and the gods and the dharma of his station. The Bhagavad Gita prizes a man’s own duty poorly done over another man’s duty done well. Inequality is no wound there. It is the shape of the cosmos, births sorted by a moral order that runs behind this life and ahead of it. Real freedom is moksha, release from the wheel, won by fidelity and renunciation, and Sen’s freedom reads to the Hindu trad as a category error, the swelling of the worldly choosing that binds the soul to rebirth. Even the denial of death runs the other way. Sen denies death through progress, the line that climbs. The trad denies it through the order that returns, the lineage, the caste, the wheel, the dharma held across the ages. One hero climbs and one hero abides.

Now the terms, read through both heroes.

Freedom. Sen treats freedom as additive, more agency, more options, no one set back. The trad knows the price, and the price is the heart of the thing. Every freedom Sen adds to the public square resets the shared world. Bring porn into the common air and gay marriage into the common law and the trad does not gain an option he can decline. He loses the world his children grow up inside, the world that once felt like the grain of things and now feels like a subculture holding out. So he withdraws, and Sen’s frame reads the withdrawal as a man fleeing freedom, while the trad lives it as exile from a home taken from him. The expansion of one hero’s freedom is the contraction of another hero’s world. That trade-off never reaches Sen’s ledger, because his subtraction story tells him he removed a superstition and a superstition is no loss.

The filter goes deeper. Sen’s freedom carries a hidden destination. When a man freely chooses the tribe, the faith, the inherited role, Sen does not bless the choice as free. He reaches for adaptive preference, the idea he draws from Jon Elster (b. 1940), and reads the choice as a taste deformed by narrowed options, the contentment of a man who never glimpsed the alternatives. The trad woman at ease in her place, the believer who treasures his obedience, the tribesman loyal to his people, each gets reclassified, his contentment called false and his reasoning called stunted. So Sen’s freedom is freedom toward one fixed end. A choice that lands on agency and openness counts as free. A choice that lands on submission and reverence drops to unfreedom. The word holds a verdict before the man has chosen.

Inequality. Sen counts every man as a unit of equal worth because each is an agent, and inequality of capability reads as a wound, an agency blocked from outside, so the level spread of real freedom becomes the aim. The rival reads the same fact and calls it order, the rank that follows because men differ. A hierarchical hero system seats the priest and the king and the sage where they stand by right, reads the differences among men as the truth of things rather than an injury, and reads Sen’s leveling as adharma, the inversion that ushers in the dark age where the orders blur and the world comes apart. What Sen calls inequality, the rival calls order.

Democracy. Sen’s democracy is government by discussion, and his famine claim follows from the hero, not from the data alone. No grave famine survives where citizens vote and a free press prints the failure, because there the ordinary man’s agency reaches the men who rule. Yet discussion runs on public reason, and the terms of public reason fall to the class fluent in it, the schooled, the articulate, the cosmopolitan, Sen’s own kind. The ordinary man’s voice counts once it enters that arena and speaks its grammar. And the trad and the tribesman feel the catch before they can name it. Public reason admits only certain warrants. Revelation does not count as a reason. The authority of the sages does not count. The custom of the ancestors does not count. The conversation rules their grounds out before it opens, then bids them join as equals. Sen’s democracy is not rule by experts in name. It is the quiet sovereignty of one kind of warrant over the rest, and the men whose truth comes from above or from the dead arrive already disqualified by the house rules.

Welfare and capability approach. The content of a worthy life in Sen’s system is the content of agency, health and schooling and mobility and voice, the gear of the self-author. What a man can do and be means the spread of self-chosen lives he can reach. The Human Development Index ranks nations by how well they outfit the agent, treating the long life, the schooled mind, and the cash income as the goods that count, in Norway and in Niger alike. A hero system where the good life is faith kept, or righteous children raised, or nearness to God, or release from the wheel, keeps a different ledger. The poor man rich in Torah, or in sons, or in honor, scores low on Sen’s index and high on his own.

Gender and the missing women. Sen counts a woman as missing because the equal autonomous agent is his unit of worth, and her shortened life or her thinner care reads as agency denied. The word gender carries the hero system in its grammar, setting the sexed body as stuff the chosen self may override, and reading the old division of men’s work and women’s work as a harm to undo. A hero system built on distinct and joined roles, where a woman draws significance from a place a man cannot fill, reads the same record and finds no missing women in it. It finds the numbers and gives them another sense, or none. The count is shared. The reading divides.

Sen is Indian and cites India, and his hero is the Western reasoner in Indian dress. The Argumentative Indian lifts the skeptics and the tolerant kings out of a worshipping civilization and binds them into the heritage worth claiming, while the dharmic, hierarchical, devotional mainstream most Indians lived inside drops to the margin as the part to outgrow. So his quarrel with Hindu nationalism is two hero systems fighting over one country. Sen reads the Hindutva man as the betrayer of the real, argumentative India. The Hindutva man reads Sen as a rootless cosmopolitan who pulled a handful of skeptics from a worshipping people and called them the essence. Each claims India. Sen wrote his claim as the neutral one, and the subtraction story is what let him.

So to read Sen, translate. When he says freedom, hear agency toward one fixed end. When he says inequality, hear agency blocked. When he says democracy, hear the warrant of public reason raised over revelation, custom, and the dead. When he says development, hear the spread of self-chosen lives. The translation returns the questions his prose buries under the word reason. Which hero stands here, lifted over which rivals, and by what right does this one speak for man. And what does his freedom cost the men who held the world it cleared. The capability approach answers what the agent can do. It never answers why this agent, and not another hero, holds the floor, and it never sends the trad the bill it ran up tearing down his home.

‘A Big Misunderstanding’

Pinsof’s essay argues that intellectuals trace the world’s troubles to misunderstanding, because that story hands intellectuals the lead role. If ignorance causes the trouble, then the men who clear up ignorance save the world. Sen builds a seventy-year career on that premise. His work reads as a catalog of misunderstandings corrected.

Welfare economics misunderstood welfare. It barred comparisons of well-being across persons and treated utility as private. Sen corrects the error and reopens rational evaluation. Development economics misunderstood development. It counted growth and output in place of freedom and opportunity. Sen corrects the error and renames the goal. Famine studies misunderstood famine. They blamed food shortage. Sen corrects the error with entitlement. Each move keeps the same shape. A discipline holds a confused belief, Sen finds the confusion, and a better understanding follows. Pinsof says most social science runs this errand, and Sen runs it at the highest level the field allows.

Then comes Pinsof’s deflation. Judge a man by his stated goals and Sen looks like a servant of humanity, at work to relieve poverty and widen freedom. Judge him by what the work earns and a different picture forms. The work earns the Nobel, the Bharat Ratna, the mastership of Trinity, the Harvard chair, and more honorary degrees than any rival can count. Sen holds the highest status an academic can reach. Pinsof does not call this hypocrisy. He calls it design. Natural selection built an animal that pursues status under a moral cover story, and Sen pursues it through the most admired cover story the discipline offers, the story that returns ethics to a cold science.

The capability approach gives elite institutions a moral vocabulary and a number to chase. The Human Development Index lets the United Nations, the World Bank, and a thousand agencies measure their own value and justify their reach. Pinsof notes that the best compliment a social scientist can hear is not that the work is insightful but that it has policy implications, meaning it supports the policies the listener already likes. Sen’s framework carries more policy implications than any welfare theory of the age. It built an industry, and the industry employs the people who praise it. The stated aim is the relief of deprivation. The working result is a self-sustaining apparatus that pays salaries and confers status on its staff under a moral banner.

Sen’s faith in public reasoning draws the same fire. In The Idea of Justice and The Argumentative Indian he treats open debate as the road to justice and credits an Indian tradition of argument with keeping reason alive. Pinsof reads debate as coalition signaling and rival-derogation wearing the mask of truth-seeking. Men argue to win and to bind allies, not to find the right answer. Sen mistakes the stated purpose of debate for the working one. He sees citizens reasoning toward fairness where Pinsof sees primates fighting for position and calling it deliberation.

The frame meets resistance at the famine work, and honesty demands the point. Sen’s entitlement theory holds no misunderstanding story. It runs on incentives. People starve not because food vanishes but because they lose the means to command it. Democracies prevent famine, Sen argues, because politicians fear voters and a free press punishes failure. That account points at motive and structure, which sits close to Pinsof’s own move. Here Sen reasons like a man who knows that outcomes follow from incentive rather than from ignorance.

The escape lasts one step. Sen diagnoses the incentive and then prescribes a cure that leans on the same actors behaving well once informed. Let the press report and the voters see, he says, and the system corrects. Pinsof answers that voters have no reason to drop their bias and strong reason to parrot the tribe, and that the press prints what holds attention rather than what informs. Sen reads the incentive right for the cause and forgets it for the remedy. The misunderstanding myth slips back in through the prescription.

The missing women essay shows the pattern at full strength. Sen counts the absent women and treats their absence as a wrong to be righted through awareness and policy. Pinsof might answer that sex-selective abortion and unequal care follow savvy strategy under hard constraint, where sons carry dowry relief, old-age support, and standing in a resource fight. The parents understand the incentive. They sit in no fog. Sen’s framing of the loss as a problem awaiting consciousness reads a strategic choice as an error of knowledge.

Sen carries the warmest brand in his profession. He returns conscience to economics and speaks for the poor in the gentle, learned voice of a man above the scrum. Pinsof observes that cynicism reads as icky and that we broadcast feel-good idealism to signal that we are sweeties, and it works. Sen’s sweetness works better than anyone’s. The moral warmth marks no flaw in the status game. It is the winning move.

Pinsof closes with the claim that the world does not want saving, that nothing is broken, that the study of human nature often comes to the study of the hole we sit in. Sen’s life rests on the opposite faith. Injustice is a fixable error, freedom can expand, public reason can widen, and the right framework brings the better world closer. The two men stand at the far ends of the same question. Under Pinsof, Sen is the grandest case in the essay, the misunderstanding myth dressed in the finest mathematics and the kindest moral vocabulary the discipline has produced.

The Great Delusion

In his 2018 book, The Great Delusion: Liberal Dreams and International Realities, John J. Mearsheimer wrote:

My view is that we are profoundly social beings from the start to the finish of our lives and that individualism is of secondary importance… Liberalism downplays the social nature of human beings to the point of almost ignoring it, instead treating people largely as atomistic actors… Political liberalism… is an ideology that is individualistic at its core and assigns great importance to the concept of inalienable rights. This concern for rights is the basis of its universalism—everyone on the planet has the same inherent set of rights—and this is what motivates liberal states to pursue ambitious foreign policies. The public and scholarly discourse about liberalism since World War II has placed enormous emphasis on what are commonly called human rights. This is true all around the world, not just in the West. “Human rights,” Samuel Moyn notes, “have come to define the most elevated aspirations of both social movements and political entities—state and interstate. They evoke hope and provoke action.”
[Humans] do not operate as lone wolves but are born into social groups or societies that shape their identities well before they can assert their individualism. Moreover, individuals usually develop strong attachments to their group and are sometimes willing to make great sacrifices for their fellow members. Humans are often said to be tribal at their core. The main reason for our social nature is that the best way for a person to survive is to be embedded in a society and to cooperate with fellow members rather than act alone… Despite its elevated ranking, reason is the least important of the three ways we determine our preferences. It certainly is less important than socialization. The main reason socialization matters so much is that humans have a long childhood in which they are protected and nurtured by their families and the surrounding society, and meanwhile exposed to intense socialization. At the same time, they are only beginning to develop their critical faculties, so they are not equipped to think for themselves. By the time an individual reaches the point where his reasoning skills are well developed, his family and society have already imposed an enormous value infusion on him. Moreover, that individual is born with innate sentiments that also strongly influence how he thinks about the world around him. All of this means that people have limited choice in formulating a moral code, because so much of their thinking about right and wrong comes from inborn attitudes and socialization.

If Mearsheimer is right, Sen keeps his economics and loses his philosophy.
Start with the unit. Sen builds welfare on the individual and asks what each man can do and be. Mearsheimer holds that the group comes first and forms the man before he can assert any self of his own. The value infusion lands in childhood, ahead of the critical faculty. So the chooser at the center of the capability approach arrives already loaded, his ends installed by family and society rather than picked by him. Sen measures the freedom of a self that Mearsheimer treats as a late and secondary thing. The capability set still describes something real. It no longer sits at the base of human life. It floats above the layer that does the forming.
Then the universalism. Sen treats freedom as the universal aim of development and the Human Development Index as a measure good for all peoples. Mearsheimer reads universalism as the child of the rights premise and the engine of liberal overreach. On his account the index carries no neutrality. It is a liberal scorecard, the value infusion of one civilization written up as the standard for the species. Development as Freedom then reads as the export of a particular tribe’s morality under a universal name. Sen’s cosmopolitanism becomes a parochialism that does not know its own address.
The hardest blow lands on reason. Sen prizes public reasoning as the road to justice and credits an Indian tradition of argument with keeping that road open. The Idea of Justice rests on deliberation. The Argumentative Indian celebrates debate as a civilizational inheritance. Mearsheimer ranks reason last among the three sources of preference, below innate sentiment and below socialization, and he says so without hedging. If he holds the right order, Sen has mistaken the top layer for the engine. Reason defends what socialization already planted. The argumentative tradition might be real as a custom, a practice handed down among a particular people, yet it cannot carry the weight Sen puts on it. Argument serves the group more often than it commands it.
Identity and Violence takes the sharpest cut, because the book and the passage meet head on. Sen argues that a man can reason his way to plural, chosen identities and resist the single identity that feeds slaughter. Mearsheimer answers that identity arrives by socialization before reason wakes, and that the pull toward the group runs in the blood. On that reading the murderous single identity waits for no better argument. It is the resting state of a social animal. Sen offers reason as the cure for a condition that reason did not cause and cannot reach.

Turner on Essentialism

Stephen P. Turner’s anti-essentialism denies the shared thing. When men act alike, the essentialist posits a common substance behind the likeness, a culture, a practice, a tradition, a set of shared values, and then treats that substance as the cause. Turner says the substance does not exist. What looks like one shared essence is a crowd of separate men, each built a little differently, who happen to produce similar surface behavior. Name the crowd a tradition and you have invented a thing, not found one. Aim that knife at Sen and it cuts him in two, because Sen swings it at his enemies and sheathes it when he builds his own house.

Watch first where Sen and Turner stand together. Sen refuses a fixed list of capabilities. Martha Nussbaum (b. 1947) wanted a canonical roster of the central human capabilities, settled and named. Sen declined. He held that the list must come from public reasoning in each place and time, open and revisable, never carved as a human essence. That refusal is an anti-essentialist reflex. Sen will not freeze the human good into a single shared form. The same reflex drives Identity and Violence. Sen attacks the singular identity, the claim that a man is one thing, a Muslim or a Hindu or a Serb and nothing else. He says identity comes plural and chosen, an array of affiliations a man sorts by reason and context. Against the essentialist who pins a man to one tribe, Sen sounds like Turner’s pupil.

Then watch the knife go back in its sheath. To beat the singular identity Sen needs the reasoning self who sorts his affiliations, and he needs that self to be a shared human capacity, present everywhere, the same faculty in the Calcutta clerk and the Chicago professor. That universal reasoner is an essence. Sen denies the essence of the tribe and installs the essence of reason in its place. He trades one shared substance for another and calls the trade liberation.

The clearest case is the argumentative tradition. The Argumentative Indian gathers texts and figures across two and a half millennia, from the Vedas through Ashoka and Akbar to Tagore, and binds them into one heritage of debate and tolerance carried down the generations. Turner reads that move as the essentialist error in its pure form. No single thing called the argumentative tradition passes hand to hand through the centuries. There are scattered men, divided by language, caste, region, and creed, each with his own habits and his own quarrels, leaving a record diverse enough to support almost any story a later scholar wants to tell. Sen surveys the sprawl, selects the strands he likes, ties them in a bundle, and names the bundle a tradition. Then he treats the name as a cause, as though the tradition explains why Indians argue. The bundle explains nothing. Sen built it from the same behavior it claims to explain.

Sen lists the things that make a life go well, health, nourishment, education, mobility, political engagement, and treats them as shared human goods that any society can recognize. Turner asks whether each word names a single shared thing or a heap of different things gathered under one label. Education in a Bengali village school, education at Trinity College, education in a Quranic academy, these run on different ends, different habits, different lives. Sen’s list smooths the heap into a roster of universals. The smoothing is the essentialist move, and the capability approach needs it, because a measure of human development must assume that the things it measures mean the same thing across the men it counts.

The Human Development Index makes the assumption visible. To rank Norway against Niger on one scale, the index treats a long life, a schooled mind, and a decent income as the same goods everywhere, comparable across every culture it touches. Sen, who refused to fix the capability list as an essence, signs his name to a global ranking that fixes three of them for all mankind. The contradiction hides nowhere. It is the working core of his most influential creation.

Turner on the Normative

Sen spent his life reopening a room the positivists had locked. They had ruled the normative out of economics, banished the ought, and left a science of description that measured income and called the job done. Sen forced the door. He brought justice, rights, freedom, and fairness back into the discipline and treated them as fit subjects for rigorous reason. Turner stands in the doorway and says the room has no floor.

Turner’s case in Explaining the Normative runs against a wide field, the Kantians, Jurgen Habermas (b. 1929), Robert Brandom (b. 1950), everyone who holds that the normative forms a domain of its own, a realm of oughts and obligations and validities that the facts of what men do can neither explain nor replace. The normativist posits a binding force above the empirical record. A man does not merely act, he follows a rule that binds him. A claim does not merely persuade, it holds a validity that obligates assent. Turner asks one question of every such posit. What work does the bindingness do that the plain facts do not already do? The man’s habits, his training, the sanctions he fears, the reactions he expects, these explain his conduct. The extra layer of normative force explains nothing further. It sits on top of the causal story and draws a salary for no labor. Turner calls it a good bad theory, a story that seems to explain while it relabels the thing it was asked to explain.

Bring Sen into that doorway and the furniture starts to look unsupported.

Take the capability approach at its base. Sen describes what a man can do and be, his real opportunities for health, schooling, nourishment, and voice. The description is empirical and sound. Then Sen turns the description into a demand. This is what we ought to care about, he says, the right measure of a life and the proper aim of a society. The turn from can to ought is the whole moral force of the work, and it is the step Turner denies. Sen has the facts about capabilities. He then asserts that these facts bind us, that a society stands under obligation to expand them. Where does the obligation live? Sen points to public reasoning, to what survives open scrutiny. Turner answers that scrutiny produces agreement, and agreement is a fact about people, not a force that binds them. Men converging on a view does not make the view obligatory. Sen treats the sociological event of consensus as though it delivered a normative truth, and the bindingness he needs never arrives.

The Idea of Justice runs the same circuit at higher voltage. Sen argues that some social states are less unjust than others and that reason can rank them. Less unjust against what standard? A normative standard with binding force, supplied again by public reasoning. Sen builds an elegant comparative method and never cashes out the one term that makes it a theory of justice rather than a theory of what people happen to prefer. He argues with Rawls over which principles a just society honors. Turner stands outside the argument and notes that both men assume the normative domain is real and stocked, and that neither ever says what a normative fact is or why it binds a soul who declines to feel bound. They quarrel over the furniture and never check the floor.

Human rights show the posit. Sen defends rights as ethical claims that hold prior to any law, entitlements a man carries whether or not a state enforces them. A legal right Turner can explain in a sentence, since courts and police and expectations make it a fact in the world. An ethical right with no enforcement behind it is a different animal. It is an obligation hanging in the air, binding by assertion alone, with no cause, no sanction, no institution to give it weight. Sen treats this floating ought as the most solid thing in his system, the bedrock under the law. Turner sees a posit suspended over nothing, doing no work that the practices of claiming, demanding, and shaming do not already do.

Sen thinks of himself as the man who rescued the normative from the positivists, who showed that economics cannot dodge the ought. Turner shares Sen’s contempt for the positivist and holds it for the opposite reason. The positivist and Sen agree on the live question, whether to admit normative facts into the science. The positivist says keep them out. Sen says let them in. Turner says there are no such facts to admit or refuse. There are men acting, expecting, sanctioning, and feeling bound, and the feeling of bindingness is a real fact about them that wants explaining. The error is to take the feeling for a fact in the world, the first-person grip of obligation for a third-person force in the order of things. Sen reopened a room and furnished it richly. He never noticed that the floor he stood on was the same feeling he mistook for ground.

Turner on Expertise

Sen wants both crowns. He wants the legitimacy of the democrat, who trusts the people to reason their way to the good, and he wants the authority of the expert, whose measure tells governments what the good is. Turner’s work on expertise shows why a man cannot wear both crowns at once, and the Human Development Index is where the two slip from Sen’s head together.

Turner’s question in The Politics of Expertise: How does expert authority earn legitimacy in a polity built on the equal standing of citizens? Liberal democracy rests on consent, and consent assumes that the people can weigh the claims made on them. The expert makes claims the people cannot weigh. His knowledge sits beyond their check, so his authority looks less like the consent of equals and more like the word of a priest. Turner sorts experts by how they hold their audience, and he marks the gravest case, the expert who fuses with the administrative state, whose claims turn coercive through public power while the public stays unable to test them. That expert governs while he calls his work neutral, technical, above the fray. The neutrality is the costume. The power is real.

Set Sen’s two roles side by side and the costume slips.

The democrat speaks first. Sen refuses to let a philosopher fix the list of human capabilities. He told Martha Nussbaum the list must come from public reasoning in each place, open and revisable, never carved by a single expert hand. He grounds justice in open discussion. He credits the free press and the voting public, not the planner, with stopping famine. The Argumentative Indian and The Idea of Justice raise the reasoning citizen to the center of the moral order. Trust the people, Sen says, and let them argue their way toward the good.

Then the expert builds the index. Sen, with Mahbub ul Haq, fixes three things, a long life, a schooled mind, a decent income, weights them, folds them into a single number, and hands it to the United Nations to publish as the measure of development for every nation on earth. No public deliberated that choice. A small circle of development economists chose the components, set the weights, picked the functional form. The number then rules. Aid follows it, ministries chase it, a nation reads its rank and feels the verdict. The man who would not let a philosopher fix the human good signed a global scorecard that fixes three pieces of it for all mankind, stamped by an intergovernmental body the voters never elected. The metric overrules the deliberation it claims to serve.

Sen knows the strain, and he has a defense. He treated the index as a blunt instrument, a strategic crudity meant to wrestle attention away from gross domestic product, never the truth of welfare. Haq called it a vulgar measure on purpose, vulgar enough to fight GDP on its own ground. Sen kept his distance from any claim that the three numbers captured capability. At the level of theory he stayed the democrat, holding that the real human good must be settled by the people who live it.

Turner’s reply cuts straight through the defense. The disclaimer does not travel with the number. Once the index enters the world, the caveats stay in the seminar and the ranking does the governing. The United Nations publishes Norway first and Niger near the bottom, and a ministry reads that as a fact about its worth and bends policy to climb. Sen’s nuance reaches a few hundred readers. His metric reaches every development office on the planet. That gap marks no flaw in how the index was received. It is how expert authority works. The expert keeps the qualifications for his peers and sends the bare result out to govern.

The public reasoning Sen prizes, at the technical floor where his framework lives, can only be carried out by the trained. No voter checks Arrow’s theorem or the proof of the liberal paradox. The reasoning that grounds social choice theory is expert reasoning the demos cannot follow, let alone contest. So Sen democratizes the conclusion and keeps the method behind glass. He tells the people the good must be theirs to decide, then hands them a framework whose foundations only economists can read. The citizen is sovereign over the answer and locked out of the workshop where the question gets its shape.

