Political Feasibility: An Interpretive Approach

Political theorists study the meaning of political feasibility in part to better understand the role of empirical political science in normative political theory. In the conventional understanding, political feasibility refers to the ability of an individual or collective agent to bring about a cer...

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Main Author: Dr. Amit Ron
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Calgary 2025-03-01
Series:Journal of Applied Hermeneutics
Online Access:https://journalhosting.ucalgary.ca/index.php/jah/article/view/80926
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author Dr. Amit Ron
author_facet Dr. Amit Ron
author_sort Dr. Amit Ron
collection DOAJ
description Political theorists study the meaning of political feasibility in part to better understand the role of empirical political science in normative political theory. In the conventional understanding, political feasibility refers to the ability of an individual or collective agent to bring about a certain political state of affairs. This way of thinking about political feasibility corresponds with the ordinary language use of the term, but it asks empirical political science to carry the very heavy burden of assessing the likelihood that a plan of action will bring about a particular future state of affairs. In this article I develop a different way to think about political feasibility as part of a conversation about the meaning of the future.  Building on Gadamer’s view of historical interpretation, I argue that empirical political science can be understood as creating “history of effects” towards possible futures as a way to enable understanding of future meanings. I use this framework to examine the place of arguments about feasibility in the processes of reason giving that take place in the public sphere. I do so by interpreting the “can” in the principle of “reasons that all can accept” as referring to an interpretive horizon of what can become feasible.
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spelling doaj-art-e819bc711877440db9efd517f210837e2025-08-20T02:47:07ZengUniversity of CalgaryJournal of Applied Hermeneutics1927-44162025-03-012025202510.55016/ojs/jah.v2025Y2025.80926Political Feasibility: An Interpretive ApproachDr. Amit Ron0Arizona State Univeresity Political theorists study the meaning of political feasibility in part to better understand the role of empirical political science in normative political theory. In the conventional understanding, political feasibility refers to the ability of an individual or collective agent to bring about a certain political state of affairs. This way of thinking about political feasibility corresponds with the ordinary language use of the term, but it asks empirical political science to carry the very heavy burden of assessing the likelihood that a plan of action will bring about a particular future state of affairs. In this article I develop a different way to think about political feasibility as part of a conversation about the meaning of the future.  Building on Gadamer’s view of historical interpretation, I argue that empirical political science can be understood as creating “history of effects” towards possible futures as a way to enable understanding of future meanings. I use this framework to examine the place of arguments about feasibility in the processes of reason giving that take place in the public sphere. I do so by interpreting the “can” in the principle of “reasons that all can accept” as referring to an interpretive horizon of what can become feasible. https://journalhosting.ucalgary.ca/index.php/jah/article/view/80926
spellingShingle Dr. Amit Ron
Political Feasibility: An Interpretive Approach
Journal of Applied Hermeneutics
title Political Feasibility: An Interpretive Approach
title_full Political Feasibility: An Interpretive Approach
title_fullStr Political Feasibility: An Interpretive Approach
title_full_unstemmed Political Feasibility: An Interpretive Approach
title_short Political Feasibility: An Interpretive Approach
title_sort political feasibility an interpretive approach
url https://journalhosting.ucalgary.ca/index.php/jah/article/view/80926
work_keys_str_mv AT dramitron politicalfeasibilityaninterpretiveapproach