Cultural Diversity and the Shared Premises Requirement

The shared premises requirement for political debates becomes challenging when citizens of diverse cultural backgrounds, religious faiths and political convictions come to live together. Since citizens would naturally rely on all their dearly held views, beliefs and values, the shared premises requirement might be seen as a considerable burden under the condition of pluralism. The danger is that not only cultural minorities, but also persons of faith might feel alienated by such a requirement for political debates in a liberal polity.

conditions that political justification must satisfy in order to be impartial and fair.To reach impartial political justification, reasons should only be offered and rejected on the basis of "common critical rationality" and "considerations of evidence that can be shared" (Nagel 1987, 232).In other words, "it must be possible to present to others the basis of your own beliefs, so that once you have done so, they have what you have, and can arrive at a judgment on the same basis" (ibid., emphasis in the original).This excludes our personal faith or revelations as reasons in political justification, since they do not give to others what we have.Instead, what is needed for others to arrive at what we have are evidence or arguments.(Ibid.)Against both Ackerman's and Nagel's version of the shared premises requirement, Perry holds that they have overly demanding consequences for religious persons.This is so because a religious person cannot refer to her most dearly held religious beliefs in a political debate with a non-religious person.Since this might severely affect the religious person's moral and political integrity, this objections can be dubbed integrity objection.Note, furthermore, that by the notion of religious beliefs we do not mean to imply any epistemological view on what beliefs -and more specifically religious beliefs -are, or whether there are such things as beliefs in the first place.Neither is it necessary to ascribe any such epistemological view to Perry himself regarding his critique of Ackerman and Perry, or so it seems.By a person's reference to religious beliefs in political debate we, and arguably Perry as well, simply mean her use of religious language in such debates.Regarding Christians and other theists this would, for instance, concern God-talk and references to the holy scriptures.
Perry's critique is most strikingly formulated in an imagined political debate between himself, a religious person, and Ackerman, a non-religious person.In a political debate between Perry and Ackerman, the proportion of Ackerman's relevant beliefs that Perry would share would be larger than the proportion of Perry's relevant beliefs that Ackerman would share.In other words, Ackerman would be able to rely on a larger part of his web of beliefs in a political debate, whereas Perry would be able to rely merely on some strands of his web.This is the case because Perry's relevant beliefs include all his religious beliefsbeliefs that his non-religious counterpart does not have.These religious beliefs are, according to Perry, relevant to most of his views on fundamental political-moral issues.This situation would, therefore, leave him at a serious disadvantage in a discussion with Ackerman, because Ackerman could rely on most of his relevant beliefs, whereas he could rely merely on some of his relevant beliefs.(Perry 1989, 484;Perry 1990, 10) Furthermore, Perry is disadvantaged because Ackerman might get to rely on his most important relevant beliefs, whereas Perry would not be able to rely on his most important relevant beliefs: his religious ones.This is necessarily so because religious beliefs cannot be shared between a religious and a non-religious person.In the political debate with Ackerman, Perry is thus forced -following the shared premises requirement -to leave his most dearly held beliefs aside and to rely only on those strands of his web of beliefs "approved ('shared') by Ackerman" (Perry 1989, 484;Perry 1990, 10).Perry's integrity in political debate is thus violated in a second way, because he is forced to bracket his most important beliefs.
Perry criticizes Nagel's implicit version of the shared premises requirement on the same ground.By confining political justification to "common critical rationality" (Nagel 1987, 232), i.e. to whatever beliefs are commonly accepted, Nagel's view also privileges some beliefs over others, namely those shared and accepted as authoritative.(Perry 1989, 487;Perry 1990, 14) In a debate with Perry, Nagel's non-religious beliefs would therefore be privileged over Perry's religious beliefs because, again, religious beliefs cannot possibly be shared between Perry and Nagel.When debating with Nagel, Perry would get to rely merely on some of his relevant beliefs -not including the most important ones -whereas Nagel might rely on most of his relevant beliefs -including the most important ones.(Perry 1989, 487;Perry 1990, 14-15) To make things even grimmer, and to cast a different light on Perry's critique, let us briefly consider Steven D. Smith's rejection of the shared premises requirement.In his words, the "common denominator ploy" is fraudulent.He asks us to suppose that a father and his daughter are discussing what to have for dinner.The daughter prefers having just dessert, while her father suggests that it would be better to have a full meal, and then dessert.The daughter reasons as follows: "We disagree about a lot of things.But there is one thing we agree on.We both want dessert.So let's have just dessert."According to Smith, the shared premises requirement works in a similar fashion, and is thus as unpersuasive as the daughter's reasoning.(Smith 1989) Objections against Perry's view 1.However, Perry's argument is problematic, or so we will argue.Let us first consider Perry's critique that a religious person will be able to rely on merely some of her relevant beliefs, while a non-religious person can rely on most of her relevant beliefs.This seems to be a consequence of the requirement because the religious person's web of beliefs contains strands that the non-religious person does not have.In presenting the case as he does, however, Perry seems to suggest that it is mainly or even only religious beliefs that are disadvantaged.