Even when Sen calls on the public to reason, the public reasons inside categories the expert supplied. Capability, functioning, freedom as the measure of a life, these are not found in the street. Sen built them, and the citizen who deliberates with them deliberates in a room the economist designed. Turner’s point lands here with full weight. The appeal to what reasonable people would accept hides the earlier act in which the expert set the terms reasonable people now use. The framing is the quiet exercise of authority, and it happens before the discussion the democrat celebrates ever opens.

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Brian Stelter: The Reporter on the Reporters

Brian Stelter (b. 1985) reports on the American news business. He covers the institutions, people, technologies, and incentives that shape journalism, and over two decades he has become a chronicler of the news industry and a media figure in his own right. He works both sides of a line few reporters straddle. He reports on the press, and he belongs to it. His career tracks the change in journalism from the age of newspapers and cable television to an era of social media, digital platforms, political division, and fights over public trust.

Stelter was born on September 3, 1985, in Damascus, Maryland, and grew up in the Washington suburbs as cable television gained force in American political life. Many future journalists come to the work through politics or public affairs. Stelter came to it through the news. As a boy he watched ratings, programming choices, network rivalries, and the personalities who drew audience loyalty in cable news. The production of news held his attention more than the events the news described.

While he attends Towson University, Stelter starts TVNewser in 2004, a blog about the television news business. The site fills a gap that mainstream journalism ignores. He does not cover politics or world events. He covers the people who cover those events. He tracks ratings, executive hires, anchor moves, newsroom disputes, and strategy at CNN, Fox News, MSNBC, and the broadcast networks.

TVNewser becomes required reading inside the industry. That same year Mediabistro, the media company Laurel Touby founded, buys the site. The terms are modest, but the sale gives Stelter a larger platform and a professional audience while he is still an undergraduate. He writes at first under the name “CableNut,” and he builds relationships with producers, executives, and reporters across the business. Network chiefs such as Jonathan Klein at CNN and Roger Ailes at Fox News come to see the reach of a blog their own staff read each day. TVNewser sets the model for the rest of his career. He reports on the institutions that carry news to the public.

In 2007, at twenty-one, Stelter joins The New York Times, recruited by media editor Bruce Headlam. The hire carries weight beyond one job. The paper wants to bring digital-native reporting into one of America’s most prestigious legacy newsrooms. Stelter arrives as newspapers face deep disruption from online publishing, social media, and falling print revenue.

At the Times he becomes a principal media reporter. He covers the collapse of old business models, the rise of digital journalism, newsroom reorganizations, leadership changes, and the growing power of technology companies over how news reaches readers. His method carries over from TVNewser: speed, and a wide net of sources. He reports through Twitter and keeps deep contacts inside media companies.

Andrew Rossi‘s 2011 film Page One: Inside the New York Times documents Stelter’s role. The film shows him as part of a younger generation at ease in a changing media world. It also shows his bond with media columnist David Carr, among the paper’s most admired writers. Carr mentors him and defends his work, and argues that critics undervalue the rigor of digital-first reporting. Their pairing stands for a wider shift as old reporting cultures adapt to new tools.

Through his Times years Stelter grows into a leading reporter on television news. He builds sources inside NBC, ABC, CBS, CNN, Fox News, and other companies. That reporting yields his first major book, *Top of the Morning* (2013), an account of the contest among America’s network morning shows. The book traces the rivalries, executive moves, and ratings pressure around Today and Good Morning America. It later helps inspire the Apple TV+ drama The Morning Show, though the series expands and fictionalizes the source.

In 2013 Stelter leaves the Times for CNN as senior media correspondent. The move reflects the growth of media criticism as a separate beat. At CNN he works as both reporter and on-air analyst, and he explains shifts in journalism, technology, misinformation, and political communication.

Later that year he takes over Reliable Sources, CNN’s long-running media program. He succeeds Howard Kurtz, who leaves for Fox News. The show has run for decades, but Stelter changes its focus. In earlier years it reviews newspaper coverage and press performance. Under Stelter and executive producer Jennifer Suozzo it widens into a study of whole information systems. The program looks at cable news incentives, social media, online extremism, misinformation, conspiracy theories, and the ties between media and political power.

The shift follows changes in American public life. As social media breaks the hold of old gatekeepers and audiences split apart, questions about the quality of information and public trust move to the center of politics. Stelter casts himself as an analyst of these systems rather than a reviewer of coverage.

Donald Trump‘s rise changes the media world and Stelter’s profile with it. Through the 2016 campaign and Trump’s presidency, Stelter becomes a visible commentator on the relationship between politics and the press. He analyzes attacks on journalists, misinformation campaigns, partisan media, and the shifting role of the platforms.

Supporters see him as a defender of the press through years of political hostility toward the mainstream media. Critics see him as too kind to establishment newsrooms and too soft on their failures. The argument tracks a larger fight over what journalism owes a divided country.

Some of the friction comes from the nature of the beat. Stelter reports on organizations he also belongs to. Critics say that closeness breeds deference toward elite media culture. Others say his deep sourcing and institutional knowledge give him a rare view of how modern journalism works.

His second major book, *Hoax: Donald Trump, Fox News, and the Dangerous Distortion of Truth* (2020), examines the bond between Trump and Fox News. Stelter argues that the relationship outgrows ordinary press coverage and becomes a political loop that feeds itself. The book reaches the bestseller lists and confirms his standing as a leading analyst of media systems.

His third major book, *Network of Lies* (2023), turns to the misinformation around the 2020 election and the events behind the Dominion Voting Systems suit against Fox News. The book studies how audience incentives, competition, and political loyalty shape choices inside large newsrooms. Together his three books trace the path of his interests: from television personalities and ratings, to media-political alliances, to the spread of misinformation across whole systems.

A turning point comes in 2022 after WarnerMedia and Discovery Inc. merge into Warner Bros. Discovery. The merger reshapes CNN’s leadership and direction. Jeff Zucker, who ran CNN through Stelter’s years there, leaves. Chris Licht takes over with a mandate to reposition the network and soften its partisan image.

In that restructuring, CNN cancels Reliable Sources in August 2022 after three decades, and ends Stelter’s contract. Public talk often cites ratings. Inside media circles the cancellation reads as part of a wider effort to set the new CNN apart from the Zucker era. The media owner John Malone had criticized CNN’s direction, and many saw Stelter as a symbol of the old approach.

The cancellation makes a media critic the subject of the very forces he spent years documenting. The episode shows how ownership, management priorities, and corporate strategy can reshape a journalist’s career apart from his performance.

He loses the television platform but keeps his place inside elite media and academic circles. In late 2022 he becomes the Walter Shorenstein Media and Democracy Fellow at Harvard Kennedy School‘s Shorenstein Center, where he leads discussions and research on journalism, democracy, misinformation, and threats to public trust.

He also widens his work as a writer. He contributes to The Atlantic and Vanity Fair. For Vanity Fair’s media vertical, The Hive, he reports on Fox News, the Dominion suit, leadership changes at major newsrooms, and the ongoing change in the industry. He hosts Vanity Fair’s Inside the Hive podcast from 2023 through 2024. He stays on as a producer and consultant on The Morning Show, and keeps a tie to the drama built from themes he first explored in *Top of the Morning*.

The circumstances behind his CNN exit then shift. Licht’s tenure runs short and troubled. After Licht leaves in 2023, the veteran executive Mark Thompson takes over CNN and reassesses its direction. In September 2024, CNN brings Stelter back as chief media analyst.

The return does not revive Reliable Sources as a weekly show. Stelter takes charge of the Reliable Sources newsletter and appears across CNN’s programming as an analyst and correspondent. The arrangement fits changing habits, with newsletters and digital products now central to how news organizations reach readers.

By 2026 Stelter holds that role and reports on the meeting point of journalism, technology, politics, and public trust. His career and the story of American media’s change in the early twenty-first century run together.

Stelter holds an odd place in American journalism. He comes from the blogosphere rather than the usual reporting pipelines. He gains influence by covering journalists rather than politicians. He becomes a public figure while studying how public figures are made. His work keeps returning to the structures that shape the flow of information: corporate incentives, new technology, audience behavior, and political division.

Some call him a defender of the press. Some call him a chronicler of media failure. Some call him a partisan in the fights around modern news. By any of these readings he is a leading interpreter of the American information system, and his career opens a window onto how journalism changed in an age when the institutions that produce and spread information became among the most consequential subjects in public life.

Alliance Theory

David Pinsof, David O. Sears, and Martie Haselton offer a theory of political belief that starts from a blunt claim. Belief systems do not grow from abstract values like equality, tolerance, or authority. They grow from alliance structures. People choose allies by similarity, by transitivity, the sharing of friends and enemies, and by interdependence, the reliable trading of help. Then they defend those allies with a set of propagandistic biases. They downplay an ally’s wrongs, they embellish an ally’s grievances, and they credit an ally’s success to virtue while charging an ally’s failure to circumstance. Moral language rides on top of this work. It signals loyalty and recruits third parties to one’s side. Brian Stelter’s subject is the press and his coalition is the press.

Start with the choice of allies. Stelter’s career runs inside one coalition. TVNewser, The New York Times, CNN, Harvard’s Shorenstein Center, Vanity Fair. Each post draws status and income from the same network of newsrooms, editors, executives, and reporters. Pinsof and his coauthors hold that the late twentieth century split the American upper class into intellectual elites and business elites, and they name journalists among the knowledge workers on the intellectual side. Stelter belongs to that class by training and by trade. Similarity binds him to its members. Interdependence binds him tighter, since his sources, his bookings, his book sales, and his standing all run through the people he covers. He reports on his own coalition, and the coalition feeds him.

Transitivity sets his rivals. The enemy of an ally becomes a rival, and the press has a clear antagonist in Donald Trump (b. 1946). Trump attacks reporters, names the mainstream press an enemy of the people, and builds a rival media coalition around Fox News. By transitivity Stelter inherits the whole rival cluster. His two later books map it. Hoax: Donald Trump, Fox News, and the Dangerous Distortion of Truth (2020) frames Fox and Trump as a single loop that feeds itself. Network of Lies (2023) tracks the rival coalition into the misinformation around the 2020 election. Both books name the rival, sort the field into the trustworthy and the dangerous, and rally the reader to one side. Alliance Theory calls this propaganda in its technical sense, narrative that mobilizes support for allies and opposition to rivals. The label carries no insult. It names a function.

The propagandistic biases show up where the theory predicts. Perpetrator bias appears in how Stelter handles the wrongs of his own coalition. His critics charge that he goes soft on the failures of establishment newsrooms, that he defends the press more than he audits it. Read through the frame, that softness is loyalty. A coalition member downplays his allies’ transgressions and emphasizes their good intentions, and Stelter does this for the institutional press as a class. Victim bias appears in how he handles the press as a target. He casts journalists as the wronged party in a campaign of hostility, and he raises the grievance to the level of a threat against democracy. The theory expects exactly this from an ally of a group under attack, and it expects the rival coalition to run the mirror image, the claim that the real victims are Christians, conservatives, and the audiences the mainstream press looks down on. Two coalitions, two victim narratives, competing for the same third parties.

Attributional bias completes the pattern. Stelter credits the press’s strengths to internal virtue, to rigor, courage, and public service, and he charges the press’s troubles to outside forces, to Trump, to the platforms, to corporate owners who starve newsrooms for profit. He reads the rival’s success the other way. Fox thrives, in his account, through bad faith rather than through any honest read of what its audience wants. The self-serving slant runs in the direction the frame predicts, toward the ally and against the rival.

Stelter does not present his work as coalition defense. He presents it as a stand for truth against lies and for democracy against its enemies. Alliance Theory does not call him a liar for this. It holds that moral language does coalition work whatever the speaker’s sincerity. A claim that one’s own side is moral and the other side is not draws neutral parties toward the moral side and emboldens allies to attack. The theory predicts that the most loyal partisans sound the most high-minded, since the moral frame is the tool of mobilization. Stelter sounds high-minded about the press because the press is his coalition.

His cancellation reads, through the frame, as a shift in the alliance structure rather than a verdict on his work. In 2022 the merger that formed Warner Bros. Discovery changed who controlled CNN. Jeff Zucker (b. 1965), the executive of Stelter’s era, left. John Malone (b. 1941) had criticized the network’s direction, and the new leadership under Chris Licht set out to mark the channel off from the old alliance. CNN canceled Reliable Sources and ended Stelter’s contract. Inside media circles the move read as a coalition expelling a member who signaled the prior alliance, not as a response to his numbers. Then the structure shifted again. Licht’s tenure ran short, Mark Thompson took over, and in September 2024 CNN brought Stelter back. His fortunes track the alliance structure. When the controlling coalition turned, he was cut. When it turned again, he returned. The theory holds that such structures form through historical accident and small contingencies that snowball, and Stelter’s path through them fits that account better than any story of merit rising and falling on its own.

The frame has a limit. Alliance Theory is symmetric by design. It says Stelter and his sharpest critics run the same psychology, each defending a coalition with the same biases, and it refuses to crown either side. That symmetry means the theory cannot tell us whether Stelter is right.

Brian Stelter and Turner on Essentialism

Stephen Turner (b. 1951) spends his career attacking one habit of mind. Social thought keeps turning collective nouns into real things with fixed natures. Society. Culture. The profession. The framework. The shared paradigm. Turner holds that these words name no substance. They gather a spread of individual habits, trained up by similar schooling and held in place by similar incentives, and they dress the gathering as a single entity with an inner core. The essence is a trick of grammar and a convenience for the explainer. What exists are men with habits. The rest is reification, the error of treating a name as a thing. Brian Stelter builds his life’s work on the entities Turner dissolves.

Stelter’s central object is journalism. He speaks of it as a thing with a nature, a calling defined by verification, independence, and service to the public. He defends that nature against decay. He mourns its betrayal. He measures men and outlets against it. Turner asks where the thing is. Point to a reporter and you find a man with habits, a way of working a phone, a sense of what an editor will accept, a set of moves learned on the job. Point to another and you find a different man with overlapping habits. Sum them and you have a heap of practitioners, not an essence they all carry inside. The word journalism describes the heap. It does no explaining. When Stelter rises to defend journalism, he defends a noun that has swallowed its members and stands in for them.

The same move runs through his talk of the press. Stelter narrates it as an actor. The press faces threats. The media fails. The press holds power to account. Turner balks at collective agents. There is no entity, the press, with a will and a stake and a character. There are firms, owners, employees, and audiences, each acting from particular positions. The collective noun lets Stelter assign motives and virtues to a thing that cannot hold them, and the grammar hides the move. A sentence about what the press owes democracy reads as a claim about a real agent’s duty. Strip the reification and you have many men in many jobs, doing varied work for varied reasons, with no shared soul to honor or betray.

Stelter leans hardest on shared standards. He assumes that reporters carry a common framework, a set of professional norms that marks the real practitioner off from the pretender. Turner denies the shared content. He argues that men who behave alike need not carry the same thing in their heads. Similar training and similar selection produce similar surface behavior without any common essence underneath. The cub reporter learns by imitation and correction, not by downloading a profession’s core. Two journalists may reach the same practice by different routes and hold incompatible accounts of why they do it. The appearance of a shared standard is a pattern in outputs, read backward as a possession all members share. Stelter treats the backward reading as the cause. Turner treats it as an artifact.

His later vocabulary multiplies the reifications. Misinformation. The information ecosystem. Public trust. Each names a fuzzy spread of behaviors and treats it as a natural kind with edges and properties. Trust in the media stands in his work as a quantity a collective relationship possesses, a thing that rises and falls and can be restored. Turner would break it into the habits and dispositions of particular people toward particular outlets, with no aggregate essence behind the poll number. The ecosystem, likewise, gathers platforms, firms, and users under one organic figure and lends the figure a nature it does not have. The words give Stelter a subject to study and a thing to save. They also smuggle the conclusion into the description.

This bears on his standing. The media critic earns his authority by claiming to know what journalism is, what it requires, and when it falls short. The office depends on the essence being real. If journalism has a nature, a man can be the one who reads it, guards it, and calls the violations. Take the essence away and the critic loses his special object. He is left describing surface regularities and naming them a nature, then judging men against the name. The boundary work shows the strain. Stelter sorts real journalism from its counterfeits, and the sorting reads as the tracing of a kind. Turner reads it as exclusion, the drawing of a line that serves the people inside it, not the discovery of where a natural kind ends.

Turner’s alternative does not deny that reporters cluster. It relocates the cause. The regularities come from training, hiring, imitation, and feedback, individual processes that throw up similar conduct across many men. A newsroom selects for certain habits and corrects the rest. Schools and prizes and editors reward a style and punish its absence. Over time the practitioners converge, and an observer mistakes the convergence for a shared substance. The convergence is real. The substance is not. Explanation runs through the particular men and the forces that shaped them, never through an essence they jointly hold.

The frame has a limit. If journalism has no essence, neither does the misinformation he opposes, and neither does the propaganda outlet he frames as a fake. The acid dissolves both sides of his quarrel. Pushed all the way, it threatens to dissolve every category and explain nothing, which is not Turner’s aim. His aim is narrower. He punctures the reification and sends the explainer back to the individual causes.

Turner on the Normative

In Explaining the Normative Stephen Turner takes aim at a wide family of thinkers who hold that a separate realm of norms stands behind social life and explains it. Oughts. Obligations. Standards of validity. Bindingness. The space of reasons. The normativist posits a normative fact, a genuine requirement that cannot be reduced to any plain matter of fact, and treats that requirement as the thing that holds conduct in place. Turner argues the requirement does no work. Whenever a man explains behavior by a norm, he can swap the norm for ordinary facts, the habits people have, the expectations they hold about one another, the sanctions they apply when someone strays. The only evidence for the norm is the behavior it claims to explain, so the explanation circles back on itself and adds nothing. The ought is a phantom laid over the is. Brian Stelter (b. 1985) talks in oughts all day.

Stelter’s account of the press runs on duty. Journalism ought to hold power to account. Reporters ought to verify before they publish. The press owes the public the truth. He states these as facts about what journalism requires, binding on anyone who takes up the work, true whether or not a given reporter feels their pull. Turner asks what the duty adds. Describe the editors who send back unverified copy. Describe the rivals who pounce on a sloppy story. Describe the audience that turns away from an outlet caught in a lie, and the career that ends when a reporter fabricates. Lay out the whole array of expectation and sanction, and the conduct stands explained. Now add the duty on top. Nothing changes in the account. The reporter verifies because of what happens when he does not, and the obligation hovers above the practice, doing none of the lifting. Turner calls this kind of posit a ghost, and Stelter’s duties of the press are ghosts of the purest kind.

The same move governs his talk of legitimacy. Stelter sorts real journalism from its counterfeits and grants the real article a standing the counterfeit lacks. He speaks as though legitimacy were a property a practice holds, conferred by its conformity to a standard that binds. Turner reads legitimacy as belief plus the behavior that follows from belief. When Stelter pronounces an outlet legitimate, he expresses approval and predicts that the relevant people will treat it as authoritative. He does not report a normative fact about where the line of valid journalism falls. There is no such fact to report. There are men who confer deference and men who withhold it, and a vocabulary of validity that dresses the conferring as the recognition of a standing already there.

His strongest claims take the transcendental form, the form the normativist loves best. Democracy requires a free and trusted press. Self-government depends on a shared set of facts. Without trusted institutions the whole arrangement collapses. Each claim posits a normative precondition, a thing that must hold for the valued outcome to be possible. Turner distrusts these necessity arguments above all. They take a contingent arrangement, the way some democracies have run for a while under some conditions, and convert it into a binding requirement, a presupposition without which the thing cannot exist. The word requires does the smuggling. It carries an ought across into a sentence that looks like a description of how the world hangs together. Strip the necessity and you have an empirical guess about which arrangements tend to produce which results, a guess that might hold or might fail, with no requirement anywhere in it.

Underneath all of this sits a slide between persons. Stelter holds a commitment to a free press. He cares about it, defends it, has staked a career on it. Then he presents the commitment as a third-person fact about what journalism is obligated to do, a feature of a normative order that obtains apart from anyone’s stance toward it. Turner watches for this slide everywhere, the move that launders a first-person commitment into an impersonal requirement. The only things on hand are Stelter’s commitment and the commitments of others who feel and act as he does, together with the sanctions that hold their shared practice in place. The order in the world, the binding standard the commitments supposedly track, never shows up except as a way of speaking that grants one’s own stance the authority of a fact.

Turner’s replacement is dry and complete. Describe journalism without a single ought. Reporters check claims because unchecked claims get them caught and cost them. Outlets keep to a style because the prizes, the hires, and the audience reward it and punish the departures. Trust rises and falls as people form expectations and revise them after they are met or betrayed. The entire order Stelter defends stands accounted for by what men do, what they expect, and what they inflict on one another when crossed. The norm adds a layer of obligation that explains nothing the sanctions did not already explain. That is the charge. The duty of the press is not the cause of the press’s conduct. It is a redescription of the conduct in the language of bindingness, and the language earns its keep nowhere.

The frame has a limit. Turner’s eliminativism does not tell Stelter to stop caring about a free press, and it does not show his commitments wrong. It denies that the press ought to be free names a fact in the furniture of the world. The commitment remains, and so do the consequences when the commitment spreads or fails to. There is a further difficulty. The man who eliminates the normative seems to lean on norms of good explanation while he does the eliminating, the standard of what counts as a better account, and that standard looks like one more ought he cannot shed. Turner wrestles with this self-reference rather than waving it off. Applied to Stelter, the frame strips the phantom of obligation from his account of the press and rewrites his duties as expectations backed by sanction. It tells us that the press must explains nothing beyond the habits and the sanctions it names.

Brian Stelter’s Hero System and the Words He Holds Sacred

Ernest Becker (1924-1974) held that man knows he will die and cannot live with the knowledge, so he builds a hero system, a scheme of meaning that lets him feel he counts and that his short life serves something large and lasting. The hero system hands each man a script. Play the part well and you earn symbolic immortality. You join the thing that outlives you. Sacred values hold the system together. Threaten them and you threaten the man’s sense that his life amounts to anything. Men fight hardest over symbols for this reason. The symbol keeps the terror at a distance.

Stelter’s hero system is professional journalism, and inside it the press stands as guardian of the republic. The honest reporter holds the line between the public and chaos. He checks the powerful, corrects the record, and keeps the shared world of facts intact so that citizens can govern themselves. To serve that institution is to serve something noble and lasting. To rise within it young, as Stelter did, is to win a place among the men who guard it. When CNN canceled his show, he signed off by telling viewers that standing up for democracy is not a partisan act. He believes that without strain. His hero system makes the claim obvious. He does not experience his advocacy as politics. He experiences it as service to a sacred order that sits above politics, the way a priest does not think of the Mass as one opinion among many.

Every hero system needs its devil, and Stelter’s devil is the man who corrodes the shared world of facts. Donald Trump plays the role in his cosmology. Fox News plays it. The wider trade in rumor plays it. His two recent books carry the war in their titles. Hoax and Network of Lies name the enemy as the deliberate manufacture of falsehood that weakens public trust. The threat is not only political. It runs closer to metaphysical. If the shared world of facts dies, the institution that guards it loses its reason to exist, and the hero loses the ground he stands on. The heat in Stelter’s alarm comes from this. He defends the world that makes his life count.

Now the words. Stelter says democracy, freedom, truth, facts, press freedom. These are his holy terms, and he says them often. Inside his hero system each one carries a meaning fitted to that system. Democracy names a particular order, one where trained institutions gather and certify what the public knows, where reporters and editors and fact-checkers stand between raw event and public belief. Press freedom names the protected standing of those institutions. Truth names the consensus those institutions reach. Disinformation names the claims that flow around them and weaken trust in them. The terms describe the survival of his church.

A man with a different hero system hears the same words and means something else by them, because his sacred order differs.

