Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 February 2024
Does the existing order have any better justification than the argument that it is ‘natural’? In most of its guises the ‘nature’ argument in fact arises more often than not from an argument whose authority is questionable, since it has been used to back up many forms of tyranny, oppression and exclusion. In this sense we are quite rightly wary of this notion of human nature as used to explore the democratic ideal. If the democratic ideal is associated with the modern experience of the indeterminate and the ‘dissolution of fixed markers of certainty’ (Lefort), it seems to imply the idea of the plasticity of human nature rather more than the hypothesis of an objective human essence. As the feminist and ecology movements have taught us, the question of nature has to remain open in democracy, and open above all for democratic debate. An insistence that there are characteristics intrinsic to human nature that make humans inclined to a democratic way of life reminds us too much of Plato's ideal city or Hobbes's Leviathan. And if we criticize this type of reasoning in those who seem to us to be democracy's enemies, we can scarcely have the face to use it to justify that kind of regime.
1. This article is based in particular on the following works by Dewey: Human Nature and Conduct (1922); The Quest for Certainty (1929); A Common Faith (1934); Liberty and Culture (1939); Creative Democracy - The Task Before Us (1939), as well as the excellent synthesis by J. Zacks, L'opinion publique et son double II. John Dewey, philosophe du public (L'Harmattan, 1999).
2. See Diogenes No. 176, edited by Paul Ricoeur, La tolérance entre l'intolérance et l'intolérable (Paris, Gallimard, October-December 1996).