But what is about Ackerman's and Nagel's views that are not shared?After all, we might think of relevant beliefs of a non-religious person that can never be shared with a religious person too.Consider, for instance, the Marxist and secular view that religion is the opiate of the masses.This belief could not possibly be shared by a religious person, just as the belief "God exists" could not possibly be shared by a true Marxist.Marxists, just as religious persons, could more often than not -when discussing with religious persons, capitalists, libertarians etc. -rely only on some of their relevant beliefs.
Perry seems to base his argument on inadequate assumptions about secular webs of beliefs.These inadequate assumptions lead to an inadequate view on the shared premises requirement.Thus, it is not biased against religious beliefs in particular, but against controversial views in general, as the debate between the Marxist and the religious person indicates.The requirement does not favor secular views over religious ones, but uncontroversial over controversial ones.
Thus, if we interpret Perry's claim as holding that secular views are privileged over religious ones, then Perry's view is inadequate.However, Perry might still hold on to the weaker claim that, even if the shared premises requirement is not discriminating against religious views in particular, the fact that noncontroversial views are favored over controversial ones has still disadvantageous consequences for religious views.The disadvantageous consequences are due to the fact that religious views necessarily are controversial in a plural society, whereas a secular citizens' political views may more easily and fully be founded on shared, uncontroversial beliefs.
According to this weaker claim, shared values such as peace, liberty, security or human well-being may be sufficient to ground many of a non-religious person's political-normative views.A religious person's political-normative views, on the other hand, will also be grounded on her religious beliefs.The shared premises requirement seems to bear the consequence that the religious person's political-normative views, along with the religious beliefs on which they are based, are excluded from political debate.We therefore still face the objection that the shared premises requirement has overly burdensome consequences for religious persons, but not for secular ones.The same might hold for members of a cultural minority that base their political-normative views on their cultural traditions.
The weaker claim assumes, however, that normative views based on religious beliefs, or cultural traditions, are not overdetermined.That is, it assumes that normative views of a religious person are uniquely based on religious beliefs, and that there is no possibility to reach similar normative views on different paths or grounds.As the parable of the good Samaritan indicates, this is an inadequate assumption about the nature of normative views.The biblical story of the Samaritan might ground the normative belief of a religious person that we should help those in need, even if they are strangers and we do not like them.This normative belief, however, is not only acceptable to the religious person.The moral point of the biblical story can be translated in non-religious terms, and will also appeal to nonreligious persons.This is so precisely because the moral point of the biblical story about the Samaritan, as arguably many other religious normative beliefs, is overdetermined and also reachable on other than religious grounds.This view suggests that a religious and non-religious person might often have more in common than it seems at first glance.It also suggests that the shared premises requirement does not hinder religious persons to draw on their religious normative views -as long as these religious normative views also have grounds that are accessible and acceptable to non-religious persons.Thus, if we assume that much religious normative views are overdetermined, then the shared premises requirement does not preclude religious persons from drawing on much of their normative beliefs, and it would not have the overly burdensome consequences that Perry suggests.