Take the populist who locates legitimacy in the people set against the institutions. He says democracy and means the direct will of ordinary men, unfiltered by the credentialed class. To him the gatekeepers Stelter reveres are the threat. When experts and editors override what the public wants, that man sees democracy under attack, and he sees Stelter as an agent of the attack. The same word points the two men in opposite directions. One hears a defense of the institutions. The other hears a defense of the cage.

Take press freedom. Stelter hears the phrase and pictures a reporter shielded from a strongman. A critic of the mainstream press hears the phrase and pictures a guild protecting its monopoly on what counts as news. To that critic, the rise of independent voices, podcasters, Substack writers, citizen video, marks the spread of press freedom, and the institution’s complaint about disinformation reads as the guild pulling the new entrants down. Stelter calls the same flood a crisis. The label depends on which hero system the man inhabits.

Take truth and facts. Stelter treats these as settled by process, by the methods of the newsroom and the agreement of serious institutions. A religious traditionalist locates truth in revelation and in an order older than any newsroom. A populist locates it in plain sight and common sense against expert obfuscation. When Stelter says he stands for facts, he means he stands with the institutional process that certifies them. The traditionalist and the populist hear a man claiming the authority to decide what is real, and they distrust the claim, because their truth comes from a different source.

This is why so many listeners find that Stelter’s sacred words mean something other than what they themselves mean. The fight does not turn on whether democracy or truth or freedom is good. Almost everyone salutes the words. The fight runs under the words, at the level of the hero system that gives each word its content. Stelter pours into democracy the survival of the credentialed press. His opponent pours into the same word the revolt against that press. Each man defends his own immortality project and reaches for the highest word he has to name it.

Becker might say the heat of the fight comes from death, not policy. Stelter defends the institution that holds his terror at a distance, and so an attack on the press registers in him as an attack on the order of the world. His opponents defend their own orders with the same force and for the same reason. When two hero systems collide, each side reaches for the sacred vocabulary, empties the words of the other side’s meaning, and fills them with its own. The shared word survives. The shared meaning does not. That is the trap. Stelter and the men who hate him can chant the same creed, democracy and freedom and truth, and walk away each one certain the other has betrayed every word of it.

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Freedom as Non-Domination: The Political Philosophy of Philip Pettit

An Irish-born thinker whose career has crossed Ireland, Britain, Australia, and the United States, Philip Noel Pettit (b. 1945) revived the republican tradition in political theory and redefined political freedom as non-domination rather than mere non-interference. His writing ranges across political philosophy, ethics, philosophy of mind, social ontology, democratic theory, and the philosophy of agency. Across these fields he pursues a single question: how free and responsible agents emerge within social institutions, and how political systems can protect individuals from arbitrary power.

Pettit was born in Ballygar, County Galway, in 1945. He studied at Garbally College, read philosophy at Maynooth College, and completed doctoral work at Queen’s University Belfast. His formation came during the high tide of postwar analytic philosophy, yet from an early stage his interests reached past the conceptual concerns of that tradition. History, psychology, economics, law, and political institutions all entered his thinking. He combines the rigor of analytic philosophy with a wide concern for social and political life.

His academic path moved through several institutions. He lectured at University College Dublin, held a research fellowship at Trinity Hall, Cambridge, and served as professor of philosophy at the University of Bradford. In 1983 he moved to the Research School of Social Sciences at the Australian National University, where he held a joint professorial position in social and political theory and philosophy until 2002. There he helped shape contemporary Australian political and moral philosophy. In 2002 he joined Princeton University as the Laurance S. Rockefeller University Professor of Politics and Human Values. Since 2012-13 he has held a joint appointment as Distinguished University Professor of Philosophy at the Australian National University, dividing his time between Princeton and Canberra. Few contemporary philosophers have held such positions in both the American and Australian intellectual worlds.

Pettit writes on a wide range of topics, but his reputation rests first on his revival of republican political theory. Through much of the twentieth century, political philosophy turned on debates among liberals, socialists, and conservatives. Pettit argued that an older republican tradition, running from ancient Rome through Renaissance civic humanism into the Anglo-American constitutional tradition, offered a distinct and neglected account of liberty.

His republicanism drew on the historical scholarship of Quentin Skinner and J. G. A. Pocock. These historians recovered the language and assumptions of the republican tradition from centuries of political thought. Pettit took their historical findings and built from them a rigorous normative theory suited to contemporary political philosophy. He translated a largely historical idiom into a systematic analytical account.

At the center of that account sits the distinction between non-interference and non-domination. Modern liberal theories often define freedom as the absence of interference. Pettit argues that this definition misses a deeper form of unfreedom. A man is unfree not only when someone interferes with him, but whenever another holds arbitrary power over him. His best-known illustration is the benevolent master. A slave whose master rarely interferes might enjoy considerable day-to-day autonomy, yet he remains unfree because the master keeps the power to intervene at any moment. Freedom therefore requires protection against dependence, not only protection against actual interference.

This conception of liberty became the foundation of neo-republicanism, a leading movement in contemporary political theory. Pettit’s landmark book *Republicanism: A Theory of Freedom and Government* (1997) established him as the chief theorist of the revival. The book offered an alternative to both libertarian and egalitarian conceptions of freedom. Political institutions, Pettit argued, should be judged by their capacity to prevent arbitrary domination, whether by governments, employers, economic elites, social majorities, or other powerful actors.

An important consequence of his theory is that law and government need not reduce freedom. In the liberal tradition, every law often counts as a restriction on liberty because it interferes with individual action. Pettit argued that laws passed through non-arbitrary, democratically accountable institutions can enlarge freedom by reducing domination. A citizen living under just laws might therefore stand freer than a man living without legal constraints but exposed to the arbitrary power of stronger individuals.

Pettit developed these ideas across a series of major works. *On the People’s Terms* (2012), drawn from his Seeley Lectures at Cambridge, offers his fullest account of republican democracy and constitutional government. *Just Freedom* (2014) presents a more accessible overview of his political philosophy. His later books, including *The Robust Demands of the Good* (2015), *The Birth of Ethics* (2018), and *The State* (2023), extend his concerns into ethics, social evolution, and the philosophical foundations of political authority.

A central theme in his mature political theory is contestation. Many democratic theories focus on elections, voting, or consensus. Pettit stresses the capacity of citizens to challenge and contest political decisions. For him, democracy is legitimate not because everyone agrees with government policy but because citizens hold institutional means to question, appeal, review, and resist arbitrary exercises of power. This emphasis gives weight to courts, ombudsmen, administrative review bodies, constitutional protections, and other institutions through which ordinary citizens contest governmental action.

Pettit distinguishes horizontal and vertical forms of domination. Horizontal domination concerns arbitrary power held by private actors such as employers, spouses, corporations, or criminal organizations. Vertical domination concerns arbitrary power held by the state. A successful republic must protect citizens from both. The task of political design is to build institutions that exercise public authority without becoming sources of domination in their own right.

Unlike many political philosophers whose influence stays within the academy, Pettit’s ideas entered practical politics. His work proved influential in Spain during the government of Prime Minister José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero. Zapatero acknowledged Pettit as a major intellectual influence and invited him to assess how far republican principles had been put into practice in Spain. Pettit later reflected on this experiment in applied political philosophy in *A Political Philosophy in Public Life: Civic Republicanism in Zapatero’s Spain* (2010), written with José Luis Martí. The book stands among the rare cases where a major political philosopher examined the real-world implementation of his own theoretical ideas.

Beneath the political philosophy lies a broader project on human agency and social life. Long before his work on republicanism, Pettit had established himself in the philosophy of mind and social ontology. His book *The Common Mind* (1993) remains among his important contributions in these areas. There he developed a position sometimes called holistic individualism. He rejected both atomistic individualism, which treats individuals as independent of social relationships, and strong forms of social holism, which subordinate individuals to collective structures. Human beings remain individual agents, he argued, but their capacities for reasoning, language, and self-consciousness develop within social relationships and practices of mutual recognition.

This account of agency gives the deeper foundation for his political thought. Freedom is not a property held by isolated individuals. It is a social standing held through institutions, norms, and relationships that protect men from domination while letting them function as responsible agents.

His interest in collective agency led to another major area of influence. Working with the philosopher Christian List, he developed a sophisticated account of group agency. Their book *Group Agency: The Possibility, Design, and Status of Corporate Agents* (2011) argues that organizations, corporations, governments, courts, and other collective bodies can function as agents holding beliefs, intentions, and responsibilities not reducible to those of their individual members.

Their work took up the discursive dilemma, a problem showing how majority voting on connected propositions can yield collectively irrational outcomes. Pettit and List showed that collective agents often need decision procedures that cannot reduce to simple aggregations of individual preferences. Their theory has shaped political science, legal theory, organizational studies, and discussions of artificial intelligence and institutional design.

His work in ethics carries the same concerns that drive his political philosophy. Rather than treat morality as a matter of private choice, he stresses the social conditions for mutual respect, accountability, and recognition. His long collaboration with the Australian philosophers Frank Jackson and Michael Smith helped establish a distinctive style of Australian analytic philosophy that joined conceptual precision with practical engagement in moral and political questions. His most recent book, *When Minds Converse: A Social Genealogy of the Human Mind* (2025), drawn from the John Locke Lectures he gave at Oxford in 2019, traces how mind and morality might arise from social practices of conversation and exchange.

Throughout his career Pettit has remained skeptical of concentrations of unchecked power. Domination, in his view, can arise from governments, employers, monopolies, patriarchal structures, technological systems, and informal social hierarchies. This wide focus helps explain the unusual ideological reach of his work. Progressives draw on his theories to criticize economic inequality and workplace domination. Constitutional conservatives find value in his defense of dispersed authority, checks and balances, and the rule of law. Democratic reformers use his ideas to justify institutions built to increase accountability and public oversight.

His influence has reached debates about digital technology and artificial intelligence. Scholars working from republican theory argue that algorithmic systems and digital platforms create new forms of arbitrary power that subject individuals to opaque and unaccountable decisions. Pettit’s conception of non-domination has become a framework for judging technological governance in the twenty-first century.

Honors have marked his contributions. He was elected a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 2009, an Honorary Member of the Royal Irish Academy in 2010, and an International Fellow of the British Academy in 2013. In 2017 he was appointed a Companion of the Order of Australia, the nation’s highest civilian honor, for his contributions to philosophy and public life. He holds honorary doctorates from universities in Ireland, the United Kingdom, Greece, Sweden, Canada, and Argentina.

Among contemporary political philosophers, Pettit holds a place beside John Rawls (1921-2002) in liberal theory and Jürgen Habermas (1929-2026) in critical theory. His lasting contribution was to turn attention from the question of whether power exists to the question of whether power is arbitrary. By placing domination at the center of political analysis, he revived a neglected republican tradition and built from it a major body of political thought. Through his work on agency, social ontology, ethics, and democracy, he developed an integrated vision linking mind, society, and politics into a single account of what it means for human beings to live freely among one another.

‘A Big Misunderstanding’

David Pinsof’s essay “A Big Misunderstanding” makes a simple charge. Intellectuals trace the world’s troubles to misunderstanding because that diagnosis hands intellectuals the cure. If bad beliefs cause the damage, then the people whose job is correcting beliefs become the people who save the world. Pinsof says the story flatters its tellers and hides what they chase. Humans are savvy coalitional primates. They understand what they have an incentive to understand. The trouble runs through bad motives, not bad beliefs, and bad motives admit no fix.
Pettit does not blame misunderstanding. He blames domination. The substitution looks like a deep difference and conceals a shared structure. A misunderstanding is a fixable defect, and the man who knows how to fix it earns his keep. Domination, in Pettit’s telling, is also a fixable defect, a flaw in how institutions are built, and the man who knows how to design non-dominating institutions earns his keep the same way. Both diagnoses name a problem that a thinker can correct through superior understanding. Both install the theorist as the necessary expert. Pinsof’s intellectual fixes beliefs. Pettit fixes constitutions. The flattery runs along the same channel.
Pinsof says partisans fight over the coercive apparatus of the state, the thing that puts human beings in prison at gunpoint. Pettit builds a whole theory around that same apparatus and asks how its coercion might stop counting as domination. His answer is democratic control and contestation. Citizens who can question, appeal, review, and resist do not suffer arbitrary power, even when the state coerces them. Pinsof reads that answer as wishful. Whoever holds the coercive apparatus uses it against rivals, and the loser does not feel free because a review board exists. The winning coalition flies the banner of non-domination over its own dominance and calls the arrangement legitimate. Contestation is the fight itself, renamed. Pettit hears deliberation. Pinsof hears coalitional warfare with better manners.
Pettit’s stated goal is freedom for every man as protection against arbitrary power. His function, on the Pinsof read, is to supply elite institutions and their allied coalitions with a high-status vocabulary for blessing their preferred arrangements as legitimate and branding their rivals’ arrangements as arbitrary. The tell is the reach Pettit enjoys. Progressives use non-domination to attack employers and inequality. Constitutional conservatives use it to defend dispersed power and the rule of law. A concept that serves opposed coalitions so smoothly looks less like a discovery about freedom and more like a good tool, the kind that helps whoever picks it up. Pinsof would say a real finding about human nature would cut against somebody. Non-domination cuts against no one who wants it.
The Spanish episode reads cleanly through the frame. Zapatero named Pettit an influence and invited him to grade how far the government had carried republican principle. Pettit went, assessed, and wrote the book with José Luis Martí, A Political Philosophy in Public Life: Civic Republicanism in Zapatero’s Spain (2010). The stated story is philosophy meeting practice, a rare test of theory in the world. The Pinsof story is plainer. A coalition in power wanted its program stamped legitimate by a famous thinker, and the thinker traded the stamp for status and access. The philosopher confers the sacred word, the government banks it, both gain. No one in the exchange misunderstood anything.
Pettit is the anti-cynic in person, and Pinsof’s essay predicts the type. We spout feel-good idealism, Pinsof says, to signal that we are sweeties rather than meanies, and the signal works. Pettit’s serene system, the benevolent-master parable, the faith that good design might free men from arbitrary power, all of it reads as the warmest possible idealism. It lets a man sit inside Princeton and the Australian National University, hold the Order of Australia, and criticize domination in the abstract while drawing his standing from two of the least dominated perches on earth. The cynic gets called icky and loses status. Pettit never risks that. His theory is a status-safe place to stand.
The world does not want to be saved. Pettit’s project assumes that men who hold the coercive apparatus might be persuaded, through argument and design, to surrender their power to dominate. Pinsof says they have no incentive to surrender it. They want to dominate and want the surrender to look like freedom. The voters parrot their tribe. The politicians court biased voters. The press chases attention. None of them awaits a better constitution. Pettit studies the hole with care, names every contour of arbitrary power, and proposes to climb out through institutions. Pinsof says the study of the hole leaves you in the hole. Domination is not a defect in the design. It is what hierarchical primates do with a state once they capture it.

Turner on Essentialism

Stephen Turner (b. 1951) built his anti-essentialism against a habit he found everywhere in social theory. When two men act alike, the theorist posits a shared thing they both carry, a practice, a rule, a norm, a culture, and treats that thing as the cause of the likeness. In The Social Theory of Practices (1994) Turner took the idea apart. The shared object is assumed, not shown. Each man acquires his habit by a private causal route, through his own training and feedback, and the sameness across men is rough and projected by the observer who needs it. The collective substance does no causal work. The individuals and their habits do all of it. Turner extends the same suspicion to every collective noun that theorists reify: society, culture, the social, collective representations, the group mind. He is a nominalist. He wants causes you can locate, in brains and in behavior, not essences hovering above the people who do the acting.
Pettit is a realist about the entities Turner deflates.
Start with the strongest case, group agency. List and Pettit, in Group Agency: The Possibility, Design, and Status of Corporate Agents (2011), argue that corporations, courts, and states hold beliefs and intentions not reducible to those of their members. Turner’s first question is plain. Where does this agent live? Not in any member’s head, since no member need believe what the group believes. Pettit answers in functional terms. A system with the right profile of representational and motivational states, acting to track its own rationality, counts as an agent whatever it runs on. Turner’s reply runs the other way. The functional profile is realized by individuals working a procedure. Calling the procedure’s output the belief of an agent adds a subject the procedure never needed. The group believes p describes what the voting rule printed. It does not discover a new mind. Pettit takes a redescription and gives it a self.
Pettit’s hardest card is the discursive dilemma. Individuals who each hold consistent views on connected propositions can, through majority vote on each, produce a set the group cannot hold without contradiction, so the body must adopt procedures that do not reduce to aggregating individual votes. This looks like a property at the group level absent at the individual level, a thing with rationality demands of its own. Turner’s nominalist answer treats the inconsistency as a fact about an aggregation rule, arithmetic over individual votes, not evidence of an entity that believes. The group that has to stay consistent is the members and designers choosing which rule to run. No essence enters. People and a counting method suffice.
Take the people next. In On the People’s Terms (2012) Pettit makes equal control by the people the thing that keeps state coercion from counting as domination. Turner asks what the people is. A man with a will? A shared content held in common? Or a nominal cover thrown over millions of persons with clashing interests, no shared intention, and no single hand on the lever? Pressed, the controlling people dissolves into individuals who vote and contest by their own separate routes and never converge on one content. The control they jointly exercise is spread across persons who share no will. The sameness is assumed again, and the legitimacy rests on it.
Then freedom as a status. Pettit treats liberty as a social standing, secured by institutions, norms, and mutual recognition. Turner asks where the standing lives. Not in any head, not in any single act. Pettit locates it in the relations and the recognition. Turner reads mutual recognition as many individuals with overlapping dispositions, each acquired on his own, not a shared substance the parties hold together. The status is a label the theorist lays across a pattern of behavior and rules. It does no work the individual dispositions and the institutional rules have not already done.
Pettit’s deepest commitment is holistic individualism, set out in The Common Mind (1993). He rejects atomism. Reason, language, and self-consciousness develop within social relationships and practices of recognition. He calls the result a form of individualism even so. Turner shares the rejection of atomism and suspects the holism smuggles the essence back in by another door. To say a man’s capacities are constituted by social relations grants the social a constitutive role, a shared something that does the constituting. Turner wants those relations cashed out as ordinary causes among individuals, learning from input, imitation, correction, with no remainder called the social. Where Pettit says the social constitutes the man, Turner says other men, acting on this man through plain causes, shape his habits. Drop the social as a thing and keep the causes, and the explanation loses nothing.

Explaining the Normative

Turner’s target in Explaining the Normative (2010) is a move he finds across modern philosophy, in McDowell, Brandom, Korsgaard, and Nagel. They treat the normative as a realm of its own, irreducible to facts, a source of bindingness that grounds meaning, rationality, and obligation. Turner says the realm explains nothing. It names what wants explaining and calls the name an answer. Ask how a norm binds a man and the philosopher says the man grasps the norm and holds himself responsible to it, which takes another norm to grasp the first, and the regress runs without end. Turner stops the regress in causes you can find: habits, dispositions, sanctions, the feelings that rise when expectations break, the training that lays down a response. People treat things as binding. That is a psychological and social fact, and it has causes. The philosophers’ further claim, that a genuine normative realm does the binding, adds a posit that carries no weight. Turner calls this kind of theory a good bad theory. It feels deep and does no work.
Pettit runs on the normative from end to end. He tells you which institutions hold legitimacy, when state coercion stops counting as domination, what freedom requires, what justice demands, what the state ought to be. Non-domination is an ideal with an ought inside it. Legitimacy is a status that obligates. Accountability, contestation, the non-arbitrary, all of it carries the binding force Turner doubts. Set the frame on Republicanism (1997), On the People’s Terms (2012), and The State (2023) and the same question returns at each turn. What does the ought add to the facts?
Take non-domination. Pettit says a free man stands clear of arbitrary power, and institutions ought to secure that standing. He offers tests with empirical bite. The eyeball test asks whether a man can look others in the eye without reason to fear or defer. The tough-luck test asks whether a man can treat a setback as bad luck rather than a master’s choice. Turner takes the tests as the honest core. They name causal facts about how men carry themselves when they fear arbitrary interference and how they carry themselves when they do not. The fear, the deference, the relaxed bearing, these have causes and effects you can track. The leap comes when Pettit moves from the man who feels secure to the claim that freedom requires this security and that states are bound to provide it. The bindingness is asserted at that step, not explained. Strip the ought and a real finding remains about felt security and social bearing. Keep the ought and you have added the posit that does no work.
Legitimacy fares the same way under the frame. Pettit says coercion turns legitimate, ceases to dominate, when citizens share equal control through contestation. Turner asks what legitimacy adds over the facts of compliance, complaint, and acceptance. Men obey, men contest, men accept or withhold acceptance, and these are behaviors with causes. Legitimacy-talk gathers the behaviors and crowns them with a status that supposedly binds the citizen to accept the authority. The status does nothing the behaviors leave undone. It relabels them and lends them an air of obligation the relabeling cannot earn.
Collective rationality gives the frame a clean hit. In Group Agency Pettit holds that a group agent must keep its commitments consistent, that the discursive dilemma forces procedures answering to rational requirements the group is bound to meet. Turner reads rational requirement as the inflated normative in another dress. A group must stay consistent only relative to what its designers want it to do. The must is hypothetical and causal, a fact about which rules serve which purposes, not a categorical demand issued by a realm of reason. Pettit treats the requirement as a constraint that binds. Turner returns it to the goals and the rules that men chose.
Pettit’s The Birth of Ethics (2018) tries to show how moral concepts arise from a natural baseline. Creatures who talk make avowals and pledges, commit before others, and so create accountability and the language of ought. This is a genealogy, a story of emergence from plain materials, and it puts Pettit closer to Turner than the philosophers Turner mainly fights. McDowell and Korsgaard treat the normative as sui generis and refuse to derive it from anything. Pettit refuses that refusal. He pays the explanatory price Turner demands and tells a causal, social story of how obligation enters a world that lacked it.
Pettit derives a robust normative realm and then keeps it as real. He wants to explain how obligation emerges, not to explain obligation away. The pledge, in his account, creates a binding ought. Turner presses on that last step. Why does a public pledge create a binding ought rather than a disposition to comply plus a standing liability to sanction when a man defects? Pettit needs the ought to be more than the disposition and the sanction. Turner says it is not. The genealogy reaches the philosophers’ inflated destination by a naturalistic road and asserts the bindingness at the door, where the avowal turns into an obligation. Everything up to that door is causal and fine. The door is where the posit slips back in.

The Great Delusion

In his 2018 book, The Great Delusion: Liberal Dreams and International Realities, John J. Mearsheimer wrote:

My view is that we are profoundly social beings from the start to the finish of our lives and that individualism is of secondary importance… Liberalism downplays the social nature of human beings to the point of almost ignoring it, instead treating people largely as atomistic actors… Political liberalism… is an ideology that is individualistic at its core and assigns great importance to the concept of inalienable rights. This concern for rights is the basis of its universalism—everyone on the planet has the same inherent set of rights—and this is what motivates liberal states to pursue ambitious foreign policies. The public and scholarly discourse about liberalism since World War II has placed enormous emphasis on what are commonly called human rights. This is true all around the world, not just in the West. “Human rights,” Samuel Moyn notes, “have come to define the most elevated aspirations of both social movements and political entities—state and interstate. They evoke hope and provoke action.”
[Humans] do not operate as lone wolves but are born into social groups or societies that shape their identities well before they can assert their individualism. Moreover, individuals usually develop strong attachments to their group and are sometimes willing to make great sacrifices for their fellow members. Humans are often said to be tribal at their core. The main reason for our social nature is that the best way for a person to survive is to be embedded in a society and to cooperate with fellow members rather than act alone… Despite its elevated ranking, reason is the least important of the three ways we determine our preferences. It certainly is less important than socialization. The main reason socialization matters so much is that humans have a long childhood in which they are protected and nurtured by their families and the surrounding society, and meanwhile exposed to intense socialization. At the same time, they are only beginning to develop their critical faculties, so they are not equipped to think for themselves. By the time an individual reaches the point where his reasoning skills are well developed, his family and society have already imposed an enormous value infusion on him. Moreover, that individual is born with innate sentiments that also strongly influence how he thinks about the world around him. All of this means that people have limited choice in formulating a moral code, because so much of their thinking about right and wrong comes from inborn attitudes and socialization.

