Between pluralism and plurality (or diversity): Contemporary definitions for politics and their relation to action and citizenship
Political pluralism. Plurality. Action. Thinking. Citizenship. Social justice.
This Project seeks to think of the logic and philosophical possibility and the limits of what Isaiah Berlin called political pluralism, being, among others, the central inquire: what is necessary for us to talk about political pluralism and in what does it consist?. The answer to that question is on dialogue with an Arendtian perspective for what is particular to politics. The above has as leading purpose to reveal through a specific case; review the possible consequences for political action in the light of a political theory that assumes plurality as a principle. In what relates to the method, this work tries to clarify conceptual relations between plurality and pluralism, intending to find a less apologetic face for plurality and pluralism.