In a response to Smith's critique of the shared premises requirement, we might rely on a similar line of argument.Thus, the shared premises requirement cannot be rejected on the same grounds as the daughter's reasoning in Smith's dinner story.The daughter assumes that if her father wants to have both a full meal and a dessert, then he wants, firstly, a full meal and, secondly, a dessert.But this is a mistake.The dessert is valuable for the father only if he gets the full meal.3In other words, the daughter makes the mistake to assume that if the dessert is part of the meal, then when the father values the meal, he also must value the dessert independent of the meal.However, the father only values the dessert insofar as it is part of the meal.4The case of the shared premises requirement is different.Reconsider briefly the Samaritan example.It is a mistake to assume that if a non-religious person values the belief that we should help those in need, then she also should value the Samaritan story.The acceptance of the belief that we should help those in need simply does not depend on the acceptance of the Samaritan story.This is so because the belief that we should help those in need is overdetermined, and accessible and acceptable on religious as well as non-religious grounds.It is quite plausible that people's shared beliefs are valuable for them even when the beliefs are not presented together with their personal, for instance religious, normative views.
The shared premises requirement in a political debate only becomes relevant when religious normative views cannot be understood and accepted by the non-religious person, or when there are beliefs that are not overdetermined.In the first case, further deliberation might help to sort out the common normative grounds.In the second case, both sides would indeed have to accept that the beliefs in question -whether religious or not -are controversial and should therefore be excluded from political debate.
2. Let us now consider the second line of Perry's critique, namely that the shared premises requirement might impose to a religious person to bracket her religious beliefs that are most important to her, and maybe even constitutive of her identity.Such an imposition would still have overly demanding consequences for religious persons.To meet this objection, consider an inclusive5 or wide6 reading of the shared premises requirement, according to which a religious person is free to refer to her most important religious beliefs as long as she supports her arguments also with largely shared premises.
Consider the shared view among a religious and non-religious person that the state should support the poor.For the religious person this belief is linked to, or based on, another belief that is most important to her, namely that charity through state institutions is good because a divine spirit, through a holy scripture, says so.The non-religious person believes that the state should help the poor because of her most important belief that all persons have a basic right to welfare, a right that imposes certain duties on states.In a discussion between the religious and non-religious person, they would agree on the shared premise that the state should support the poor, but would have most different reasons why they accept this shared belief.According to the inclusive reading of the shared premises requirement, both persons could fully rely on their most important beliefs, since they also present the shared premise that the state should help the poor.
What if the interpretation of the shared belief by the religious person is colored by a controversial religious belief, for instance when for the religious person "poor" means "deserving poor" on scriptural grounds?Given the shared belief "the state should help the poor", the shared premises requirement would still allow both persons to present their controversial stories behind the shared belief -no matter how controversial they are.Even though such a scenario might seem strange, they are very well imaginable and practicable, as political alliances between parties of the far right and the far left on certain topics, such as anti-globalization, indicate.
3. Finally, let us consider why not even an exclusive interpretation of the shared premises requirement -i.e. the view that persons engaging in political debates should refer only to normative premises that are widely shared -is overly burdening regarding religious persons.First of all, and as indicated earlier, all kinds of arguments that are based on contestable normative premises, not just religious ones, would be banned.7Indeed, the only group that would not have to exclude certain views from political debate would consist of persons whose most important beliefs are shared by all others.It is therefore hard to see why religious persons would be especially burdened even in the exclusive reading of the shared premises requirement.
Another reason why the shared premises requirement is not especially burdening regarding religious persons even in an exclusive reading is that religious beliefs might not be that relevant in many political debates as critics of the shared premises requirement seem to suggest.If religious beliefs are irrelevant, a civic duty not to use religious premises has no practical relevance, and therefore does not disadvantage religious persons.This is the case in a least some political debates, for instance regarding details of state budget or regarding legal technicalities in many other political issues.

Conclusion
The view that the shared premises requirement disadvantages especially religious personsand in a similar fashion possibly also cultural or political minorities -is unconvincing because of the following reasons.First of all, the requirement does not disadvantage religious beliefs in particular, but controversial views in general.Furthermore, the requirement does not have disadvantageous consequences for religious persons because religious persons are allowed to draw on their religious normative views in political debategiven that these views are overdetermined and translatable in non-religious language.
Second, according to the inclusive reading of the requirement, religious persons are allowed to refer to all of their most important controversial beliefs, provided that they support their arguments also with largely shared premises.Finally, even an exclusive reading of the requirement does not necessarily disadvantage religious persons, since it only applies where religious beliefs become relevant in political debate.

Bibliography
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