If Mearsheimer is right, then Pettit stands on thin ground at three points.
His method goes first. Pettit designs institutions by argument and justifies non-domination by what free and reasoning agents have cause to accept. Contestation, the heart of his democracy, asks citizens to question, appeal, and challenge power through reasoned objection. If reason is the weakest of the three sources, the contesting citizen Pettit needs is mostly a creature of socialization and inborn sentiment who reaches for his tribe’s verdict and dresses it as judgment. The man casts his vote by inheritance and feeling, then offers reasons after. Pettit’s republic asks that man to run the engine of legitimacy on his rational faculty, the part Mearsheimer ranks last. The institutions might stand. The justification that gives them authority leans on a power most men barely use.
His unit goes second. Pettit calls his position holistic individualism, and the label admits half of Mearsheimer’s point. Capacities for reason and language develop within social relations, Pettit says in The Common Mind (1993), so the man is no atom. Mearsheimer would take the concession and press past it. Pettit grants the social as a cradle for the reasoning individual, then keeps the individual as the unit of freedom and the object of concern. Non-domination protects this man against arbitrary power. Mearsheimer says the man does not chiefly want individual non-domination. He wants his group to prevail, and he will trade his own freedom for his group’s standing without much hesitation. The thing Pettit centers is, on this anthropology, secondary to the thing Pettit hardly treats: belonging, kinship, the survival of the group a man calls his own.
His scope goes third, and goes hardest. Non-domination is a status Pettit owes to every man everywhere, a universal claim. Mearsheimer ties that universalism straight to the atomism. Abstract the individual from his group and you can hand the same rights to all, since you have stripped away the particular loyalties that divide men. Restore the group and the universal claim loses its ground. Men belong to particular peoples with particular attachments, and they favor their own over the stranger. A status owed equally to all collides with the loyalty a man feels to his fellow members, and on Mearsheimer’s reckoning the loyalty wins. Pettit’s universalism is the symptom, not the cure.
The trouble reaches into his idea of the people. On the People’s Terms (2012) makes equal control by the people the thing that keeps state coercion from dominating. Pettit’s people is a procedural body of contesting citizens, thin, open, defined by the institutions they share. Mearsheimer’s people is a nation bound by sentiment, history, and shared identity, the strongest political force he knows. If he is right, the glue that holds Pettit’s polity together is the national feeling Pettit does not name, and his state runs on a fuel he leaves out of the design. When the universal claim, the rights of all men, meets the national claim, the priority of us, the nation takes the field. Pettit’s cosmopolitan republican has no reply to the citizen who says he owes his countryman more than the foreigner, because Pettit built no place for that man to stand.
Even the genealogy in The Birth of Ethics (2018) bends under the same weight. Pettit derives obligation from a natural baseline of creatures who talk, pledge, and hold one another to account. Mearsheimer agrees men are formed in society and pushes the formation harder. The socialization that shapes a man is a particular group’s value-infusion, imposed in a long childhood before his critical faculties wake, not a neutral scaffold for an autonomous reasoner. The recognition Pettit treats as the making of a free agent looks, on this view, like induction into a tribe’s code. The man does not choose his morality from a clear table. He receives it from his people and his blood before he can weigh it.

The Sociology of Philosophies

Randall Collins (b. 1941) built The Sociology of Philosophies: A Global Theory of Intellectual Change (1998) on a few claims. Intellectual life runs through networks of personal contact that carry ideas across generations, master to pupil, rival to rival. The attention space holds only so many positions at once, three to six live schools, by his law of small numbers, and a newcomer who wants a place must take one, which means displacing an occupant or opening ground the occupants left bare. Creativity gathers where networks cross, so the great names cluster and know one another rather than appearing alone. The men at the hubs draw emotional energy from each successful exchange, and that energy funds the confidence and the output that mark a major career. They deploy cultural capital, the inherited texts and problems, and they need an organizational base, chairs and students and presses, to carry the work past their own lifetimes. One reliable road to a slot is to take over abandoned property, recover a neglected tradition, and refit it for present use.

Pettit’s career fits the model.

Anglophone political philosophy after 1971 filled fast around John Rawls (1921-2002). A Theory of Justice set the terms, and the attention space organized into a small set of opposed positions: Rawlsian liberalism, Nozick‘s libertarianism, the communitarian reply, Dworkin on rights, Habermas imported from Germany. The slots were taken. A young theorist had little room to stand. Pettit opened a new place by reaching past the occupants for ground none of them held. He revived republican liberty and set it against the field’s governing map, Isaiah Berlin (1909-1997) and the two concepts of liberty. Against negative liberty as non-interference, which the liberals and libertarians shared, and against positive liberty as self-mastery, which the communitarians worked, Pettit fixed a third term, freedom as non-domination. The contrast gave the position a sharp edge, and the attention space rewards a sharp edge. *Republicanism: A Theory of Freedom and Government* (1997) planted the flag.

The cultural capital came from another network. The republican tradition had been recovered by historians, J. G. A. Pocock (1924-2023) in *The Machiavellian Moment* (1975) and Quentin Skinner (b. 1940) across his work on early modern political thought, later in *Liberty before Liberalism* (1998). They mined the tradition as history. Pettit carried that capital across the line into normative philosophy and refitted it for live argument about freedom and the state. Collins calls this the importation that energizes a new combination, and Pettit sat at the join of two networks, the Cambridge school of historians and the analytic political philosophers, taking from one what the other could not supply on its own. Skinner himself moved toward the normative claim, and the two men’s mutual citation marks the tie. The bridge between the networks was the creative act, more than any single insight.

For two decades Pettit worked at the Research School of Social Sciences at the Australian National University, a hub where economists, philosophers, and political theorists met under one roof. He sat where the lines met. From philosophy of mind he took the functionalist account of agency and carried it into the theory of group agents, the work with Christian List that became *Group Agency*. From economics, through his long partnership with Geoffrey Brennan, he drew the rational-choice materials behind *The Economy of Esteem*. Frank Jackson and Michael Smith gave him the Canberra style of analytic precision in metaethics, and Robert Goodin gave him a fellow node in political theory. Collins predicts that the man at the junction of fields produces the new combination, because he holds capital none of his neighbors hold together. Pettit held it together.

The output reads as high emotional energy spent from a central seat. The lecture series tell the story. The Seeley Lectures at Cambridge became *On the People’s Terms* (2012). The Uehiro Lectures at Oxford became *The Robust Demands of the Good* (2015). The Tanner Lectures at Berkeley became *The Birth of Ethics* (2018). The John Locke Lectures at Oxford became *When Minds Converse* (2025). Each series is an interaction ritual at one of the field’s high altars, and each one returns energy to the man who gives it and consolidates his slot. The festschrift *Common Minds* (2007), gathered by Brennan, Goodin, Jackson, and Smith, is the network marking its own center.

Pettit holds chairs at Princeton University and at the ANU, one in each hemisphere, two of the strongest organizational seats in the Anglophone world, with the students and the standing that come with them. Neo-republicanism propagated from there into new problems its founder never worked in full, workplace domination, the domination of women, the arbitrary power of digital platforms, and the men who carried it inherited the cultural capital and spent it on fresh ground. A position survives as a school when followers extend it, and Pettit’s followers extended it across the political spectrum, which let the school hold attention without a single opposed bloc strong enough to crush it. The reach that looks like depth from inside reads, on Collins’s terms, as a slot built wide enough to resist capture.

Rivalry fed the whole structure. Pettit defined his liberty against Rawls and against Berlin’s pair, and the opposition gave the position its identity. Collins holds that schools form by conflict, that a thinker needs an occupant to stand against. Pettit found his in the reigning liberals and built his own slot out of the contrast.

Buffered vs Porous Selves

Charles Taylor (b. 1931) spent a career against the atomist picture of man. In his essay “Atomism” he argues that the capacities we prize, language, reason, moral judgment, the very power to form an identity, develop only in society, so a man owes allegiance to the community that makes him possible. Rights come late and belonging comes first. In Sources of the Self (1989) he holds that a man becomes a self only within webs of interlocution, in conversation with others, oriented by frameworks that mark out what holds worth. He calls the modern self the buffered self, bounded and disengaged, master of its own borders, and he counts both its strength and its cost. In A Secular Age (2007) he refuses the subtraction story, the idea that the modern world is the old world with God removed. The secular is a thing men built, and it runs on moral sources it no longer names. Behind all of it sits a Catholic, Hegelian, expressivist sensibility: freedom realized in belonging, the self articulated through expression, the good buried under modern proceduralism and waiting to be recovered.
Pettit and Taylor work the same question from opposite temperaments. Both reject the self-sufficient individual of contract theory. Both reject the collective that swallows the man. Both put the social at the root of the self. Then they part.
Pettit’s holism is thin. In The Common Mind (1993) the individual stays the agent and the bearer of concern, while the social supplies the conditions under which his capacities grow. The social explains how a man came to reason. It does not bind him. Taylor’s holism is thick. The community that forms a man lays a claim on him, and his identity, his goods, his standing all draw from a shared life he did not author. Pettit keeps the analytic individual and treats society as the cradle. Taylor makes the belonging constitutive and turns it into an obligation. One man secularizes the social into a developmental fact. The other keeps it as a source of meaning and duty.
The split runs through the self each man describes. Taylor’s self has depth, articulated in strong evaluation, defined against a horizon of significance, made in dialogue. Pettit’s self is the reason-responsive agent, the one who holds beliefs, answers to reasons, and can be held to account. Pettit’s late work moves toward Taylor’s ground. When Minds Converse (2025) grounds mind in conversation, in the avowals and pledges men exchange, which sounds like Taylor’s webs of interlocution. The likeness is the surface. Pettit’s conversation is a genealogy of how reason-responsive agency comes to be. Taylor’s conversation is the medium where a man finds the goods that orient a life. Read Pettit’s free man through Taylor and he turns into the buffered self at political ease. Secure behind good institutions, able to look any other man in the eye without fear, he is bounded, protected, and self-possessed, insulated from arbitrary power as the buffered self is insulated from the porous world of forces and meanings. Non-domination is the buffered self given a constitution.
Freedom is where the two part hardest. Pettit defines liberty as non-domination, a secured standing, protection against arbitrary will. He keeps it thin on purpose, so that men who hold different views of the good life can share it without one imposing on the rest. Taylor attacks that thinness in his essay on negative liberty. Freedom emptied of the good becomes a bare opportunity, and an opportunity with no account of what holds worth cannot answer the question that gives freedom its point. Free for what? Pettit’s non-domination secures the room and stays silent about what a man should do inside it. Taylor wants the room filled with goods a man pursues and a community that names them. Pettit hears in that fullness the old danger, the community’s good enforced on the man who does not share it, whose good, whose ethical life, pressed on the dissenter at the majority’s hand. The thing Taylor calls hollow Pettit calls the honest settlement for men who disagree.
Pettit trained in the Catholic intellectual world. He went from Garbally College to Maynooth, the national seminary, where philosophy meant the scholastic architecture, Thomas and natural law, the dignity of the person, the common good. He took the structure and set the theology down. Read him through Taylor and the shape stands out. The careful definitions, the systematic edifice, the integration of mind and ethics and politics into one account, all carry the form of a scholastic system with the God lifted out. Non-domination secularizes a thought the tradition held in theological terms. The arbitrary will of the master, the mark of tyranny against a creature made in God’s image, becomes arbitrary power against a man owed equal standing. The eyeball test, the man who can stand before another without dread, recasts the equal dignity of persons before God as equal dignity before other men. Taylor’s A Secular Age denies that this is loss by subtraction. Pettit did not lose the moral content of Maynooth. He rebuilt it on naturalistic ground and kept its weight.
The Birth of Ethics (2018) is the subtraction story Taylor refuses, run by a man who once held the fuller view. Pettit assembles morality from natural materials, talk and commitment and accountability, and asks nothing of a source beyond them. Taylor’s standing objection lands. A morality built from below still lives on the gravity it inherited, and Pettit’s gravity, the seriousness with which he treats the dignity of the unmastered man, has a source his official theory disowns. He thinks he can raise the cathedral without the altar. Taylor thinks the cathedral still warms itself at the altar’s fire, and that the man who grew up tending that fire is the last one who should mistake the heat for his own.

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Jürgen Habermas: The Unforced Force of the Better Argument

Jürgen Habermas (1929-2026) ranks as the leading German philosopher of the postwar period and the central figure of the Frankfurt School’s second generation. For more than seven decades he defended a single proposition: that free societies can govern themselves through reasoned public discussion rather than through tradition, ideology, nationalism, or force. His accounts of the public sphere, communicative action, discourse ethics, deliberative democracy, and constitutional patriotism became foundational across philosophy, political science, sociology, law, and communications.

He was born on June 18, 1929, in Düsseldorf and grew up in the nearby town of Gummersbach during the last years of the Weimar Republic and the rise of National Socialism. His father, Ernst Habermas, worked as an executive in the regional chamber of industry and commerce and joined the Nazi Party soon after Adolf Hitler (1889-1945) took power in 1933. Like most German boys of his generation, Habermas passed through the Nazi youth organizations. Near the end of the Second World War, at fifteen, the regime called him up to help man Germany’s western defenses.

These years marked him. The collapse of Nazi Germany in 1945 became, by his own account, a moral and political awakening. Habermas belonged to the first generation of German intellectuals who had to face the crimes of the Third Reich and the failures of their parents. Much of his later work answers a question that haunted postwar Germany. How can a modern society build legitimate political authority and still guard against the return of tyranny?

A second influence ran closer to the body. Habermas was born with a cleft palate and underwent several surgeries as a child. Trouble with speech left him alert to both the fragility and the worth of human contact. Many readers trace his lifelong attention to communication, dialogue, and mutual understanding to these early years.

Habermas studied philosophy, history, psychology, economics, and German literature at the universities of Göttingen, Zurich, and Bonn. He finished his doctoral dissertation in 1954 on the philosopher Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph Schelling (1775-1854). Two years later he joined the Institute for Social Research in Frankfurt as an assistant to Theodor W. Adorno (1903-1969).

His place in the Frankfurt School was never settled. He later became its most famous representative, yet he clashed early with the Institute’s director, Max Horkheimer (1895-1973). Horkheimer judged some of Habermas’s first work too political and too risky for the fragile setting of postwar West Germany. The friction grew sharp enough that Horkheimer blocked Habermas’s habilitation through the Institute. Habermas left Frankfurt and completed the habilitation at the University of Marburg under the socialist political scientist Wolfgang Abendroth (1906-1985).

That work appeared in 1962 as The Structural Transformation of the Public Sphere. It became a landmark of twentieth-century social science. Habermas traced the rise of a bourgeois public sphere in eighteenth-century Europe through coffeehouses, salons, newspapers, reading societies, and civic clubs. These places gave citizens room to discuss public affairs apart from both state power and private money.

The book argued that democratic legitimacy rests on a living public sphere where citizens debate in earnest. Habermas held that commercialization, mass media, and bureaucracy had weakened this sphere, and he held too that its democratic promise remained among modernity’s great achievements. The idea changed scholarship in communications, journalism, political theory, sociology, and history.

In 1964 Habermas returned to Frankfurt as professor of philosophy and sociology and took Horkheimer’s place as the most prominent thinker tied to the school. He parted ways with the first generation on a central point. Horkheimer and Adorno stressed domination, mass manipulation, and the failures of Enlightenment reason. Habermas looked instead for the means of democratic renewal inside modern institutions.

His public standing grew during the upheavals of the 1960s. He shared many aims of the student movement and rejected its revolutionary romance. During the protests of 1968 he warned against what he called left fascism and argued that democratic reform offered a more legitimate road than revolutionary confrontation. This loyalty to constitutional democracy set him apart from much of the European left.

From 1971 to 1981 Habermas served as co-director of the Max Planck Institute in Starnberg alongside the physicist and philosopher Carl Friedrich von Weizsäcker (1912-2007). In these years he produced the work that made his international name.

His most ambitious book appeared in 1981, the two-volume The Theory of Communicative Action. It sought to rescue the Enlightenment project from both conservative doubt and radical attack. Habermas argued that men do not interact through strategic calculation alone. They also act communicatively, in a manner aimed at reaching shared understanding.

On his account, every real act of communication raises claims to truth, sincerity, and rightness. People in a discussion assume that arguments can be weighed on their merits and that better reasons should win out over weaker ones. Reason therefore arises through ordinary speech, not only through science or technical expertise.

A central idea here is the ideal speech situation. Habermas never claimed such a state exists. It works as a critical standard. Anyone who enters an argument presupposes a setting free of coercion, manipulation, and domination, a setting where the only force at play is what he called “the unforced force of the better argument.” The idea gave him a benchmark for spotting distortions caused by power, wealth, propaganda, or ideology.

The book drew a further distinction between system and lifeworld. The system holds the large structures, markets, bureaucracies, and administrative bodies, that coordinate conduct through money and power. The lifeworld holds culture, family, community, and everyday talk. A modern society needs both. Habermas argued that pathologies set in when the system pushes past its proper bounds and colonizes the lifeworld, draining democratic life and human solidarity.

This argument set him against the German sociologist Niklas Luhmann (1927-1998). Luhmann’s systems theory pictured society as a web of self-steering subsystems, each running on its own code, largely apart from human intention. Habermas read this as technocratic and dangerous, since it seemed to dissolve democratic agency and moral responsibility into function. Their exchange became a defining quarrel of postwar European social theory and sharpened Habermas’s grasp of the tie between institutions and democratic legitimacy.

Across the 1970s and 1980s Habermas built discourse ethics, an effort to ground morality in the procedures of rational communication rather than in divine command, inherited custom, or private taste. A moral norm holds, he argued, only if every person affected might accept it under conditions of free and open discussion. The approach left a deep mark on ethics, legal theory, and democratic philosophy.

Habermas also became a prominent public voice in Germany. During the Historikerstreit, the historians’ dispute of the 1980s, he fought attempts to relativize or normalize Nazi crimes. He argued that a German democratic future required an honest reckoning with the Holocaust. His interventions helped shape the country’s culture of historical memory.

From these debates came an influential political idea, constitutional patriotism, *Verfassungspatriotismus*. A modern democratic society, he argued, can no longer rest political unity on ethnicity, blood, religion, or ancestral culture. Citizens should instead attach their loyalty to the universal principles set down in a democratic constitution, among them human rights, popular sovereignty, and the rule of law. The idea shaped arguments over German identity, immigration, European integration, and post-national citizenship.

In 1985 Habermas published The Philosophical Discourse of Modernity, a broad defense of the Enlightenment against postmodern and post-structuralist critics. Reading Michel Foucault (1926-1984), Jacques Derrida (1930-2004), and others, he argued that many radical critiques of reason lean on the very rational standards they claim to reject. He called this a performative contradiction. The Enlightenment, on his view, remains an unfinished project able to correct its own failures through self-criticism.

His mature political and legal theory found its fullest form in Between Facts and Norms (1992). The book took up a central problem of modern democracy. How can law wield coercive authority and still protect individual freedom?

Habermas argued that legitimate law arises when democratic institutions stay tied to public deliberation. Informal discussion within civil society generates what he called communicative power. Democratic institutions then convert that communicative power into administrative and legal power. Law works as a bridge between public discussion and state authority. The book became a major contribution to legal and constitutional theory.

Beyond Germany, Habermas argued for European integration. He held that globalization had sapped the capacity of nation-states to solve shared problems, and he argued that democratic governance might come to need supranational institutions. He stayed wary of purely technocratic integration and insisted that legitimacy must rest on public participation and democratic accountability.

His later writing turned to the relation between secularism and religion. Secular himself, Habermas came to argue that religious traditions still hold moral resources worth hearing. A democratic society, he held, should neither privilege nor silence religious voices, and believers and nonbelievers alike should join a shared work of public reasoning.

Habermas married Ute Wesselhoeft, a teacher, in 1955. The couple had three children, Tilmann, Rebekka, and Judith. Rebekka Habermas became a historian at the University of Göttingen and died in 2023. Ute Habermas died in 2025 after almost seventy years of marriage. Habermas stayed on in their home in Starnberg and remained at work despite his age.

Over his career he received many of the highest academic honors, among them the Hegel Prize, the Sigmund Freud Prize, the Adorno Award, the Leibniz Prize, the Kyoto Prize, the Erasmus Prize, the John W. Kluge Prize, and the Johan Skytte Prize in Political Science. In 2021 he declined the Sheikh Zayed Book Award after concerns rose over human rights and political freedoms in the United Arab Emirates, a choice that matched his public conduct to his philosophy.

Habermas retired from his Frankfurt chair in 1994 and stayed in intellectual and political debate for three more decades. He died on March 14, 2026, in Starnberg, at ninety-six. By then many regarded him as the leading democratic theorist of the modern age.

His admirers saw the philosopher who best defended the possibility of reason after the catastrophes of the twentieth century. His critics held that he overrated the power of rational discussion against power, identity, emotion, and conflict. Even many critics granted the scale of the achievement. Few thinkers have done more to explain why a deliberative democracy depends on more than elections and institutions. It depends on citizens willing to justify their beliefs, hear opposing arguments, and treat one another as political equals.

One question drove his whole career. How can free men govern themselves without domination? His answer was that legitimacy arises through communication. Democracy survives because citizens stay committed to settling their disagreements through public reasoning rather than force, even when agreement comes hard. In an age of polarization, technological disruption, and distrust, that conviction is the lasting legacy of Jürgen Habermas.

Turner on Essentialism

Stephen P. Turner is a nominalist about the social. He denies that shared things exist, shared practices, shared cultures, shared frameworks, shared competences, as real objects over and above separate persons with separate histories. When a theorist explains why people act alike by pointing to something they hold in common, Turner asks what that common thing is and where it sits. The usual answer names a practice, a culture, a rationality, a background. Turner reads each as a reification, an abstraction a writer first draws from surface similarity and then treats as the cause of the similarity. The move runs in a circle. The shared essence does the explaining, and the only evidence for the essence is the behavior it claims to explain. He set out the case at length in The Social Theory of Practices, where the target is the notion of a shared practice as a thing transmitted and held in common.

Habermas builds on shared essences from the first premise to the last.

The first is communicative rationality. In The Theory of Communicative Action he argues that every competent speaker carries an implicit knowledge of the validity claims raised in speech, a single rational structure built into language as such, turned toward mutual understanding. He calls the reconstruction of this knowledge universal pragmatics. The word universal carries the essentialism. One reason, one structure, the same in every speaker in every tongue. Turner sees the classic hypostatization. Habermas observes that people sometimes reach agreement, infers a shared competence that makes agreement possible, then explains the agreement by the competence. No one observes the competence. He reads it off the result and then makes it the cause of the result.

Next comes the lifeworld. Habermas describes a shared background of taken-for-granted meaning held in common by a community, a reservoir a society draws on. Turner denies the reservoir. There are persons whose habituations overlap enough to coordinate. The word lifeworld names the overlap and then treats the overlap as a thing with contents and a boundary. The essentialism shows when Habermas speaks of the lifeworld as colonized, rationalized, drained, verbs that need an object to act on. To suffer colonization a thing must first stand as a thing.

