Is patriotism a sufficient justification for liberal democracies to coerce conscription?

Liberal democracies are legitimate when the country is able to justify their coercive actions to reasonable free and equal citizens. Liberal democracies are stable when free and equal citizens find overlapping consensus via public reason to form a unified political conception – that of the liberal d...

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Main Author: Tan, Jared Yue Rong
Other Authors: Andrew T. Forcehimes
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: Nanyang Technological University 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/137440
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1374402020-03-26T02:28:25Z Is patriotism a sufficient justification for liberal democracies to coerce conscription? Tan, Jared Yue Rong Andrew T. Forcehimes School of Humanities forcehimes@ntu.edu.sg Humanities::Philosophy Liberal democracies are legitimate when the country is able to justify their coercive actions to reasonable free and equal citizens. Liberal democracies are stable when free and equal citizens find overlapping consensus via public reason to form a unified political conception – that of the liberal democracy. This paper argues that patriotism is necessary for a stable liberal democracy by providing that overlapping consensus. However, patriotism cannot be achieved by free and equal citizens, and coercion is necessary to inspire patriotism. This paper argues that inspiration of patriotism through the coercive act of universal conscription cannot be justified legitimately by countries. This leads free and equal citizens at a fork with two unsavoury consequences, either accept an a stable but illegitimate political conception (which is no longer a liberal democracy) or demand for legitimacy, but end up without a unified scheme of cooperation.  Bachelor of Arts in Philosophy 2020-03-26T02:28:25Z 2020-03-26T02:28:25Z 2020 Final Year Project (FYP) https://hdl.handle.net/10356/137440 en application/pdf Nanyang Technological University
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Humanities::Philosophy
spellingShingle Humanities::Philosophy
Tan, Jared Yue Rong
Is patriotism a sufficient justification for liberal democracies to coerce conscription?
description Liberal democracies are legitimate when the country is able to justify their coercive actions to reasonable free and equal citizens. Liberal democracies are stable when free and equal citizens find overlapping consensus via public reason to form a unified political conception – that of the liberal democracy. This paper argues that patriotism is necessary for a stable liberal democracy by providing that overlapping consensus. However, patriotism cannot be achieved by free and equal citizens, and coercion is necessary to inspire patriotism. This paper argues that inspiration of patriotism through the coercive act of universal conscription cannot be justified legitimately by countries. This leads free and equal citizens at a fork with two unsavoury consequences, either accept an a stable but illegitimate political conception (which is no longer a liberal democracy) or demand for legitimacy, but end up without a unified scheme of cooperation. 
author2 Andrew T. Forcehimes
author_facet Andrew T. Forcehimes
Tan, Jared Yue Rong
format Final Year Project
author Tan, Jared Yue Rong
author_sort Tan, Jared Yue Rong
title Is patriotism a sufficient justification for liberal democracies to coerce conscription?
title_short Is patriotism a sufficient justification for liberal democracies to coerce conscription?
title_full Is patriotism a sufficient justification for liberal democracies to coerce conscription?
title_fullStr Is patriotism a sufficient justification for liberal democracies to coerce conscription?
title_full_unstemmed Is patriotism a sufficient justification for liberal democracies to coerce conscription?
title_sort is patriotism a sufficient justification for liberal democracies to coerce conscription?
publisher Nanyang Technological University
publishDate 2020
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/137440
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