Facing post-truth from a neo-aristotelian foundation of education
Main Article Content
Abstract
The current challenge of post-truth that threatens the functioning of democracy, arises from
the limits of knowledge and the interference of emotions and values. Two common schools of
thought, discourse ethics and agonist politics, fall short of resolving this challenge. In Aristotle’s
understanding of Politics, these both elements are already present. He presents politics as a field
of knowledge determined not only by knowledge as such, but also by the limits inherent in that
knowledge and the emotive weight.
The aim of the present article is to propose a contemporary conception of a phronetic political
discourse, incorporating the key characteristics of an Aristotelian understanding of phronesis.
The proposed hypothesis is that such a phronetic political discourse in a contemporary context
cannot be founded on the good, as the plurality of conceptions of the good is what separates
modern politics from Aristotelian times. Instead, and following debates in neo-Aristotelian
ethics, the foundation should be sought in the character development of (future) participants in
said discourse. Education is, then, the key starting point to enforce the capabilities and habits of
discourse participants required to best manage, as far as this is possible, the limitations of our
knowledge and our personal commitment to the political realm.
Article Details

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.
Authorship: The list of authors signing must include only those people who have contributed intellectually to the development of the work. Collaboration in the collection of data is not, by itself, a sufficient criterion of authorship. "Sophia" declines any responsibility for possible conflicts arising from the authorship of the works that are published.
Copyright: The Salesian Polytechnic University preserves the copyrights of the published articles, and favors and allows their reuse under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Ecuador license. They may be copied, used, disseminated, transmitted and publicly displayed, provided that: i) the authorship and the original source of their publication (journal, editorial and work URL) are cited; (Ii) are not used for commercial purposes; Iii) mention the existence and specifications of this license.
References
ARISTÓTELES
Metafísica. Madrid: Gredos.
Retórica. Madrid: Gredos.
Política. Madrid: Gredos.
Ética Nicomáquea; Ética Eudemia. Madrid: Gredos.
AUBENQUE, Pierre
La prudence chez Aristote. Paris: PUF Quadrige.
BLACKBURN, Simon
On Truth. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
CAVELL, Stanley
Cities of Words. Cambridge: Harvard UP.
ESCOBAR, Andrés & RAMÍREZ, César
El diálogo filosófico como Aventura y experiencia que cura. Sophia, colección
de Filosofía de la Educación, 29, 261-285. https://doi.org/10.17163/soph.
n29.2020.09.
HABERMAS, Jürgen
Conciencia moral y acción comunicativa. Barcelona: Provenca.
HEIT, Helmut
‘There are no facts…’ Nietzsche as Predecessor of Post-Truth?” Studia Philosophica
Estonica, 11(1), 44-63. https://bit.ly/30suBiY
HOBBES, Thomas
Leviathan. New York: Penguin Classics.
KIRK, Geoffrey S. & RAVEN, John Earle
The Presocratic Philosophers. A Critical History with a Selection of Texts.
Cambridge: Cambridge UP.
LACLAU, Ernesto & MOUFFE, Chantale
Hegemonía y estrategia socialista. México: Fondo de Cultura Económica.
MACINTYRE, Alisdair
After Virtue. Indiana: University of Notre Dame Press.
MORIN, Edgar
La Méthode 6. Éthique. Paris: Seuil.
Introduction à la pensée complexe. Paris: Seuil.
MURDOCH, Iris
The Sovereignty of Good. London: Routledge.
NUSSBAUM, Martha
Upheavals of Thought. Cambridge: Cambridge UP.
NIETZSCHE, Friedrich
Segunda consideración intempestiva. Sobre la utilidad y los inconvenientes de
la Historia para la vida. Buenos Aires: Zorzal.
PLATÓN
Diálogos VI. Timeo. Madrid: Gredos.
SLOTE, Michael
Moral Sentimentalism. Oxford: Oxford UP.
SWANTON, Christine
Virtue Ethics: A Pluralistic View. Oxford: Oxford UP.
VAN ZYL, Liezl
Virtue Ethics. New York: Routledge.