The public sphere works the same way. The Structural Transformation of the Public Sphere narrates the rise and decay of a single entity. Heterogeneous coffeehouses, papers, salons, and clubs, with different members and different habits, gather under one noun and receive one structure and one biography, down to the refeudalization that marks the decay of the essence. The ideal type serves as a useful abstraction until the writer forgets it is one and lets it rise, transform, and fall like an organism. Turner reads the structural-transformation story as the giveaway. A thing has a structure, and the structure transforms. The narrative presupposes the thing.

The ideal speech situation is the hardest essentialism in the set. Habermas locates a single normative core inside the act of speaking as such, a counterfactual setting that every speaker presupposes the moment he opens his mouth. Turner denies there is a speaking as such with a built-in core. There are episodes of talk, each with its own setting and its own separate history, and the sameness across them is the thing a theorist has to earn rather than assume.

The essences carry the politics. Discourse ethics needs a universal reason so that critique rests on more than local custom. Constitutional patriotism needs a shared rational core so that loyalty to principle might replace loyalty to blood. Post-national legitimacy needs one reason for all men. The shared essences save Habermas from relativism. Strip them out and the critique loses its ground and the politics loses its warrant. The reification is no stray habit. The system needs it.

Habermas has a reply. Universal pragmatics, he might say, is a reconstructive and fallible hypothesis, not a metaphysical essence, an empirical reconstruction of competences that stays open to revision. Turner’s rejoinder holds the label does not change the shape of the argument. The reconstruction still posits a shared competence and still uses it to explain coordination, and it never hands over the shared object. It relabels the inference and leaves the circle intact.

Turner’s nominalism owes a debt. People do coordinate. They reach agreement. They treat the same arguments as the stronger ones often enough for institutions to run on the result. Habermas might press the point. Something shared seems to do the work, and an account built only on separate persons and lucky meshing has to explain the meshing without the sameness it denies. Turner’s answer, individuals tuned by feedback into good-enough coordination, sameness as appearance rather than substance, is thinner and harder to put to work than the essence it rejects.

Habermas and the Normative Surplus

Stephen P. Turner is a naturalist about the normative. He denies that the normative names a separate realm, a domain of validity, obligation, and the ought that stands above the natural facts and cannot reduce to them. In Explaining the Normative he tracks a family of thinkers who hold the opposite, who argue that rule-following, inference, language, and agreement each presuppose a standard of correctness that no description of behavior can supply. The argument runs as a transcendental. Normativity is presupposed by the activity, therefore normativity is real and binding. Turner’s complaint is that the presupposition lives in the theorist’s reconstruction and not in the agent. The agent has habits, expectations, trained responses, and feelings of obligation, all natural facts. The theorist adds validity on top and calls it a presupposition. The validity is an extra, hired to do the explaining and never located. Turner calls the whole approach a secular theology. It puts validity where God used to sit, a source of authority above all practice from which all practice can be judged.

Habermas is the type perfected. His apparatus runs on irreducible normativity from the ground up.

Start with the validity claims. Every speech act, Habermas argues, raises claims to truth, to normative rightness, and to sincerity, and a hearer can challenge any of them and demand reasons. The rightness claim carries the weight. It asserts that the speaker stands in the right, not merely that he speaks from habit or interest, and the claim binds whether or not the hearer grants it. Turner reads this as the extra in plain view. A man speaks. He expects uptake. He feels entitled. He sanctions the hearer who brushes him off. All natural. Habermas adds a claim to validity that floats above the expecting, the feeling, and the sanctioning, and gives the validity the explanatory job.

The validity has to rise above any actual agreement, so Habermas idealizes. A real consensus can be false. Validity is what an unlimited communication community might agree under conditions free of coercion, by the unforced force of the better argument. This is the transcendent standpoint Turner targets, authority lifted clear of every practice men actually run. The standard never touches the ground. No community is unlimited and no setting is free of coercion, so the valid norm is the one that might be agreed in a place that does not exist.

Discourse ethics states the rule. A norm holds if all affected might accept it in rational discourse. The phrase might accept does the work. Not what they accept, which is a fact, but what they might accept if rational, which is the surplus. Turner asks where the surplus sits. You can find the people, their interests, their arguments, their assents and refusals. You cannot find the might-accept. It gets read off the hope that reason converges and then used to certify the norms reason is supposed to deliver.

Between Facts and Norms names the problem in its title. Habermas wants legitimate law to be both a coercive fact and a valid norm, and he wants the validity to be more than the coercion. Legitimacy is what parts law from naked force. Turner grants the parting as a fact of feeling. Men treat some commands as legitimate and others as mere force, and the feeling has natural sources, in habit, in consent, in the expectation of fair sanction. What he denies is the more than. Strip the surplus and you have power, habit, and the sense of legitimacy, each a natural fact, with nothing left over for validity to be.

Habermas resists the charge by calling his method reconstructive and fallible. Universal pragmatics, he says, reconstructs the unavoidable presuppositions of speech, and the idealizations are pragmatic, not Platonic, forced on anyone who argues at all. Turner’s reply holds that unavoidable presupposition restates the transcendental move rather than answering it. Calling the idealization pragmatic instead of metaphysical does not tell us where the validity lives or what natural fact it adds to the habits and feelings already on the table. The fallibilism cuts the other way too. If we can never identify the valid norm, the realm we cannot check earns its keep by faith.

Habermas needs the surplus, and the need is honorable. Without irreducible validity his critique loses its footing and democracy rests on custom and power alone. He spent a career fighting that conclusion, against the legal positivists who reduce law to whatever the sovereign commands, against Carl Schmitt (1888-1985) and the decision that grounds order in will, against the functionalism that dissolves legitimacy into system maintenance. The normative saves him from Schmitt. Turner’s point is that it saves him by positing a ghost, and a man who fears decisionism is not thereby owed a transcendent realm to fend it off.

Habermas is the great secular rationalist who turned in old age to the moral inheritance of religion. He kept the structure of faith while emptying its content. The unforced force of the better argument is a regulative absolute, a this-worldly seat for the view from nowhere. Where the believer trusts that God sees the truth of the matter, Habermas trusts that the unlimited communication community might reach it. The trust does the same work. It anchors judgment in a standpoint no man occupies.

‘A Big Misunderstanding’

David Pinsof has a single target, the belief that the world’s troubles come from misunderstanding. Intellectuals hold this belief because it flatters them. If misunderstanding causes the trouble, then the men whose trade is understanding are the ones who can fix it. Just by doing their work they save the world. Pinsof’s counterclaim is blunt. There is no misunderstanding. People understand what they have an incentive to understand. The cause of the trouble is bad motives, not bad beliefs, and the motives are the ordinary ones a hierarchical, coalitional, self-deceiving primate carries out of natural selection.

Habermas is the archpriest of the belief Pinsof attacks. His master word is Verständigung, reaching understanding. He splits human action in two. Strategic action aims at success, at getting your way. Communicative action aims at mutual understanding, and he treats the second as the deeper and more human of the two, the orientation that holds a society together. Pathology enters when communication is distorted, when power, money, or ideology bends speech away from understanding. The cure is speech freed of distortion. Name the master concept of a man’s life work and you have named the misunderstanding myth in its purest form.

Take the diagnosis first. Habermas reads the ills of modernity as failures of communication. Ideology is distorted communication run through a whole society. The lifeworld suffers colonization when the imperatives of money and administration crowd out shared meaning. Partisan rancor, manipulation, the decay of the public sphere into public relations, all of it reads as understanding gone wrong. Pinsof answers that the distortion is the function, not the failure. Partisans hate each other because they are locked in zero-sum competition over the coercive apparatus of the state, the thing that puts men in prison at gunpoint. They demonize the other side because demonizing works. They deny doing it and embellish the other side’s doing it because denial and embellishment serve as weapons. None of this is a breakdown of understanding. It is understanding put to use.

The ideal speech situation takes the hardest hit. Habermas pictures a setting cleared of coercion where the only force is the unforced force of the better argument. Pinsof denies men carry any such orientation. We argue to win. Confirmation bias helps us win arguments and justify what we have already done. The better argument wins when it serves the winning coalition, and the loser’s argument was never weighed on its merits. Habermas offers the counterfactual as a standard, not a description, and grants that no real setting reaches it. Pinsof’s reply cuts at the standard. A benchmark that nothing approaches, and that men have no motive to approach, measures nothing. It flatters the man who holds it up.

Underneath the quarrel sits the split between stated and actual motives. Habermas takes the stated orientation of a speaker, toward truth, toward sincerity, toward the better reason, as the real one. He builds a theory on the mission statement. Pinsof says read the deeds. Starbucks talks of nurturing the human spirit one cup at a time and works to maximize profit. Public discussion talks of reaching understanding and works to raise status, build coalitions, and run down rivals. Judge the discussion by its stated goal and it fails, and the failure looks like a great misunderstanding to clear up. Judge it by its working goal and it succeeds, and there is nothing to clear up.

Discourse ethics carries the same flaw. A norm holds, Habermas argues, if every affected person might accept it under free and open discussion. Pinsof answers that men accept the norms that serve their coalition and reject the ones that threaten it, then dress the verdict in the language of what all might accept. Open discussion does not strip the motives out. It gives them better cover.

The public sphere depends on a golden age that never ran. Habermas mourns the bourgeois coffeehouse, the salon, the reading club, sites of rational-critical debate later degraded into manipulation, a process he calls refeudalization. Pinsof’s frame denies the Eden. The coffeehouse was a status arena and a coalition floor from the start. The refeudalization Habermas grieves is no fall from disinterested reason. There was no disinterested reason to fall from.

The misunderstanding myth makes the intellectual the most important man alive, the one who diagnoses the distortion and reconstructs the conditions of clean speech and so rescues democracy from within. Seventy years of work raise the critical theorist to the man who can heal a sick modernity. Pinsof’s closing image fits Habermas without alteration. A man finds himself in a hole and studies the dirt to the last molecule, and no study of the hole lifts him out of it. The hole is human nature. We have no deep wish to climb out. The world does not want to be saved.

The Great Delusion

In his 2018 book, The Great Delusion: Liberal Dreams and International Realities, John J. Mearsheimer wrote:

My view is that we are profoundly social beings from the start to the finish of our lives and that individualism is of secondary importance… Liberalism downplays the social nature of human beings to the point of almost ignoring it, instead treating people largely as atomistic actors… Political liberalism… is an ideology that is individualistic at its core and assigns great importance to the concept of inalienable rights. This concern for rights is the basis of its universalism—everyone on the planet has the same inherent set of rights—and this is what motivates liberal states to pursue ambitious foreign policies. The public and scholarly discourse about liberalism since World War II has placed enormous emphasis on what are commonly called human rights. This is true all around the world, not just in the West. “Human rights,” Samuel Moyn notes, “have come to define the most elevated aspirations of both social movements and political entities—state and interstate. They evoke hope and provoke action.”
[Humans] do not operate as lone wolves but are born into social groups or societies that shape their identities well before they can assert their individualism. Moreover, individuals usually develop strong attachments to their group and are sometimes willing to make great sacrifices for their fellow members. Humans are often said to be tribal at their core. The main reason for our social nature is that the best way for a person to survive is to be embedded in a society and to cooperate with fellow members rather than act alone… Despite its elevated ranking, reason is the least important of the three ways we determine our preferences. It certainly is less important than socialization. The main reason socialization matters so much is that humans have a long childhood in which they are protected and nurtured by their families and the surrounding society, and meanwhile exposed to intense socialization. At the same time, they are only beginning to develop their critical faculties, so they are not equipped to think for themselves. By the time an individual reaches the point where his reasoning skills are well developed, his family and society have already imposed an enormous value infusion on him. Moreover, that individual is born with innate sentiments that also strongly influence how he thinks about the world around him. All of this means that people have limited choice in formulating a moral code, because so much of their thinking about right and wrong comes from inborn attitudes and socialization.

Mearsheimer’s broad target is the liberal who treats man as a rights-bearing atom prior to society, the line that runs from John Locke (1632-1704) through John Rawls (1921-2002). Habermas does not stand in that line. He spent a career attacking possessive individualism and built his account of the self on the opposite premise. The self forms through communication with others, after George Herbert Mead (1863-1931), not before. Habermas agrees with Mearsheimer on the first point. We are social from the start. The atomism charge glances off him.

Both men grant that society makes the man. They split on what follows. Mearsheimer ranks reason last and treats the value infusion as close to fixed. Habermas makes reason the medium of legitimacy and treats the infusion as open to revision through discussion. He asks the citizen to step back from his inherited loyalties, bring his norms into discourse, and accept only what all affected might agree to. Mearsheimer answers that the stepping back barely happens. The loyalties were laid down before reason woke, they sit deeper than reason reaches, and a faculty ranked third behind socialization and sentiment cannot reweight what the other two have set. The Habermasian citizen who brackets his tribe and weighs the better argument is a rare creature, and a weak one.

Constitutional patriotism is where the collision shows plainest. Habermas asks modern men to anchor their loyalty in universal principles, human rights, popular sovereignty, the rule of law, and to loosen their grip on blood, ethnicity, and nation. He asks for love of an abstraction in place of love of one’s own. Mearsheimer’s anthropology says the request runs against the grain of the animal. Men attach to thick groups and make sacrifices for them. A constitution is thin. When the thin principle and the thick group pull apart, the group wins, because the group reaches the sentiments and the principle reaches only the late and weakest faculty. Constitutional patriotism might hold a cosmopolitan stratum, the readers of Habermas, the educated and the mobile. It will not hold the mass, and it will not survive a crisis, when the social nature reasserts and men remember whose they are.

After 1945 Habermas wanted Germans to ground their identity in constitutional principle rather than ethnic nationhood, because German ethnic nationalism had produced the catastrophe. The whole postwar bet was that reason and the right socialization could override the tribal infusion that fed the Third Reich. Mearsheimer doubts the bet. The attachment can be suppressed, redirected, shamed into silence, yet the social nature remains, and what remains can return.

Discourse ethics meets the same wall. A norm holds, Habermas argues, if all affected might accept it in free discussion. Mearsheimer answers that men do not build their moral codes in discussion. They receive them, through socialization and through inborn attitude, with little room to choose. The discourse-ethical citizen who reasons his way to a universal code is not how a moral code forms in a real man.

So if Mearsheimer is right, what then for Habermas? The architecture stands, but it floats. Communicative reason is real and it does real work in courts, in parliaments, in the slow construction of law, yet it works on the surface and among the few, an elite overlay on a tribal base. The public sphere is the room where a thin stratum performs reason. It does not set what most men believe or whom they will fight. Constitutional patriotism is a delusion in the sense Mearsheimer’s title intends, a liberal dream that mistakes the wish for the animal. The post-national order Habermas hoped Europe might become is that dream colliding with the nation, and the nation does not yield.

The Ritual Beneath the Argument

In Interaction Ritual Chains, sociologist Randall Collins takes up Durkheim and Goffman and argues that solidarity and conviction come from the body before they come from the mind. An interaction ritual needs four things, bodily co-presence, a shared focus of attention, a common mood, and rhythmic entrainment, the falling into step that happens when people attend to the same thing together. When the four combine, the participants feel collective effervescence, they generate emotional energy, and they treat the focus of attention as a sacred symbol. The belief that follows feels binding because the ritual charged it, not because anyone reasoned to it. Émile Durkheim (1858-1917) saw this in religion. Erving Goffman (1922-1982) saw it in the small encounters of daily life. Collins makes it the engine of all solidarity. Reason rides on top. The conviction comes first, from the room, and the reasons arrive after to dress it.

Set this against Habermas and the collision runs the whole length of his thought.

Habermas grounds social integration in reasoned agreement. Men reach understanding by raising and redeeming validity claims, and the agreement binds because it is rationally motivated, carried by the unforced force of the better argument and nothing else. Collins answers that the force is never nothing else. The force is the ritual. The felt rightness of a conclusion comes from the effervescence of the gathering that produced it, and the argument takes the credit the room has earned.

The ideal speech situation makes the quarrel sharp. Habermas wants speech cleared of everything but the proposition and the reason, no coercion, no rhetoric, no pull of personality, no weight of numbers. Collins reads the cleared room as an empty one. Strip out the co-presence, the shared mood, and the rhythm, and you have removed the source of agreement, not the impurities around it. What stays, bare propositional exchange between disengaged minds, generates little solidarity and little conviction. The unforced force of the better argument is the force of the ritual that frames the argument, and Habermas has mistaken the frame for the content.

The order runs backward in Habermas. He has men reason their way to agreement, then feel bound by what they agreed. Collins has men bound by the ritual, then reason their way to a justification for the bond. The seminar feels the truth of a position when the discussion catches fire and the energy rises, and the participants walk out persuaded and call it the better argument. The persuasion is real. Its source is the fire, not the syllogism.

The public sphere looks different through this lens. Habermas prizes the coffeehouse, the salon, the reading club as engines of rational-critical debate. Collins sees interaction-ritual sites, rooms full of co-present men focused on the same pamphlet or quarrel, entrained, charged, minting shared symbols and emotional energy. The power of those rooms was the gathering, the attention, the heat. The reasoning was real and was also the byproduct, or the cover. What bound the early public was the effervescence of assembly more than the quality of its arguments.

Discourse ethics inherits the problem. A norm holds, Habermas argues, if all affected might accept it under ideal discussion. Collins answers that a norm holds when ritual has made it sacred and charged it with the energy of the gatherings that affirm it. Men feel the wrongness of breaking a sacred norm as a bodily recoil, the recoil Durkheim found at the edge of the sacred. No tally of who might accept the norm in reasoned discussion captures that. The norm binds because the ritual loaded it.

Habermas has a name for the modern transition. He calls it the linguistification of the sacred. The old binding powers, religion, sacred authority, the holy, dissolve into communicatively achieved agreement, and reason inherits what ritual once held. Collins denies the dissolution. The sacred never linguistifies. It relocates. The modern world still runs on interaction rituals, the rally, the courtroom, the inauguration, the funeral, the lecture hall, the demonstration, and the energy and the sacred symbols come off those gatherings as they always did. Habermas saw ritual fade and called it the rise of reason. Collins says ritual only changed address, and reason still rides where it always rode, on top of the charge the room provides.

The frame meets its limit at scale. Collins is strong on the small group, the gathering, the room where bodies share a focus. Habermas is after something the room cannot hold, legitimacy among strangers who never gather, the coordination of millions through law and right who will never share a ritual or a mood. Modern law governs people who never enter a common room, and there the thick charge of co-presence runs thin and procedure does the work that ritual cannot reach. Collins explains the wider bond by aggregation, ritual chains linking encounter to encounter until the energy spreads, but the account of how local effervescence becomes society-wide legitimacy is the soft part of the theory, and it is the exact ground Habermas claims. Habermas might press the point. Show me the ritual that binds a citizen to a stranger he will never meet under a constitution he never debated, and if you cannot, reason and procedure are doing the binding after all.

The two theories agree that the lone reasoner is a fiction and that integration is social work. They split on the work. For Habermas the work is reasoning together toward agreement. For Collins the work is gathering together until the body believes. Where men are present to one another, Collins has the better of it, and the unforced force of the better argument looks like the afterglow of the ritual that made the conviction. Where men are absent from one another, strangers bound across a continent by law, Habermas holds the ground Collins struggles to reach. Modern life runs on both, the charged room and the cold procedure, and Habermas built his system on the second while underrating how much of the first still carries the weight.

Habermas and the Interest in Disinterestedness

Pierre Bourdieu built his sociology around a single suspicion, that the scholar misreads the world by the light of his own position in it. He named the error the scholastic fallacy and worked it out at length in Pascalian Meditations. The scholar enjoys skholē, the leisure of the school, time off from necessity, and from that leisure he takes up a contemplative stance toward practices he never has to perform under pressure. Then he projects the stance onto the men he studies. He pictures the practical actor as a small theorist weighing options, when the actor moves in the flow of need, guided by a practical sense lodged in the body, the habitus, below the reach of deliberation. The scholastic fallacy is the unnoticed projection of the thinker’s free relation to the world onto everyone, most of whom are not free.

Hold the ideal speech situation up to this and it shivers.

Habermas reconstructs what every competent speaker supposedly presupposes, an orientation to mutual understanding, the suspension of strategic interest, the readiness to bow to the better argument. Bourdieu reads the list and recognizes the seminar. These are the conditions of the lecture hall, not of speech. A man can suspend his interest when he can afford to, and the affording is the whole point. The leisure buys the disinterested posture. Most men speak under stakes they cannot set aside, for a raise, for standing, for the room’s regard, and the contemplative ease that treats talk as the joint pursuit of truth is the privilege of the few excused from the fight. Habermas took the phenomenology of the tenured and called it the structure of language.

The unforced force of the better argument fares no better. In Language and Symbolic Power Bourdieu argues that no utterance carries its force from its content alone. Every utterance enters a market that prices it by the authority of the speaker, his titles, his accent, his recognized right to be heard. The professor’s sentence outweighs the student’s before either is examined. What Habermas calls the force of the argument is, in the room, the force of the speaker’s symbolic capital, and the listeners credit the argument and overlook the capital. That overlooking has a name. Misrecognition. The power passes for reason because no one sees the power.

Habermas treats agreement as the goal and the test, the free assent of all to what all find rational. Bourdieu asks whose categories framed the question and whose language set the terms before the first word was spoken. The dominated reach agreement in the dominant’s tongue, with the dominant’s distinctions, by the dominant’s measure of what counts as a good reason. The smoother the consensus, the deeper the imposition, because the imposed categories no longer feel imposed. They feel like one’s own mind. This is symbolic violence, the softest and strongest form of domination, the kind the dominated help to work on themselves. Where Habermas hears free men converging on the truth, Bourdieu sees men agreeing in a language not their own and mistaking the surrender for consent.

Habermas needs a subject who deliberates, who raises claims and answers them with reasons. Bourdieu’s agent acts from habitus, from dispositions laid down by a life in a position, and he produces his conduct without consulting the rules a theorist later writes for it. The reasons come after, to justify what the body already chose. A theory built on the redemption of validity claims presupposes a reasoning subject that practice rarely puts on display.

Bourdieu’s reflexive sociology holds that the thinker must objectify his own position in the field before he trusts his own thought. Apply it to Habermas. The man stands in the intellectual field, and a theory of disinterested communication is a move in that field, a position-taking with a payoff. The field reserves its highest prize, recognition, for the player who appears to want only truth, and the appearance of wanting nothing is the surest way to win the thing. Bourdieu called this the interest in disinterestedness. The philosopher who proclaims the unforced force of the better argument secures the field’s esteem by the very disavowal of the wish for esteem. The theory of pure communication, read this way, is the perfected strategy of the intellectual, profit drawn from the show of seeking no profit.

Pressed to the end, Bourdieu’s suspicion turns on Bourdieu. If every agreement is misrecognized domination and every reason a position in a field, then his own sociology is one more position, and his claim to have seen through domination leans on the disinterested orientation to truth he spends his work denying to others. He knew the danger and answered it with reflexivity, the demand that the sociologist objectify himself, yet the regress does not fully close. Habermas can press the point. You could not tell me that my consensus is domination, and expect me to take it, unless you trusted me to yield to the better argument against my interest in staying comfortable. The critique of reason borrows reason to do its work, the charge Habermas laid on every unmasker before Bourdieu.

The frame also reads too much defeat into agreement. Men do sometimes change their minds because the case against them is strong, and the dominated do sometimes win the argument outright. A lens that sees every consensus as the surrender of the weak loses the difference between persuasion and submission, and the difference is real even if it runs rarer than Habermas hoped. Habermas has his reply ready in his own terms. The ideal speech situation was never a snapshot of how men talk. It is the standard that lets you see symbolic violence as violence, the benchmark against which the distortion shows. Bourdieu answers that the benchmark is the scholar’s dream, and that measuring the world against a dream is the scholastic fallacy once more, now wearing the mask of critique. There the two men stand, closer than the heat suggests, both enemies of the lone liberal individual, both wanting men freed, split on the one question that decides the rest. Is reason a tool the dominated can take up against their masters, or the finest of the masters’ tools, handed down so the dominated will do the work on themselves. Habermas bet his life on the first. Bourdieu spent his showing the second.

