Revista de Ciencias Humanas y Sociales. FEC-LUZ 
the sense of freedom, the sense of coexistence also fades away. All this is 
a consequence, logically, of the signs of the "difficult times" we are living, 
not only because of the post-pandemic effects, but also because of the 
effects  of  the  same  urgencies  and  needs  that  are  arising  as  we  try  to 
perpetuate  life  on  the  face  of  this  very  deteriorated  planet.  It  is  not  a 
whim to generalize the analysis of these circumstances, since the locality 
of life is no longer a common characteristic of all beings; of none. In the 
case of humans, we are "planetary citizens", as passionately expressed by 
MORIN  (2005),  that  other  French  thinker  who  has  bequeathed  us so 
much for the  understanding of  our times  of  complexity.  Therefore,  by 
possessing the instrument of reason, it makes us responsible for the rest 
of  beings,  who  only  possess  the  spirit  of  survival,  to  think  in  the 
Aristotelian sense. 
By  virtue  of  this  planetary  generalization  of  our  existence,  it  is 
increasingly vulnerable to the signs of decadence of political institutions, 
due  to  the  ever-emerging  intentions  of  power  that  characterizes  any 
model of social coexistence that has been chosen, precisely. It seems that 
the  political  model  par  excellence  that  we  have  chosen  in  the  West  is 
failing precisely as a result of the emergence of passions that have been 
gaining ground in this world of shared life, which, as can be seen, is less 
rational than  emotional. The emotionality of life has been replacing the 
way of life of being rational, as another philosopher of our time would 
say, who has devoted memorable pages to think democracy as a principle, 
in terms of discourse theory. 
Indeed,  Habermas  is  bequeathing  us  a  valuable  framework  of 
reflections on this political  coexistence that  we have tried to  perfect in 
the West; however, that same intentionality of action and rationality that 
is supposed to characterize it, has been diluted by the designs of our time: 
emotions  have  gone  viral  to  the  point  of  becoming  the  fifth  pillar  of 
democracy.  They  are  what  Crépon  himself  describes  as  harmful  to 
political coexistence, since they transform institutions in such a way that 
when the emotionality of action permeates them, the democratic turn is 
blurred  from  the  political  map  by  means  of  "urgent"  attention  to  the 
requests of citizens in need of assistance, thereby creating a welfare State, 
to such an extent that it is redefined as "procurer of existence", according 
to Habermas'  contemporary thinker, Enrst Forsthoff (SPECTER, 2013); 
according to this conception,  the value is not for the State directly or in 
itself, but for  the one who  comes timidly and crestfallen to  extend his