Is Bargaining a Form of Deliberating?
Date
2020-05-12
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Philosophical Papers
Abstract
Prevailing literature argues that arguing is the only appropriate mode of deliberation.
The literature acknowledges bargaining, storytelling, and other forms of communication, but is
unwilling to describe these as deliberation, properly speaking. The claim is that describing them
as such would amount to concept stretching. My first thesis is that arguing exhausts neither the
legitimate modes of deliberation nor the modes for effective deliberation. To do this I further
develop a two-type categorization of issues I have employed elsewhere to show that argument
alone is sufficient for bringing closure to issues in the first category, but bargaining is needed
to reach agreements on issues in the second category. I observe that the more agreeable
variant of the second category of issues constitutes a great deal of issues deliberated outside
the purely theoretical classroom. Progressing from these observations, my second thesis is
that bargaining is in fact the preeminent way of reaching agreements in political
deliberation. To illustrate this, I demonstrate that normative differences and distributive
consequences are inherent features of political issues.
Description
Research Article
Keywords
communication, bargaining, deliberation, exchange of arguments
Citation
Emmanuel Ifeanyi Ani (2020) Is Bargaining a Form of Deliberating?, Philosophical Papers, 49:1, 1-29, DOI: 10.1080/05568641.2019.1664317