Habermas and the Discussing Class

Carl Schmitt drew one line and built a politics on it. The political lives in the distinction between friend and enemy. In The Concept of the Political he argues that this distinction stands on its own, apart from good and evil, apart from profit and loss, apart from the beautiful and the ugly. A people is political when it can name an enemy, a public enemy, the stranger it might have to fight, and the possibility of the fight to the death is what gives the political its weight. Liberalism cannot abide the line. It dissolves the enemy into a competitor to bargain with and an interlocutor to persuade, and it turns the decision into a discussion. Schmitt held that the line returns whatever liberalism does, because the enemy is a fact of collective life and not a misunderstanding to clear up.

He had a name for the men who could not face the line. The discussing class.

In The Crisis of Parliamentary Democracy Schmitt pronounced the founding faith of parliament dead. Parliament rested on two beliefs, openness and government by discussion, the faith that truth comes from the clash of opinions if only men talk freely and long enough. By the 1920s, he wrote, the faith had become a ritual, the real decisions made in party rooms and interest coalitions while the chamber performed debate for the public. Government by discussion presumes that the men in the room came to be persuaded rather than to win, and that presumption belonged to a vanished bourgeois moment. Schmitt buried the principle. Habermas dug it up and gave it the most complete philosophical body it ever had. Where Schmitt saw a dead ritual, Habermas saw the unfinished promise of modernity, and he spent his life supplying the foundations the principle had always lacked, the theory of communicative reason, the validity claims, the unforced force of the better argument. He answered Schmitt’s death notice with a system.

Habermas builds the political we out of shared reason, the orientation to mutual understanding, the agreement all might reach under free discussion. Schmitt answers that a people is not the set of those who share reasons. It is the set of those who share an enemy. Unity comes from the line drawn against the outsider, not from the consensus reached among insiders, and a community with no enemy is no political community at all. Constitutional patriotism, post-national citizenship, the unlimited communication community, each tries to raise a we with no they. Schmitt reads the attempt as the liberal dream of a world with the politics taken out. And he adds the barb that cuts deepest. Whoever invokes humanity means to cheat. The appeal to a universal human community does not end enmity. It strips the enemy of the honor of a foe and recasts him as a criminal against mankind, and the wars fought in the name of all humanity are the most pitiless of all.

Political Theology opens with the line that organizes everything Schmitt thought. Sovereign is he who decides on the exception. The legal order runs on norms until the moment it cannot, and in that moment someone suspends the norm and decides, and the decision rests on no rule because the rules have stopped. Between Facts and Norms wants law without remainder, communicative power converted into legitimate law with nothing left over, no founding that procedure did not authorize. Schmitt asks the question the theory cannot hear. Who decides when the talking stops? Every order rests on a founding decision that no procedure licensed, and on a power that holds the normal situation open so the discussion can go on inside it. Habermas describes the house and forgets to ask who built it and who stands at the door.

The call for more discussion, freer discussion, one more round of reasons, is the discussing class fleeing the decision and naming the flight reason. Juan Donoso Cortés (1809-1853), whom Schmitt loved to quote, called the bourgeoisie the class that answers every question with on the one hand and on the other, that meets every either with a maybe. When the enemy stands at the gate, the man who asks for another exchange of validity claims is not the most rational man present. He is the man who will not see that the hour for talk has passed. Read through Schmitt, seventy years of Habermasian theory is the grandest monument ever raised to the evasion of the political.

That Habermas spent a career fending Schmitt off measures the force of the threat. He fought the Schmittian right in the constitutional debates of the Federal Republic, warned against the decisionism that grounds order in will, and built the whole apparatus of communicative legitimacy as the answer to the claim that legitimacy rests on the decision. A man does not spend fifty years answering an argument he finds weak. The energy of the defense is the confession of the danger.

The decisionism that mocks discussion as evasion is the same doctrine that supplied the legal cover for the state Schmitt served, and the exception he theorized became the emergency decree, the enabling act, and the camps. The doctrine that dissolves Habermas is the doctrine that helped dissolve the Weimar constitution into the Third Reich. This is no change of subject. It is evidence about what the theory does when a man acts on it. Schmitt says the institutions of discussion are always a mask. The century says those institutions sometimes hold the violence that the decision, unbound, lets loose.

Schmitt also overreaches. Not every conflict is the existential fight to the death. Most political disagreement is bargainable, and the machinery of procedure and discussion settles it without anyone reaching for a weapon. Habermas can grant the exception, the rare moment when the norm fails and someone must decide, while denying that the exception is the essence of all politics. Most of political life is the normal situation, and in the normal situation the account of legitimacy through reasoned agreement does real work. Schmitt mistakes the limit case for the rule and calls the mistake realism.

And Habermas has the reply that goes to the root. The friend and enemy distinction tells you how power operates. It does not tell you which order deserves to stand. A doctrine that blesses any decision because it is a decision has given up the question of legitimacy and called the surrender courage. Might is not right, and the sovereign who decides still owes an account of why his decision binds the men it binds.

Schmitt has one move left. The demand for justification is the evasion, because someone decided the terms of the justification before the first reason was given. Someone drew the boundary of the communication community, ruled who counts as a participant and what counts as a reason, and named the hour the talking begins and ends. The unlimited communication community has a limit, and a limit is a line between those inside and those outside, the friend and enemy distinction wearing the robe of inclusion. The sovereign Habermas evicted from the order returns at the threshold, in the decision that constitutes the conversation he calls free. There the two men reach the bone. Habermas says the decision can be bound by reason, talked down, hedged with procedure until the will gives way to the argument. Schmitt says the decision is first and last, that reason runs only inside the space some prior decision cleared, and that the man who forgets this will be reminded by an enemy who never agreed to the rules.

Habermas and the Pathogenesis of the Public Sphere

Two Germans wrote the history of the same room within three years of each other, and they read it to opposite ends. Habermas published The Structural Transformation of the Public Sphere in 1962 and mourned a loss. Reinhart Koselleck (1923-2006) published Critique and Crisis in 1959 and diagnosed a disease. The room is the eighteenth-century bourgeois public, the coffeehouse, the salon, the Republic of Letters, the reading clubs, the men who met to judge the world by reason. Habermas saw the birthplace of democratic legitimacy. Koselleck saw the cradle of the Terror. Same coffeehouse, opposite verdict, and the opposition runs all the way down.

Koselleck starts where Habermas does not, with the absolutist state and the wars of religion. The confessional wars taught Europe that shared moral truth in the public realm meant slaughter, and the absolutist state bought peace by a hard division. Thomas Hobbes (1588-1679) drew it. The sovereign takes the whole of the public and political realm and decides the public order, and the subject keeps his conscience to himself, a private inner morality with no public claim. Peace came at the price of a silenced conscience. Into that walled private garden, the space the state marked off as merely moral and therefore harmless, the bourgeois Enlightenment grew.

And here is the move that turns Habermas’s story inside out. The critics took the moral space the sovereign had fenced off as private and used it to judge the whole world, the state included, while insisting all the while that they judged as moralists and rational men and not as political actors at all. Koselleck calls this the hypocrisy at the root. The bourgeoisie waged a political war on the state under a flag that read apolitical. Critique presented itself as neutral, the verdict of reason and humanity, above the fray, and that pose let the critic seize a political authority he refused to name as political and so refused to answer for. Habermas prizes the disinterested rationality of the public sphere as its authentic principle. Koselleck reads the same disinterest as the founding lie, the mask that hid a bid for power from the men who wore it.

The secrecy belongs to the indictment. Habermas builds everything on *Öffentlichkeit*, openness, the principle that power must answer in the light. Koselleck points to the lodges, the Masonic orders, the half-hidden correspondence networks, the secret societies where the Enlightenment elite built an indirect power, a counter-sovereignty that pronounced on the state from the shadow while calling itself a private moral fellowship. The public sphere had a concealed face, a tribunal of mankind sitting partly in the dark. The openness Habermas treats as the principle was also a front for a power that did not announce itself.

Then the disease takes its mature form. Critique and crisis share a root, the Greek *krisis*, the judgment, the turning point. Koselleck’s claim is that permanent moral judgment breeds a permanent sense of crisis. The critics measured the present against a rational and moral future and found the present rotten, a mere transition to be overcome, and they built a philosophy of history, progress toward a coming age of reason, that made the existing order a thing already condemned. Rousseau (1712-1778) and the writers of progress turned the world into a courtroom and history into a verdict already reached. The standpoint of the imagined future absolved the judges of the present of any responsibility for what it cost. Habermas inherits this philosophy of history whole. His modernity is an unfinished project, reason advancing, the promise not yet kept. In Koselleck’s terms that is the utopian self-understanding, the engine of permanent crisis, named as hope.

The line ends at the guillotine. The moralized critique that would not see itself as politics produced the Revolution and the Terror, because a politics conducted from the standpoint of morality and humanity cannot grant the enemy the standing of a legitimate adversary. It can only find him evil. The critic who judges from humanity makes every opponent a criminal against mankind, and the moralized war is the pitiless one. The public sphere Habermas celebrates and the pathogenesis Koselleck traces are the same thing read forward to two different stations, and Koselleck rides it to 1793.

No man of the last century played the part Koselleck describes more fully than Habermas the public moralist. He stood up in the Historikerstreit and judged his opponents from the standpoint of universal reason and human rights, and he cast the men who sought to relativize the German crimes not as political adversaries but as betrayers of morality and truth. He spent fifty years issuing verdicts on the world in the voice of reason and humanity, the voice that does not concede its own partiality. Koselleck’s book is, among other things, a portrait of that voice, drawn two centuries early. Habermas built his life as the figure Critique and Crisis warns against, the critic who judges all and owns nothing, certain that his standpoint is reason and not a position in a fight.

Koselleck wrote in the shadow of Schmitt, and the book carries the Schmittian wish. If every moral critique of power is covert aggression in disguise, then no honest moral check on the state can exist, and the argument clears the ground for the unaccountable sovereign Schmitt wanted all along. Habermas has the obvious reply. The cure is worse than the disease. A doctrine that unmasks all critique as hidden war ends by handing the state a monopoly on judgment, and Koselleck describes the absolutist sovereign with a sympathy that gives the game away.

The genealogy also picks its ending. Even granting the public sphere its hypocrisies and its utopian streak, the road from the coffeehouse to the scaffold is one road out of several, and Koselleck takes the darkest and calls it the destination. The same public sphere produced constitutional government, the free press, the abolition of the slave trade, and the rule of law, the very institutions that later held terror in check. To read the eighteenth century only forward to the guillotine is to choose the exit.

The French case carries more weight in the book than it can bear alone. The English and the American publics argued, judged, and reformed without a Terror, which suggests the disease lay in a brittle absolutism that gave critique no legal channel and drove it underground until it broke out explosive and moralized. Open the channels, let the critique into parliaments and a free press where it must answer for itself, and the indirect power becomes responsible public power. That is exactly Habermas’s remedy, and the French disease is the argument for it rather than against it.

Koselleck has a rejoinder. The moralized style of critique did not die with the Jacobins. It returned in the world-historical ideologies of the twentieth century, in the moralized civil wars Koselleck watched from the rubble of his own country, and the humanity-invoking judgment that treats the adversary as a criminal against mankind lives wherever men make politics from the standpoint of universal right. Habermas’s universalism, human rights held up as the measure of every regime, is the humanity-invoking standpoint in its purest modern form. The question the two men leave open is the one worth keeping. Does moral universalism in public life bind power to account, as Habermas trusts, or does it moralize enmity and breed the cruelest fights, as Koselleck feared? Habermas mourned the public sphere because he believed the first. Koselleck indicted it because he had seen the second. The coffeehouse is the same. The century a reader has lived through decides which man he believes.

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Avishai Margalit: The Philosopher of Humiliation

Avishai Margalit (b. 1939) is an Israeli philosopher and public intellectual whose work reshaped how moral and political philosophy treats dignity, humiliation, memory, compromise, and betrayal. He spent the core of his career at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem and later held the George F. Kennan chair at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton. He trained inside the analytic tradition. Over time he moved past its focus on language and logic toward a moral and political philosophy rooted in history, literature, and the concrete textures of human life. His writing returns again and again to the question of how institutions, communities, and shared memory bear on human dignity and moral obligation.

Margalit was born in Afula during the British Mandate for Palestine and grew up in Jerusalem. He came of age with the Israeli state. He attended the Hebrew University Secondary School and served in the airborne Nahal of the Israel Defense Forces. In 1960 he entered the Hebrew University, where he read philosophy and economics. He earned a bachelor’s degree in 1963 and a master’s degree in philosophy in 1965. His master’s thesis examined Karl Marx (1818-1883) on labor, an early sign of his concern with the moral weight of social and economic life.

During his student years he worked for several years as a guide in a youth village for immigrant children. The work brought him close to questions of identity, integration, and belonging that later run through his philosophy. A British Council scholarship took him to Queen’s College, Oxford, from 1968 to 1970. He completed his doctorate under the logician and philosopher of language Yehoshua Bar-Hillel (1915-1975), examining the cognitive status of metaphor, and received his Ph.D. *summa cum laude* from the Hebrew University in 1970.

He joined the Hebrew University faculty soon after. He rose through the ranks to hold the Schulman Professorship of Philosophy and later became professor emeritus. He held visiting posts at Harvard, at Oxford, where he served as the first Bertelsmann Professor, at the Free University of Berlin, and at universities in Prague, Florence, and New York. From 2006 to 2011 he held the George F. Kennan chair at the Institute for Advanced Study, among the leading centers for advanced scholarship in the world.

His wife, the philosopher Edna Ullmann-Margalit (1946-2010), shaped his thinking across four decades. He married her in 1965. She worked on social conventions, norms, and collective choice, and the two shared projects and arguments until her death in 2010. They raised four children. After she died, Margalit went on living and working in Jerusalem.

Margalit’s earliest publications fall in the philosophy of language, logic, metaphor, and rationality. He edited the volume *Meaning and Use* (1979), a collection of essays on language and epistemology. His attention then shifted toward moral and political philosophy. Where many analytic philosophers lean on abstract thought experiments, Margalit built a method around what he calls exemplary cases. He prefers complex historical events, literary narratives, and political controversies to tidy hypotheticals. His arguments grow out of close attention to real human situations, on the conviction that moral understanding comes through concrete cases rather than detached abstraction. He often draws a line between explaining a concept and illuminating it. Explanation seeks formal definition and logical clarity. Illumination seeks understanding through rich examples that show how a concept lives in moral experience. He favors the second task throughout his career.

His international standing rests first on *The Decent Society* (1996). In years when political philosophers argued mostly about justice, equality, and rights, Margalit asked a different question. What makes a society decent? His answer: a decent society runs institutions that do not humiliate the men who depend on them. The book placed humiliation at the center of political thought. Honor turns on rank, reputation, and position. Dignity belongs to a man by his humanity. Institutions humiliate when they treat men as less than human, strip them of agency, reduce them to categories, or refuse to see them as persons. A welfare office, a prison, a bureaucracy, or a state can humiliate even while it keeps within the law. To prevent such treatment becomes a first political duty. The book marked Margalit as an original moral philosopher of his generation.

A second major contribution came with *The Ethics of Memory* (2002), where Margalit took up the moral force of shared remembrance. The book asks how societies remember historical events and what duties follow from those memories. Its organizing idea is a distinction between thick and thin relations. Thin relations hold among strangers joined only by a common humanity, and they carry universal claims such as fairness, respect, and justice. Thick relations grow from shared history, family ties, communal bonds, and national identity, and they carry loyalty, memory, solidarity, and mutual care. Margalit holds that ethics governs the thick relations while morality governs the thin. The distinction organizes much of his later thought and gives him a way to weigh the moral pull of communities, nations, and historical identities.

With the historian and journalist Ian Buruma (b. 1951), Margalit published *Occidentalism: The West in the Eyes of Its Enemies* (2004). Written after the September 11 attacks, the book traces the intellectual roots of anti-Western thought. Margalit and Buruma argue that hostility toward the West rises not only outside it but inside it, from romantic, nationalist, and anti-modern currents born in Europe. The book entered debates about terrorism, modernity, and cultural conflict and shaped how readers thought about the sources of such hatred.

In *On Compromise and Rotten Compromises* (2009), Margalit took up one of the hard questions of political ethics. Political life often demands compromise, yet are there compromises a man should never accept? He argues that some agreements are rotten because they establish or preserve an inhuman regime. He draws on the Munich Agreement, the Yalta Conference, the slavery provisions of the United States Constitution, and Arab-Israeli negotiations, and he holds that certain accommodations cross a moral line whatever their practical gain. He writes that our compromises tell us who we are more than our ideals do. The book reflects his wider turn toward a negative ethics aimed at preventing evil rather than reaching perfection.

His interest in religion, identity, and exclusion runs through *Idolatry* (1992), written with the philosopher Moshe Halbertal (b. 1958) and published by Harvard University Press. The book treats idolatry not merely as a theological error but as a social and political matter. By tracing how communities mark insiders and outsiders through ideas of false worship and spiritual corruption, the authors show how exclusion and hostility find their justification.

*On Betrayal* (2017) returns to the distinction between thick and thin relations. Betrayal, Margalit argues, becomes possible only inside thick relationships built on trust, loyalty, and shared identity. A man cannot betray a stranger. The concept therefore lights up the moral structure of human attachment. The book ranges across personal relationships, religious communities, political movements, and national loyalties, and it shows how the experience of betrayal reveals the obligations folded into shared life.

Margalit has stayed close to Israeli public affairs across his career. In the early 1970s he took part in forming Moked, a left-wing party that sought dialogue between Israelis and Palestinians. He later helped found the Israeli Council for Israeli-Palestinian Peace and aligned himself with Peace Now, among the most influential of Israel’s peace movements. He served on the board of B’Tselem, the Israeli human rights organization. These commitments reflect his view that philosophy should keep its ties to public life and political responsibility.

Beyond the academy he has become a respected public intellectual. For decades he has written essays for The New York Review of Books and other major publications on Israeli politics, Jewish thought, historical memory, and moral philosophy. The essays carry the marks of his scholarly work: conceptual care, historical depth, and a steady concern with human dignity.

His honors include the Spinoza Lens Prize in 2001, the Israel Prize in Philosophy in 2010, the EMET Prize, the Ernst Bloch Prize in 2012, and the Leopold Lucas Prize, along with election to the Israel Academy of Sciences and Humanities and membership in the American Philosophical Society.

Margalit’s lasting significance lies in his effort to turn moral and political philosophy toward neglected corners of human experience. Where many philosophers fix on justice, rights, or utility, he writes about humiliation, memory, loyalty, compromise, and betrayal. His work shows that we judge political institutions not only by their efficiency or fairness but by how they treat the men inside them. Across more than five decades he has argued that the first task of a decent society is not to build perfection but to prevent cruelty, degradation, and the ruin of human dignity. In that effort he has built an influential body of moral thought.

‘A Big Misunderstanding’

David Pinsof opens “A Big Misunderstanding” with a charge against his own trade. Intellectuals blame the world’s troubles on misunderstanding, he writes, because the story flatters them. If every problem comes from ignorance, bias, and tribalism, then the men whose job is understanding become the men who save the world. Pinsof throws the story out. Humans are savvy coalitional primates who chase status, allies, and resources while telling themselves a kinder tale. The space between a man’s stated motive and his real one is the space between Starbucks’ mission statement and its drive for profit. Stupidity is strategic. Bad motives, not bad beliefs, run the world. Advice is mostly bullshit, and the world has no wish to be saved.

Put Avishai Margalit under this lens and the first surprise is how much he already concedes. Margalit does not preach the misunderstanding myth. He thinks evil is real and often clear-eyed. His negative ethics aims to prevent cruelty, not to perfect mankind, and the modesty of that aim sits close to Pinsof’s line that some things cannot be fixed. The man who wrote that we should be judged by our compromises more than by our ideals knows the distance between what people profess and what they do. On Compromise and Rotten Compromises is a book about that distance. So Margalit makes no easy mark for the charge that he expects education to cure the species.

Pinsof’s sharpest tool is the split between stated and real motives, and he aims it at the intellectual’s product itself. Margalit’s stated aim is to give the humiliated a moral language and to name the institutions that strip men of standing. Read through Pinsof, the work might serve a different end. Margalit writes for the New York Review of Books and the cosmopolitan moral class that reads it. His ideal of the decent society names that class’s code. To call a compromise rotten is a status move before it is a moral one. It lifts the speaker above the man who compromised and ties the rival to Munich and the men who made it, the most useful slander in political argument. Peace Now and B’Tselem mark a coalition. The frame might read the whole apparatus of dignity-talk as moral combat fought with a kindly vocabulary.

Humiliation carries the same double reading. Margalit treats it as a harm to prevent. Pinsof might treat the charge of humiliation as a weapon. To accuse an institution of degrading men derogates the men who run it, and derogating rivals is an old and profitable move for a coalitional animal. The bureaucrat, the prison, the state in Margalit’s pages do not blunder. On the cynical read they serve someone’s interest, and they humiliate because humiliation pays. Margalit wants better institutions. Pinsof might answer that degradation is the point more often than the error.

Pinsof’s evolutionary picture says we care for ourselves, our kin, and our allies, and that talk of the species or of universal love is mostly signaling. Margalit grants ethics to the thick relations of family, community, and nation, and grants the thin relations of common humanity a weaker pull. The two men describe the same shape. Margalit moralizes it and Pinsof naturalizes it. Where Margalit sees a structure of obligation, the frame sees a coalition wearing the mask of obligation. The ethics of memory reads the same way. A duty to remember the dead binds the living group, signals loyalty, and marks who belongs. The memory of catastrophe under Margalit’s negative ethics holds a people together. Margalit gives it moral weight. The frame gives it a coalition’s work.

The deepest collision sits at the center of Margalit’s whole corpus, and he built it, by accident, as the one idea made to resist Pinsof. Margalit splits honor from dignity. Honor rests on rank, reputation, and standing, the very stuff of status competition. Dignity belongs to a man by his humanity and answers to no rank at all. Pinsof’s frame reduces the moral world to honor games, to status and coalition and the chase for advantage. Margalit’s central claim holds that dignity is real and cannot be cashed out as honor. So the two positions face each other with no common floor. Pinsof says there is no dignity, only status dressed up. Margalit says dignity is the thing status can never reach. Margalit’s life work argues against the Pinsof worldview, and the Pinsof worldview argues that Margalit’s life work is a long and elegant status game.

Pinsof might be right that Margalit’s dignity is a flattering story, the moral philosopher’s version of the misunderstanding myth, a way to look like a sweetie while climbing. Margalit might be right that the cynic has mistaken the price of a thing for its nature, and that honor games run on top of a dignity they never touch. Neither man wins from inside his own frame. What Pinsof shows, applied here, is that Margalit’s gentlest concept and his fiercest opponent point at the same ground from opposite sides. The misunderstanding, if there is one, is the belief that the matter settles.

