Pramāṇavāda and the Crisis of Skepticism in the Modern Public Sphere

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Amy Donahue

Abstract




There is widespread and warranted skepticism about the usefulness of inclusive and epistemically rigorous public debate in societies that are modeled on the Habermasian public sphere, and this skepticism challenges the democratic form of government worldwide. To address structural weaknesses of Habermasian public spheres, such as susceptibility to mass manipulation through “ready-to-think” messages and tendencies to privilege and subordinate perspectives arbitrarily, interdisciplinary scholars should attend to traditions of knowledge and public debate that are not rooted in western colonial/modern genealogies, such as the Sanskritic traditions of pramāṇavāda and vāda. Attention to vāda, pramāṇavāda, and other traditions like them can inspire new forms of social discussion, media, and digital humanities, which, in turn, can help to place trust in democracy on foundations that are more stable than mere (anxious) optimism.




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Donahue, A. (2023). Pramāṇavāda and the Crisis of Skepticism in the Modern Public Sphere. Journal of World Philosophies, 7(2). Retrieved from https://scholarworks.iu.edu/iupjournals/index.php/jwp/article/view/5879
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