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Paulo Vitorino Fontes
Recognition and normative reconstruction as a theory of justice in Axel Honneth
libertad, esbozo de una ética democrática ([2011] 2014) as the rst book 
in which Honneth reworks his theory in a systematic way. In this sense, 
the concept of recognition starts to full another role: if, in his habilitation 
thesis, Honneth develops a typology of the forms of recognition, articulating 
more properly a relation between theory of subjectivity and social theory, 
his attention turns, now, to an analysis of a theory of justice supported by 
a critical theory of society, whose central concept becomes that of freedom 
- understood, more specically, from the idea of social freedom, where the 
spheres of a theory of democratic ethics (demokratische Sittlichkeit) are 
discussed.
In  this  sense,  the  suggestive  title  of  the  book  points  to  a  signicant 
change in the face of recurrent models in the debate on theories of justice. 
It  is  a  matter,  therefore,  of  shifting  the  emphasis  on  the  juridication 
and procedure of justice to the reconstruction of the ways of realising the 
concept of individual freedom mediated socially and institutionally.
It is noteworthy, here, the importance that the author gives to the 
sense of individual freedom as a presupposition for the task of a normative 
reconstruction. In this sense, Honneth ([2011] 2014: 31-32) states that:
In social modernity, the demand for justice can only be legitimised when, 
in one way or another, the autonomy of the individual is neither the will of the 
community nor the natural order, but  individual freedom which  congures the 
normative cornerstone of all representations of justice.
But it is only in the third part of the book that we nd the propositional 
core of Honneth’s project ([2011] 2014). And it is in this part that the 
author, in distinction from the sense of possibility of freedom referring to 
moral and juridical freedoms, nds the meaning of “realization of freedom” 
in the standards not of an individual taken in isolation, but of social 
freedom expressed in a plural and expanded sense of “we” (das “Wir”). In 
this way, the spheres of realisation of social freedom, following closely in 
the footsteps of the Hegelian theory of ethics, are developed as the “we” of 
personal relations (pp. 174 .), of the market (pp. 232 .) and, in relation to 
the sphere of the state, in the democratic formation of the will (pp. 339 .).
With  regard  to  the  family,  in  turn,  Honneth  observes  the  structural 
changes that have occurred throughout modernity, showing the plural 
forms of conception around the family model. Here, the discussion between 
the spheres of family and work stands out, in which aective relations are 
combined with new roles played as a result of struggles for the emancipation 
of women.
 At the same time, the author discusses the importance of seeing the 
aective care and upbringing of children by parents as a social contribution 
and at a later point, with increased life expectancy, the care of parents by 
their children, who, in a certain sense, “become ‘parents’ of their parents”