The Great Delusion

In his 2018 book, The Great Delusion: Liberal Dreams and International Realities, John J. Mearsheimer wrote:

My view is that we are profoundly social beings from the start to the finish of our lives and that individualism is of secondary importance… Liberalism downplays the social nature of human beings to the point of almost ignoring it, instead treating people largely as atomistic actors… Political liberalism… is an ideology that is individualistic at its core and assigns great importance to the concept of inalienable rights. This concern for rights is the basis of its universalism—everyone on the planet has the same inherent set of rights—and this is what motivates liberal states to pursue ambitious foreign policies. The public and scholarly discourse about liberalism since World War II has placed enormous emphasis on what are commonly called human rights. This is true all around the world, not just in the West. “Human rights,” Samuel Moyn notes, “have come to define the most elevated aspirations of both social movements and political entities—state and interstate. They evoke hope and provoke action.”
[Humans] do not operate as lone wolves but are born into social groups or societies that shape their identities well before they can assert their individualism. Moreover, individuals usually develop strong attachments to their group and are sometimes willing to make great sacrifices for their fellow members. Humans are often said to be tribal at their core. The main reason for our social nature is that the best way for a person to survive is to be embedded in a society and to cooperate with fellow members rather than act alone… Despite its elevated ranking, reason is the least important of the three ways we determine our preferences. It certainly is less important than socialization. The main reason socialization matters so much is that humans have a long childhood in which they are protected and nurtured by their families and the surrounding society, and meanwhile exposed to intense socialization. At the same time, they are only beginning to develop their critical faculties, so they are not equipped to think for themselves. By the time an individual reaches the point where his reasoning skills are well developed, his family and society have already imposed an enormous value infusion on him. Moreover, that individual is born with innate sentiments that also strongly influence how he thinks about the world around him. All of this means that people have limited choice in formulating a moral code, because so much of their thinking about right and wrong comes from inborn attitudes and socialization.

Margalit holds that dignity belongs to every man by his humanity, that no rank and no group membership grants or withdraws it, and that a decent society runs institutions that humiliate no one. This is the universal floor. It is the inalienable-rights claim in moral dress, the thing Mearsheimer says liberalism overrates. If Mearsheimer is right that reason is the weakest of our three guides, then the universal anti-humiliation norm cannot claim to bind all men as a finding of reason. It becomes a value infusion of one society. The decent society turns out to be the moral code of a particular tribe, the liberal West after the war, the human-rights culture that Samuel Moyn (b. 1972) describes, raised to the status of human nature by men who mistake their own socialization for the truth about everyone. Margalit thinks he is naming what all men owe each other. On Mearsheimer’s anthropology he is naming what his own people taught him to feel, and dressing a local code as a universal one.

His rotten-compromise doctrine takes the hardest hit. In On Compromise and Rotten Compromises Margalit argues that some agreements must be refused even for peace, because they establish or preserve an inhuman regime. This is the liberal moralism that The Great Delusion blames for ruin. Mearsheimer’s whole case is that universalist conviction in foreign policy ends in disaster, because it overrides the survival and security needs that group-bound creatures cannot ignore. The realist might read Margalit’s refusal of the rotten compromise as the luxury belief of a man whose reason has overruled the social imperative that keeps people alive. The two share their paradigm case. Margalit treats Munich as the rotten compromise that proves the rule. Mearsheimer reads appeasement through the cold ledger of the balance of power. Where Margalit hears a moral line that must not be crossed, Mearsheimer hears reason straining against the grain of a social animal, and snapping.

Margalit has a line of retreat, and it runs through his minimalism. His ethics is negative. It asks us to prevent cruelty, not to guarantee a full sheet of rights or to perfect mankind. The thinner the universal claim, the better its odds under Mearsheimer’s frame, because Mearsheimer grants innate sentiment as a real source of preference. Disgust at gratuitous suffering might sit closer to that inborn floor than any list of rights. So Margalit’s smallest claim, do not humiliate, do not degrade a man below the human, might rest on shared sentiment rather than on contested reason, and might survive where the larger liberal program does not. The weaker the demand, the harder it is for Mearsheimer to call it a mere infusion. Margalit’s modesty is his defense.

What then for Margalit, if Mearsheimer is right? His map of human attachment stands, because he drew most of it himself. His thick relations keep their force, and his account of memory and loyalty gains a backing in nature that he never sought. What shrinks is the reach of dignity. The universal floor loses its footing in reason and human nature and stands instead as the value of one society among many, strong in its own tribe and thin everywhere else. His rotten-compromise doctrine looks not merely parochial but hazardous, the kind of conviction Mearsheimer holds responsible for blood. And yet the decent society survives as an argument even after it loses its claim to speak for the species, because the truth of a moral demand and the strength of the urge behind it are two different things, and Mearsheimer’s anthropology answers only the second. Margalit ends up a liberal who can no longer say his ideal is written into man. He can still say it is good.

Turner on Essentialism

Stephen Turner is a nominalist about the things social theory loves to treat as real. In The Social Theory of Practices he denies that a shared practice passes between men as a common substance. What looks like one practice held in many heads is many men with similar-enough habits, and the sameness is an inference we draw, not an object we find. He carries the doubt across the whole family of collective and conceptual entities that explanation reaches for. Society, culture, the normative, shared frameworks, common meanings. Turner treats these as words that gather loosely similar cases, not as kinds with essences we uncover. Push hard enough and the collective dissolves into individuals, their dispositions, and the histories that shaped them. The essence was never there. We projected it.

Set Margalit beside this and he looks at first like an ally. His method runs against definition. He prefers to illuminate a concept rather than explain it, to work through exemplary cases rather than pin down necessary and sufficient conditions. He distrusts the tidy hypothetical and reaches for the messy historical event. A man who refuses to say what humiliation is in a formula, and instead shows you a welfare office, a prison, a camp, is not in the business of hunting essences. He treats his concepts the way Turner treats practices, as things known through instances and resistant to capture. So the frame seems to find a friend.

The friendship breaks where Margalit’s morality starts. His ethics needs the concepts to be more than words that gather cases. When he says an institution humiliates a man, he treats humiliation as one thing, a real harm that holds across the welfare office and the camp and the bureaucratic form, the same kind wearing different clothes. When he says dignity belongs to every man by his humanity, he posits a shared human essence and rests the whole universal floor on it. This is the move Turner blocks. There is no common humanity functioning as an object, on Turner’s account, only billions of men with overlapping traits and the inference of a shared nature laid over them. Margalit’s dignity hangs from the one hook the anti-essentialist refuses to drive into the wall. Take away the essence of the human and the claim that all men carry equal dignity loses the thing that made it universal. What remains is a word that does varied work in varied places.

His collective concepts take the same pressure. The Ethics of Memory leans on a community that shares a memory and owes a duty to remember. Turner might read the shared memory as a reification of the plainest kind. No memory-object sits between the members. There are many men with similar-enough recollections and dispositions, and the community of memory is the projection we throw over them. The duty to remember presupposes a collective bearer, and the bearer is the sort of entity Turner spends his work dissolving. Thick relations meet the same fate. Family, community, nation name real attachments among individuals, but Margalit treats them as kinds that ground kinds of obligation, and the anti-essentialist hears a noun pretending to be a thing.

Margalit has a defense, and it is the strongest a moral philosopher could mount against this frame. He never claimed essences. He built his whole style to live without them. Illumination over explanation is the refusal to treat dignity and humiliation as kinds with definable cores. He might say Turner attacks a position he abandoned at the start. You know humiliation when you meet it, case by case, the way you know cruelty, and you need no essence to feel the wrong. That answer holds for the method. It strains at the conclusion. A harm recognized case by case can still be a real harm, but the universal floor asks for more than recognition. The step from these cases of humiliation to every man is owed dignity by his shared humanity smuggles back the essence the method disavowed. The cases stay local and particular. The conclusion claims to bind the species. Somewhere between them the human essence slips back into the argument, and Turner’s frame catches it in the act.

What then for Margalit, if Turner is right about essences? He keeps the cases and loses the kinds. Humiliation survives as a recognizable wrong met one instance at a time, not as a single thing with a nature that institutions violate. The decent society survives as a description of places where such wrongs grow rare, not as a kind of society with an essence. Dignity survives as a word that does heavy and honorable work, not as a property every man carries by virtue of a shared humanity, because that shared humanity is the projection Turner will not grant. Margalit ends able to say that this man was humiliated and that this institution did it. He loses the right to say that every man, everywhere, is owed the same by the same essence, since the essence was the inference all along. The illumination was real. The thing it was supposed to illuminate may have been a word doing its work.

The Ought That Explains Nothing

In Explaining the Normative Stephen Turner takes aim at a word that does heavy lifting in philosophy and earns none of its keep. The normative. Theorists reach for it to explain why a rule binds us, why a reason carries authority, why we must and not merely do. Turner’s charge is that the reaching explains nothing. To say a norm binds because of its normativity relabels the thing in need of explanation and calls the relabel an answer. Press the normativist for the source of the bindingness and he posits the normative as basic, irreducible, a domain that cannot be cashed out in causal or empirical terms without loss. Turner reads the irreducibility claim as a confession. The posit stops a regress it cannot complete. What real work gets done, he argues, gets done by facts a social scientist can name. Habits, expectations, the sanctions men attach to breach, the beliefs each holds about what the others will do and punish. The ought floats above this factual substrate as a gloss. Normative theory, on his account, is bad social science wearing the robes of philosophy, smuggling claims about what people do and enforce under the cover of what they must.

Margalit is a normativist. His late work is a sequence of ought-claims. A decent society ought not humiliate the men who depend on it. Some compromises must be refused even when refusal costs peace. We owe a duty to remember. Betrayal wrongs the one betrayed. He does not try to naturalize these. He illuminates them through cases and treats them as standing moral facts, true whether or not anyone obeys them, grasped by attention rather than derived from anything below. He is the normativist Turner describes, and he writes as if the normative were a feature of the world as solid as the institutions it judges.

Margalit says some agreements must be refused regardless of the cost, because they establish an inhuman regime, and the must overrides every consequence. The word regardless is the tell Turner listens for. An unconditional ought that floats free of any account of why it binds is the normative posited as basic to halt the regress. It does not explain the refusal. It announces a place where Margalit will stop being asked. The duty to remember takes the same pressure. Margalit says the shared past generates the duty, and the verb does normative magic. What we can name is plainer. Men feel bound to commemorate, they sanction the one who forgets, they were raised inside the rite. The duty over and above these facts is a posit, and Margalit needs the posit, because a duty you merely feel might be a mistake and he wants the duty to hold whether felt or not. Turner hears in that whether or not the normativist’s refusal to let the facts be the whole story, and the refusal is the point where explanation stops and assertion begins.

His method invites the rest of the charge. Margalit illuminates rather than explains, and Turner might call illumination a courteous name for declining to explain. You set out cases, you produce agreement in the reader’s recoil, and you treat the agreement as a grasp of a normative truth. The recoil is a fact about trained men. We were taught to wince at the degraded prisoner and the broken petitioner. Margalit takes the wince, a social and psychological fact, and presents it as evidence of a norm, when the illumination manufactured the consensus it then cites. The honor and dignity split runs aground the same way. To say dignity is a normative status no rank can touch names the thing to be explained and offers it as the explanation. The status does no work that our reactions and our institutions do not already do.

Margalit has a reply, and it is the reply every normativist makes when pressed, which is both its strength and the reason Turner distrusts it. The normative justifies. It does not explain. Of course the ought adds nothing to a causal story of behavior, Margalit might say, because it was never offered as a causal story. To show that men recoil at humiliation never settles whether they are right to, and the gap between what men do and what they should do is the gap his whole enterprise sits inside. The demand that the normative earn its place as an explanation misreads what a norm is for. A norm is not a hypothesis about conduct. So the explanatory emptiness Turner exposes is no failure, because Margalit traded in justification all along. The frame lands with force only on a man who thinks every legitimate claim must explain something, and Margalit can decline that premise without flinching.

Turner has the comeback. The move from explanation to justification is the move the normativist always reaches for at the moment of pressure, and the retreat insulates the normative from any test. A claim that explains nothing, predicts nothing, and answers only to its own further normative claims has built a room with no door. Turner can add an asymmetry that catches Margalit on both flanks. His smallest claims reduce cleanest. Prevent cruelty sits close to a brute reaction at gratuitous suffering, a fact about trained men, so the normative posit there is plainly redundant. His grandest claim, the unconditional must of the rotten compromise, reduces to nothing at all and stands as bare assertion. The small oughts dissolve into facts and the big oughts hang in the air, and the normative as a working part of the world comes out empty at both ends.

What then for Margalit, if Turner is right about the normative? He keeps his oughts and loses their standing as features of the world. The duty to remember, the must of the refused compromise, the wrong of humiliation, survive as things he urges on men who already share his reactions, and bind no one who does not. The decent society remains a description of places where the trained recoil has been built into the institutions, not a verdict the institutions answer to from outside themselves. Margalit can still say humiliation is wrong and mean it with his whole weight. What he loses is the picture his prose keeps painting, of a moral order standing over us with an authority of its own, waiting to be illuminated. On Turner’s account there is the illumination, and there are the trained men it gathers, and the order it claims to reveal was the gathering all along.

The Memory That Had to Be Made

Jeffrey Alexander builds his theory of cultural trauma on a refusal. He rejects what he calls the naturalistic fallacy, the belief that an event carries its trauma inside it, that horror by its own weight stamps a mark on a people. Events do not do this. Trauma is an attribution a society makes. The work belongs to carrier groups who broadcast a claim about a wound, name the victim, name the one who caused it, and persuade an audience to take the suffering on board as its own. Four representations carry the claim. The nature of the pain, the nature of the victim, the relation of the victim to the wider audience, and the attribution of responsibility. The claim succeeds or it fails, and the success turns on the labor and the skill and the standing of the men who carry it rather than on the size of the original pain. His proof is the catalog of horrors that produced no trauma at all. The slaughter at Nanking, three hundred thousand dead under the eyes of the world press, stayed a regional memory and never branded the conscience of China or Japan. The Guatemalan army’s killing of two hundred thousand Maya, the comfort women of the Imperial army, the Cambodian killing fields, real beyond any question and for decades inert, because no carrier group with the resources and the authority built them into a story a wide audience would own. Trauma is made. The event is raw material.

Set The Ethics of Memory against this and the collision comes at once. Margalit grounds a duty to remember in a shared past. The community holds a memory, the memory makes a claim, and the men inside the community owe the dead their remembrance. Alexander moves the action upstream. The shared past is not the ground of the duty. It is the achievement, and a contingent one. Before a people can owe remembrance to a wound, carrier groups must first build the wound into a memory the people recognize as theirs, and most wounds never get built. Margalit writes as though the past obligates by its own reality. Nanking answers him. The reality was total and the obligation never came, because the trauma process failed. So Margalit’s ethics sits downstream of a sociology it cannot see. The duty he describes rides on a prior labor of construction, political and skilled and far from certain, and his account treats that labor as already done and out of view. He can tell a man what he owes a memory. He cannot tell him why this memory lives and binds while that one, equal in horror, sank without trace. Alexander can, and the answer has nothing to do with the weight of the suffering.

Humiliation takes the same pressure. Margalit treats it as a harm the institution inflicts, a property of the act, present in the welfare office and the prison even when the law is kept. Alexander’s refusal of the naturalistic fallacy reaches this too. Whether an act counts as humiliation is an attribution a culture makes, not a content the act contains. The same treatment reads as degradation in one civil sphere and as discipline or desert or plain order in another. The decent society measures institutions against a standard of humiliation, and the standard floats on a contingent code that some carrier group made to stick. Margalit hands us a ruler and calls it the shape of the human. Alexander shows the ruler was cut by men in a particular place and time, and could have been cut otherwise.

The fit grows tightest at Idolatry. Margalit and Halbertal study how a community marks its outsiders through the charge of false worship, how idolatry names the polluted other and draws the line of belonging. This is Alexander’s civil sphere in its religious ancestor. TheWatergate study lays out the secular form, a binary code that sorts the world into the pure and the impure, democracy and law and honesty and solidarity on one side, corruption and personalism and shadowy enemies and faction on the other, and then fights to fix particular men on the polluted pole. What Margalit and Halbertal find in the worship of idols, Alexander finds in the discourse of the modern republic. Here the frame illuminates more than it strikes. Margalit’s idolater and Alexander’s polluted enemy are the same figure in two costumes, the one a community must expel to know itself as clean. The rotten compromise joins them. Margalit calls a compromise rotten when it builds or keeps an inhuman regime, and the word rotten is a pollution code before it is a verdict. Munich does for him what Watergate did for Alexander’s America, hardening from an event into a durable metaphor that frames every later accommodation as a possible surrender, the way Watergate framed every later scandal down to the suffix men hung on Nixon’s heirs. Richard Nixon (1913-1994) became, in Alexander’s reading, the liquid impure, a man others feared to touch. Margalit’s rotten compromiser occupies the same seat. And the regardless in Margalit, the refusal that holds whatever the cost, is for Alexander the signature of the sacred, the value level above goals and norms where the civil religion keeps its absolutes.

His public life reads as carrier-group labor with no remainder. Peace Now and B’Tselem broadcast a claim, that the suffering of Palestinians is a wound the Israeli public and the watching world should own, and the claim moves through the four representations and meets the audience condition Alexander names. An audience joins a victim’s trauma only when it sees in the victim the valued qualities of its own collective self. That condition explains the pattern of Margalit’s reception with no appeal to the rightness of his cause. The readers of the New York Review take the suffering on board because the carrier work reaches them on shared ground. Other audiences refuse it, not from ignorance of the facts but from a code that does not place the victim inside the circle of the we. Émile Durkheim (1858-1917) stands behind all of it, the sacred and the profane doing the sorting.

The cultural sociologist cares about how and under what conditions trauma claims are made and with what results. He does not care about the accuracy of the claims, and he cares less about their moral justification. Not ontology, not morality, but epistemology. That fence is the is and the ought in sociological dress, and everything Margalit values lives on the far side of it. Alexander can show how a humiliation claim or a duty to remember wins or loses as a construction. He says nothing, by his own rule, about whether the man was wronged or whether the duty is real. So the frame walks up to Margalit’s question and declines to enter. Margalit can grant the whole sociology of construction and lose nothing he meant to keep, because the making of a memory never tells a man whether he ought to hold it. That a wound was built by carrier groups leaves open whether the wound deserved building.

Alexander cannot stay neutral. He calls the trauma process normatively profound, says it lets a society define new forms of moral responsibility, expand the circle of the we, extend solidarity to the suffering of others. The man who brackets morality keeps reaching across his own fence to praise the widening of the we. And the widening of the we is Margalit’s own subject, the passage from thin relations among strangers to the thick bonds that carry obligation. Alexander approves the expansion, and the approval smuggles back the moral reality he ruled out of bounds, on the very ground Margalit mapped. So the two men meet on Margalit’s terrain after all, with Alexander committed to a good he claims not to judge.

What then for Margalit, if Alexander is right? He keeps the ought and loses the given. The shared past turns from a ground into an achievement, won by carrier groups or lost to silence. Humiliation turns from a property of the act into a coding a culture made. Idolatry turns from a sin into a civil binary that every solidarity needs to draw its outer line. The rotten compromise turns from a moral fact into a durable metaphor doing political work. His duty to remember survives, but only for the men whose carrier groups already won the fight to build the memory, and it falls silent over Nanking and the rest, where the horror was equal and the construction failed. What does not move is the question Margalit actually asks. Ought we remember. Is this humiliation. Is dignity real. Alexander reached that question, named it ontology and morality, and stepped back over his own fence. The memory had to be made. Whether it should have been is the one thing his theory was built not to say.

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The Cover Story: Joseph Kahn and Independence as Sacred Value

David Pinsof writes:

10. Status game collapse. When players of a status game gain common knowledge that they’re playing a status game. They suddenly see each other as vain, insecure, or self-absorbed, which sends them scrambling to play a different status game. This is one of the engines of cultural evolution.
11. Sacred value. A cover story for status-seeking designed to prevent a status game from collapsing. We deny we’re seeking dominance or superiority and instead pretend that we’re seeking honor, wisdom, beauty, authenticity, self-actualization, equality, morality, or the betterment of humankind.

David Pinsof’s eleventh concept arrives after the tenth, and the order is the argument. A status game collapses, he holds, when the players gain common knowledge that it is a status game; they suddenly see one another as vain and self-absorbed, the game becomes unplayable, and they scatter. A sacred value is what prevents the collapse. It is a cover story for status-seeking, a sincere-feeling conviction that we are not chasing dominance or superiority but serving honor, beauty, truth, justice, the betterment of humankind. The cover story holds the game together by hiding from the players what the game is. The crucial word is sincere. Pinsof is not describing liars who know they pursue status and dress it as service. He is describing people whose belief in the service is genuine and necessary, genuine because necessary, since a cover story the players saw through would no longer cover anything. The sacred value works by being believed, and it is believed because the alternative, common knowledge of the game, ends the game.

Independence is the sacred value of the New York Times.

Begin by naming the game. The newsroom runs a fierce status competition. The scoop is a status trophy; the byline on page one is a status display; the masthead is a status ladder climbed against rivals; the Pulitzer is the field’s supreme status object, pursued with an intensity the institution publicly disclaims and privately organizes desks around. The green-room invitation, the panel seat, the book deal, the followers, the returned call from a senator, these are the currencies, and they are real, and everyone in the building spends their working life acquiring them. This is what an elite institution staffed by ambitious people looks like from the inside, and Pinsof’s point is not that the striving is shameful but that it cannot be looked at directly without dissolving. A newsroom that admitted, in common knowledge, we are here to win status, and the journalism is the arena, would suffer the collapse the tenth concept describes: the players would see each other as careerists, the work as self-advancement, the whole enterprise as vanity, and the spell that lets them revere their own labor would break.

The sacred value prevents this. We do this for the public’s right to know. We serve democracy. Without fear or favor. These formulas are not decoration; they are the load-bearing cover story that converts status-seeking into service and lets the strivers experience their striving as duty. The reporter chasing the scoop that will make his name experiences himself as holding power accountable, and the experience is sincere, and the sincerity is what makes it work. Pinsof calls it the necessary architecture of any high-status moral institution: the value must be felt as sacred, must be placed beyond cost-benefit calculation, must be the thing one would suffer for, so that it can do the concealing work that keeps the game playable. Independence has every mark of the sacred. It is held as non-negotiable. It is invoked to end arguments rather than to begin them. It is the thing the institution claims it would lose money and friends to defend, and sometimes does, which is the sacred value’s most convincing proof and its most effective concealment.

Now place Kahn. He is the keeper of the sacred value. The executive editor’s deepest function, on this reading, is not running coverage, which deputies could do, but maintaining the cover story at full credibility, tending the conviction that holds the game together. And Kahn’s tenure, examined through this lens, is a continuous act of sacred-value maintenance. The doctrine speeches at Princeton and elsewhere. The credo recitations, without fear or favor invoked like scripture. The independence memos. The Semafor interview where he refused, as a matter of sacred principle, to make the paper an instrument of the resistance. Each act, read through the frame, is the high priest renewing the value before a congregation whose faith had begun to waver, and the wavering is the key, because it dates the priesthood’s urgency.

Here the frame makes its coldest move and its one testable prediction, the thing that lifts it above mere relabeling. Pinsof’s logic says sacred-value maintenance intensifies precisely when the status game underneath becomes visible, because that is when the cover story is failing and most needs reinforcement. A value invoked constantly is a value under threat; the volume of the sacred talk indexes the exposure of the game beneath it. So the frame predicts that independence rhetoric at the Times should spike when the institution’s status game has been most exposed, and the timeline is the test.

The independence doctrine became Kahn’s defining public theme in 2022 and after, in the immediate wake of the period when the game showed most nakedly in the institution’s history. The Twitter years had stripped the cover off. The world watched Times journalists chase status in real time, the public feuds, the follower counts, the visible prize-hunger, the moral preening, the staff revolts in which the striving wore the costume of conscience so thinly that critics on every side could see the careerism underneath. The 2020 convulsions were a status game in open view, common knowledge accumulating by the day, the tenth concept’s collapse beginning to happen live. And it was at that moment, not before, that the sacred value required a keeper who would talk about it without pause. Kahn’s elevation and his doctrine are the institution’s response to a cover story that had slipped, the priesthood re-staffed and the liturgy intensified because the congregation had glimpsed the machinery. Before the exposure, independence could be assumed and rarely spoken, the sacred value secure enough to stay quiet. After it, independence had to be preached, daily, at volume, which is what a sacred value under threat demands and what a secure one never needs. The frame predicted the spike and the history delivered it.

