Enzo Rossi’s research while affiliated with University of Amsterdam and other places

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Publications (2)


Critical Responsiveness: How Epistemic Ideology Critique Can Make Normative Legitimacy Empirical Again
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January 2025

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4 Citations

Social Philosophy and Policy

Enzo Rossi

This essay outlines an empirically grounded account of normative political legitimacy. The main idea is to give a normative edge to empirical measures of sociological legitimacy through a nonmoralized form of ideology critique. A power structure’s responsiveness to the values of those subjected to its authority can be measured empirically and may be explanatory or predictive insofar as it tracks belief in legitimacy, but by itself it lacks normative purchase. It merely describes a preference alignment, and so tells us nothing about whether the ruled have reason to support the rulers. I argue that we can close this gap by filtering the preferences of the ruled through a form of nonmoralized epistemic ideology critique, itself grounded in an empirical account of how belief in legitimacy is formed.

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What Can Epistemic Normativity Tell us About Politics? Ideology, Power, and the Epistemology of Radical Realism

December 2024

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1 Citation

Topoi

This paper examines how radical realism, a form of ideology critique grounded in epistemic rather than moral normativity, can illuminate the relationship between ideology and political power. The paper argues that radical realism can have both an evaluative and a diagnostic function. Drawing on reliabilist epistemology, the evaluative function shows how beliefs shaped by power differentials are often epistemically unwarranted, e.g. due to the influence of motivated reasoning and the suppression of critical scrutiny. The paper clarifies those mechanisms in order to address some recent critiques of radical realism. The paper then builds on those clarifications to explore the how tracing the genealogy of legitimation stories can diagnose the distribution of power in society, even if ideology does not play a direct stabilising role. This diagnostic function creates a third position in the debate on ideology between culturalists and classical Marxists, and it can help reconciling aspects of structural and relational theories of power.

Citations (1)


... The way in which a normative political philosophy with a realist slant could support radical projects would consist in showing the epistemic flimsiness of legitimation stories that support existing structures and highlighting the epistemic guarantees of those proposals that defend alternative structures (Rossi 2019, p. 646). In this regard, Enzo Rossi's contribution to this special issue (Rossi 2024) illustrates the differences between liberal realism and radical realism. ...

Reference:

Political Normativity and Ethics: A Roadmap
What Can Epistemic Normativity Tell us About Politics? Ideology, Power, and the Epistemology of Radical Realism

Topoi