The reading also explains features of the era that other frames leave as loose ends. It explains why the institution reacts to the brand-strategy critique, the charge that independence is a marketing position, with an intensity out of all proportion to the criticism’s weight: naming the cover story as a cover story is the precise act that triggers collapse, so the accusation is not a debating point but an existential threat, and the institution defends against it the way a faith defends against blasphemy rather than the way a firm defends against a bad review. It explains the both-sides-attack-us proof, which is sacred-value confirmation in pure form, evidence offered to the believers that the service is real because it costs friends on every side, a demonstration of disinterest that doubles as the strongest possible reinforcement of the cover story. And it explains the otherwise puzzling fact that independence is invoked most fervently in the cases where it costs the institution its own coalition’s approval, the Biden-age coverage above all, because those are the cases that best prove the value sacred, the sacrifices that purchase the cover story’s credibility, the suffering that shows the service is not for sale.

Now the essay must turn the frame on itself. Three limits.

The first is unfalsifiability, the standing problem with all of Pinsof’s machinery. If Kahn preaches independence, that is sacred-value maintenance; if he fell silent about it, that would be a value so secure it needs no defense; there is no observation the frame cannot absorb. A tool that reads every possible data point as confirmation has predicted nothing, and the timeline fit, impressive as it looks, is the kind of fit an unfalsifiable frame always produces after the fact. The honest user concedes that the prediction was retrodiction, the pattern found once the lens was chosen.

The second is the genetic problem. That independence functions as a cover story for status-seeking says nothing about whether independence is also good.

The third is the sincerity defense. Kahn’s belief in independence is real. The sacred value works because the keeper believes it; a high priest who knew the rite was empty would perform it badly.

Kahn is the keeper of that value in a generation that saw, for a frightening few years, what lay beneath it, and his entire calm, doctrinal, credo-reciting tenure is the work of a man re-draping a cover that had slipped, doing it sincerely, doing it well, and doing it most loudly in the years when the game beneath showed most.

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The Man Without Appetite: Joseph Kahn Through Anti-Status

David Pinsof’s status concepts begin with an ordinary observation and end somewhere cold. We compete, all the time, to be smarter, cooler, braver, kinder, more virtuous than the people near us, and the competition runs as a game with points and ranks. The trouble is that open striving loses points. Visible hunger for status reads as vanity, insecurity, self-absorption, and these are demerits in the game itself, so the players learn to disguise the striving, and the disguise becomes its own move. Anti-status is the status you get from looking like you don’t care about status. Performative apathy is the active form, pretending you don’t care what others think, staged for the others whose opinion you are pretending not to want. The concepts have a built-in trap. The disclaimer is the claim. The man who announces he is above the game has made a move in it, and the more convincing his indifference, the stronger the move. Pinsof’s machinery converts every renunciation into a bid and leaves no exit, which is what makes it cruel and what makes it, applied to the right subject, devastating.

Joseph Kahn is the right subject, because he has built the most disciplined anti-status performance in American journalism, and the discipline is the tell.

Consider the position. The executive editorship of the New York Times is the most coveted chair in the trade, the summit of the most status-saturated institution in American media, an institution that runs on prizes, bylines, masthead rank, and the small daily currencies of whose call gets returned. Reaching it took Kahn forty years of climbing, the Dallas police beat, the Beijing bureau, the Pulitzers, the managing editorship, every rung a contest won against rivals who wanted it as badly. No one arrives at that chair without ferocious appetite; the climb selects for it ruthlessly, weeds out the indifferent in the first decade. And the man who completed the climb presents as a person without appetite. That is the configuration the frame exists to read, and it reads it in one line: the presentation is the appetite, matured into its highest form. You do not reach the summit of a status game by not wanting status. You reach it, at the very top, by wanting the one prize the open strivers cannot take, the prize for having transcended the wanting.

Now the performance, piece by piece, because each feature that I described elsewhere as temperament or stewardship reappears here as a move.

The flat affect. Kahn’s even delivery, the absence of rising intonation, the answers arriving as finished paragraphs with no reach for the laugh or the applause, all of it withholds the thing strivers display, the eagerness to land. A man working the room shows hunger in his face. Kahn shows nothing, and in a profession of performers the blank face reads as the face of a man who needs nothing from you, which is the highest-status face there is.

The unquotability. I have called this, in other frames, the dissolution of the man into the office. Anti-status names its competitive function. The quotable man is bidding, every bon mot a small request for admiration, and the bids can be counted and held against him. Kahn declines to bid. He generates no aphorisms, courts no virality, leaves no harvestable wit, and the refusal to compete for the small status of the clever line is itself a claim to the large status of the man beyond cleverness. He has removed himself from the quotation game the way the richest man in town removes himself from haggling.

The refusal of celebrity. Editors of his predecessors’ eras cultivated profiles, feuds, personae; the trade made stars of them. Kahn declines the star turn, and the decline is legible to everyone as a posture available only to someone who could have the star turn and judges it beneath the office. Performative apathy requires an audience that knows the apathy is chosen, and Kahn’s whole presentation broadcasts the choice: I could perform and I do not, which performs.

The institutional we. The pronoun does anti-status work the frame catches that the political-theology reading missed. By speaking always as the institution, Kahn forfeits personal credit for the paper’s triumphs, and the forfeiture is a flex. The man secure enough to hand every win to the corporate body, to take no bow, displays a surplus of status so large he can give the visible portion away, the way only the very high can afford conspicuous humility. Anti-status is purchased with renounced status, and the we is Kahn renouncing in public, daily, at scale.

Then the showcase, the floor photograph, which the frame turns into the performance’s defining exhibition. The 2022 New York magazine profile arranged him on the carpet in a pose the internet judged unserious and mocked without mercy. A striver would have answered, corrected the image, signaled the wound, fought for the lost dignity, and every such move would have conceded that the mockery reached him. Kahn answered with nothing. And the nothing was not absence; it was performative apathy executed at championship level, the visible demonstration that the judgment of the mocking crowd does not register on him, which is of course a demonstration staged for that crowd. Pinsof’s trap closes on the silence. The indifference is addressed to the people it claims not to notice. The more total the non-response, the louder the message that their opinion is beneath response, and beneath-response is a ranking, a placement of the mockers below the man, delivered by the one means that mockery cannot rebut, because any rebuttal would forfeit the height. Kahn won the exchange by saying nothing, and winning by silence is the purest anti-status victory available.

A profession of strivers is a room full of people visibly wanting, and visible wanting is the low-status condition, however high the wanter climbs. The man who has stopped visibly wanting stands outside the condition the others cannot escape, and every editor in the building reads the difference instantly, because they are all still in the game and he appears not to be. His calm is not the calm of a man without stakes; it is the calm that signals stakes already won, the repose at the top that the climbers below can recognize but not yet perform, because performing it requires the security they do not have. This is why his restraint commands rather than recedes. In the status grammar of the newsroom, the unbothered man is the high man, and Kahn is the most unbothered man in American journalism. The Munk stage, where his manner failed, becomes the exception that proves the reading: in a hall of three thousand who did not grant him the office’s status in advance, the anti-status performance had no foundation to stand on, the calm read as flat, the silence as no answer, because the room had not already placed him at the top, and anti-status only works among people who concede the status you are pretending to disdain.

Pinsof’s machinery is unfalsifiable, and that is its danger as much as its power. If Kahn performs hunger, that is striving; if he performs indifference, that is anti-status striving; there is no conduct the frame cannot read as a status move, which means the frame predicts nothing and forbids nothing, and a tool that explains every possible observation explains none of them in the strict sense.

Kahn’s modesty is not the opposite of the appetite that drove the forty-year climb. It is that appetite arrived at its destination and changed its clothes. The hunger that wins the chair cannot vanish on the day the chair is won; it can only mature into the one form available at the summit, the hunger to be seen as the man beyond hunger. He wears it well, better than anyone in his trade, so well that the performance has become the man.

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Seeing Like the Times: Joseph Kahn’s Newsroom Through James C. Scott

James C. Scott (1936-2024) published Seeing Like a State in 1998 and opened it with a forest. Eighteenth-century German foresters, needing timber yields the crown could count, replaced the chaotic old-growth woods with a scientific forest: Norway spruce in straight rows, same age, same species, underbrush cleared, the whole thing legible at a glance from the administrator’s window. The first rotation was a triumph. The second collapsed, because the grid had destroyed what it could not see, the soil fungi, the insect ecology, the deadwood and diversity that had quietly made the forest work, and German science had to coin a word, Waldsterben, for the death that followed. From the parable Scott built his apparatus. States simplify the world to administer it, rendering territory legible through maps, censuses, standard measures, and grids, and the simplifications serve the center’s vision, not the locality’s life. High modernism is the ideology that worships such simplification, confident, scientific, aesthetic in its love of straight lines, contemptuous of the practical local knowledge Scott called mētis, the uncodifiable skill of the pilot, the farmer, the old hand. His law follows: what the grid cannot see ceases to exist for the institution that rules through it. And his subtlest claim: maps do not merely describe territory, they remake it, because the institution acts on the map until the world resembles it.

The New York Times between 2014 and today is a legibility project of textbook purity, and Joseph Kahn was one of its chief surveyors before he became its sovereign administrator.

Start with the cadastral survey, because the transformation has a founding document. The 2014 Innovation Report did for the newsroom what the cadastral map did for the kingdom: it surveyed an old-growth institution and found it illegible, organized around print rhythms and editorial intuition, opaque to measurement, resistant to central direction, and it proposed the grid. What followed, with Kahn as managing editor from 2016 the operational architect, was the digital-first restructuring: the dashboards, the real-time traffic and engagement metrics, the subscriber-conversion funnels, the A/B-tested headlines, the standardized story formats, the push-notification analytics, the global production line through hubs in London and Seoul that rendered the report a continuous, measurable, twenty-four-hour flow. The old newsroom had been a Jane Jacobs street, messy, redundant, full of eyes and unplanned encounters, governed by the page-one meeting, which was a council of elders trading judgment. The new newsroom is a planned city, and its planners would not object to the description, since the plan worked: the first rotation of the scientific forest came in spectacularly, the subscription millions, the product empire, the only big newsroom in America that grew. Scott never denied that the scientific forest’s first rotation pays. His subject was the second rotation.

Consider first what the grid renders visible, because its resolution is astonishing. The institution now sees its subscribers as no newspaper has ever seen readers: what they open, how long they dwell, where they stop scrolling, what converts them, what churns them. It sees its own journalism as performance data, every story trailing its metrics like instrumentation. And Scott’s law operates on the other side of the ledger automatically: the populations off the grid dim toward nonexistence. The non-subscriber is fog. The lapsed local reader whose paper died is fog. The half of the country that consumes no Times product appears in the institution’s vision only as polling abstraction, never as the high-resolution human beings the dashboard makes of subscribers. The Times’s famous blind spots of the past decade map onto the grid’s edges with uncomfortable precision. The 2016 result blindsided the institution because the voters who produced it lived entirely off-grid, generating no signals in any system the newsroom watched. The new political and cultural formations that repeatedly arrive as surprises, the early populist waves, the podcast counterculture, the youth movements of the right, the religious revivals lived as practice rather than politics, all germinated in illegible territory and were discovered late, whereupon the institution responded as administrators always respond to discovered illegibility, by dispatching cartographic expeditions. The Trump-country diner story, that mocked genre, is legibility work in its exact Scott sense: the expedition sent to render the unmapped interior into the center’s categories, and its awkwardness is the awkwardness of every imperial survey team interviewing the natives through a translator.

Now the subtler operation, the map remaking the territory. The metrics do not merely measure the report; they select it. What performs gets produced, what gets produced trains the audience, the trained audience performs more reliably, and the feedback loop manufactures the very tastes it claims to be neutrally recording. This is Scott’s cadastral effect running at digital speed: the engagement grid replants the forest in rows of what engages, and the headline test, run thousands of times a day, is a small evolutionary pressure applied continuously to the institution’s language, breeding it toward whatever makes the needle move. The election needle deserves a sentence as the project’s perfect miniature, and Scott noted that high modernism adores miniatures, the model city, the showcase farm: an entire continental democracy, one hundred fifty million votes, rendered into a single quivering dial, legibility as an art object, complete with the 2016 night when the dial swung and the institution learned, live, what its grid had not seen.

The gravest Scott question is the underbrush, the invisible ecology the first rotation clears because no metric registers its contribution. In a newsroom the underbrush has names. The courts reporter sitting through dull hearings for years, generating nothing the dashboard can see, until the day the sitting becomes the scoop. The beat built on a decade of source dinners with no output. The metro desk’s institutional memory of who lied last time. The boring civic story, the water board, the zoning fight, that no one clicks and that constitutes the actual practice of accountability. All of this is mētis and ecology together, the practical knowledge and the unmeasured processes that made the visible journalism possible, and the industry-wide clearing of exactly this underbrush, the metro desks gutted, the beats consolidated, the apprenticeship structures dismantled as inefficient, tracks the grid’s blindness perfectly: the things cut were the things that showed no yield, because their yield was systemic and slow. The New York Times, richest of the survivors, cleared less than its peers. Scott’s parable does not ask whether the clearing was total. It asks whether the second rotation will find the soil alive, and the honest answer is that a generation of journalists is now being formed inside the dashboard, developing optimization instincts where their predecessors developed beat instincts, and no one yet knows what their forest will grow.

Kahn’s personal position in this machine is the irony the frame surfaces, and it ranks him below the machine only in the sense that the frame is about vision systems rather than men. His authority rests on the most cited phrase of his anointment, impeccable news judgment, and news judgment is mētis, uncodifiable, acquired the old way, on the Dallas police beat and in the Beijing bureau, exactly the knowledge the grid cannot represent. The chief administrator of the legible newsroom is a creature of the illegible one, formed entirely in the old forest he helped replant. And his doctrine, examined closely, contains a deliberate anti-grid clause: independence, in Kahn’s usage, means among other things that subscriber data does not dictate coverage, that the dashboard advises and the masthead decides, that reader fury registered in churn metrics will not move the report. In Scott’s terms, Kahn has fenced a mētis preserve at the top of the planned city, a small protected zone where decisions are made by uncodified judgment against the visible protest of the instruments. The Biden-age coverage was the preserve in operation, judgment overriding the grid’s screaming feedback. Whether the preserve outlives the men formed before the grid, whether mētis can reproduce in a newsroom whose young have never worked outside the dashboard’s light, is the long question, and Scott’s work suggests the default answer: practical knowledge dies not by decree but by the quiet disappearance of the conditions that taught it.

One boundary keeps the analysis honest, and Scott drew it. His catastrophes required four ingredients: legibility, high-modernist confidence, authoritarian power, and a prostrate civil society unable to resist. The Times holds the first two in abundance and the last two not at all. Its subjects can defect, and did, by the hundreds of thousands when coverage displeased them; its territory talks back, mocks the diner safaris, builds rival maps. So the failure mode is not the Soviet harvest or the dead German forest entire. It is softer and slower: an institution of growing internal precision and shrinking external sight, ever more exquisitely informed about the mapped and ever more structurally surprised by the unmapped, mistaking, as every administrator at every window eventually does, the legible for the real. The grid will keep improving. That has never once, in the history Scott told, been the same thing as seeing.

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The Editor’s Two Bodies: Joseph Kahn Through Ernst Kantorowicz

Ernst Kantorowicz (1895-1963) published The King’s Two Bodies in 1957, a study in what he called medieval political theology. The Tudor jurists he quotes, Edmund Plowden (1518-1585) foremost, held that the king possesses two bodies. The body natural is mortal flesh, subject to infancy, infirmity, folly, and death. The body politic is invisible and immortal, incapable of error, never a minor, never sick, never dead, and the two are conjoined in one person such that the greater wipes away every imperfection of the lesser. From this doctrine flowed the constitutional machinery of continuity: the king never dies, the demise of the man being merely the transfer of the Dignity; le roi est mort, vive le roi in a single breath; dignitas non moritur, the Dignity does not die. Kantorowicz traced the doctrine’s genealogy backward into Christology, the two natures in one person, and the migration of the corpus mysticum, the mystical body, from the Church to the state, until the realm itself became a mystical body of which the king was head but never owner, guardian of a patrimony he could not alienate. And he showed the doctrine’s dramatic life: royal funerals where the mortal body lay in the coffin while the effigy above it displayed the undying Dignity, and the deposition scene in Richard II, the tragedy of the two bodies coming apart, the man calling for a mirror to find the face left over when the kingship has been poured out of it.

Applied to the executive editorship of the New York Times, the frame cuts to the bone because the office runs on a two-bodies doctrine, and Joseph Kahn is its most doctrinally correct occupant in the institution’s modern history.

Begin with the grammar, because the doctrine lives in a pronoun. Kahn’s public speech runs in the institutional we, the first person singular appearing only for biography, and the pattern is not modesty or media training. It is the duplex persona speaking in its proper voice. When Kahn says *we stand by our reporting*, the speaker is the body politic, the Editor, the corporate person who has issued that sentence in substantially identical form for a century through a succession of mortal mouths. The sentence has the standing of a writ because no individual utters it; an I could be wrong, could be biased, could be sued into retraction, but the we that speaks has the body politic’s attributes, continuity beyond the man, authority beyond his person, and the curious legal-theological property Plowden assigned the king, that in his politic capacity he is not subject to the defects of the natural body. Kahn’s celebrated unquotability completes the doctrine. A quotable editor generates text from the body natural, wit, temper, personality, material that belongs to the man and can be held against him. Kahn has arranged his entire communicative life so that text issues only from the office. There is no corpus of Joe to attack, because Joe, as a speaking person, has been administratively dissolved into the Editor.

Now the feature the frame was commissioned to explain: why attacks slide off him. The two-bodies doctrine sorts every attack into one of two categories, and both categories fail. Attacks on the body natural strike home and cost nothing. The mocked photograph from the 2022 profile, the man arranged awkwardly on a carpet, the jeering verdict that this is not a serious person, all of it landed squarely on Joe Kahn, mortal, and bounced off the institution entirely, because the Dignity was never in the picture; you cannot wound the office by photographing the man badly, any more than the king’s gout impeached the Crown. Kahn’s response, which was no response, was doctrinally perfect: the body natural absorbs its humiliations in silence because they are constitutionally irrelevant. Attacks on the body politic, meanwhile, the coverage critiques, the open letters, the cancel-my-subscription campaigns, strike an entity that has no flesh to bruise. The Editor cannot be embarrassed, has no feelings, holds no grudges, and answers, when it answers at all, in the corporate voice that concedes nothing personal because nothing personal exists. Critics of the Times keep discovering the frustration medieval rebels knew: there is no single neck. Strike the man and you have missed the office; strike the office and you have struck a ghost.

The succession machinery runs the doctrine in its constitutional mode. The Editor never dies. Executive editors undergo demise, in the old legal sense, the transfer of the Dignity from one body natural to the next, and the institution has ritualized the transfer into bloodlessness: the announcement, the white-smoke jokes that know exactly what they are joking about, the anointing memo, the customary retirement age that schedules each demise in advance so that no man’s mortality ever surprises the office. Abe Rosenthal (1922-2006) is dead; the Editor is not. And the institution possesses the precise equivalent of the funeral effigy that Kantorowicz made famous, the wax Dignity displayed above the coffin to show the realm that the kingship lives while the king lies dead. The effigy is the next morning’s paper. On the day an executive editor departs, the front page appears, unchanged in form, voice, and authority, the undying body displayed above the mortal transition, and the realm, reassured, goes about its business.

The corpus mysticum migrated once in Kantorowicz’s telling, from Church to state, and The New York Times represents a second migration, from state to press. The institution is a mystical body in working fact: a communion of newsroom and readership bound by daily observance, possessing a creed, feast days, relics on the lobby wall, and a strong doctrine of its own perpetuity. The Editor heads this body without owning it, and the inalienability rules that medieval jurists wrapped around the Crown’s patrimony reappear around his office almost clause for clause. The king could not alienate Crown lands because he held them in his politic capacity, as guardian; the Editor cannot trade coverage, sell standards, or spend the institution’s credibility on personal account, because the patrimony belongs to the Dignity, and the man merely keeps it. Kahn’s habitual framing of hard decisions, *the story holds, the standards require*, follows the doctrine: the office’s duty speaks, never the man’s preference, because the man has no rightful preferences in his politic capacity.

The doctrine also illuminates the newsroom wars, through the maneuver Kantorowicz traced in the English Civil War. Parliament fought Charles I (1600-1649) in the name of the king, the body politic invoked against the body natural, the rebels claiming to defend the Crown from the man who wore it. The staff insurgencies of 2020 ran the identical maneuver: the revolts were conducted in the name of the Times, its true values, its real mission, against the mortal men then holding its offices, and the maneuver worked then for the same reason it worked in 1642, because the institution’s leadership conceded the premise that the body politic might be located somewhere other than in its officers. Kahn’s restoration, read through this frame, was a re-fusion of the two bodies: the 2023 memo and the discipline around it asserted, as constitutional doctrine, that the institution speaks through its current officers and not through whichever faction claims its spirit, that you cannot invoke the Times against the Times’s editors. Every settled monarchy rests on that assertion. So does every settled masthead.

And the frame supplies the institution’s tragedies, which are all Richard II. The executive editors who fell, fell when the two bodies came apart, and the falls run both directions. Howell Raines (b. 1943) let the body natural swell into the office, the personal enthusiasms, the favorites, the star system, the man’s appetites wearing the Editor’s authority, and when the Blair scandal cracked the fusion, the institution survived by the classic operation: it deposed the man to save the Dignity, demonstrating to a watching realm that the office and its occupant were separable after all. Jill Abramson‘s fall was a deposition scene conducted by the crown above her, and James Bennet‘s the same conducted under siege. Each ended at Richard’s mirror: the man holding the glass, studying the face that remains when the office has been poured out of it, discovering what the doctrine had quietly held all along, that the power was never personal, that the flattering attention, the returned calls, the deference of senators and staff belonged to the body politic and departed with it. Bennet’s long public reckoning afterward, the interviews, the lawsuit, the wounded essays, is the post-deposition search Kantorowicz’s Richard performs in verse, the body natural asking where the rest of it went. Kahn, by contrast, conducts himself as a man who has read the play. He keeps the body natural so small, so unquotable, so absent from the office’s operations, that there is almost nothing of Joe positioned to swell, and therefore almost nothing for a deposition to find.

Kantorowicz wrote his book as more than admiration; he had fled a regime that ran on mystical bodies, and the study carries a standing warning about political theologies, which the essay owes to its subject. The two-bodies doctrine that protects the Times’s independence also insulates its errors, and by the same operation. The office that cannot be embarrassed is the office that never apologizes in the first person; the corrections issue from the body politic, passive constructions in small type, *errors that occurred, standards that were not met*, and no mortal I was ever wrong. Accountability requires a body that can feel shame, and the doctrine’s whole achievement is to put the institution’s voice beyond the reach of shame. Critics sense this and rage at it without naming it: arguing with the Times feels like arguing with a ghost because, constitutionally, it is. The perfected two-bodies editor, and Kahn is the nearest the office has come, secures the Dignity against every assault, the mockery, the letters, the subpoenas, the photographs, and the price of the security is paid in a currency the doctrine renders invisible, the missing mortal who might have said, in the first person singular, that he was sorry.

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