Revista de Ciencias Humanas y Sociales. FEC-LUZ 
This  being  true,  communication  in  the  public  space  will  have  an 
ingredient that the latest version of the Frankfort School also points out: 
for Habermas, communication is a process that takes place in the spaces 
of  intersubjective  interaction,  since  it  is  the  very  nature  of  the  human 
being,  as  stated  by  the  Stagirite.  For  the  German  philosopher, 
communication is the fundamental element that the subject uses to shape 
the  world  of  life;  hence,  public  communication  is  its  guiding  element, 
since it is based on the elementality of the human being: communication, 
which  is  raised  as  argumentation.  Public  communication  from  this 
perspective consequently possesses the other dimension necessary for the 
establishment of the world  of  life:  public action,  that is, political action 
(Botero Montoya, 2006). 
So  the  connection  is  self-evident;  public  communication  is  political 
communication, since the political is what is proper to human beings in 
society. The social fabric is formed in the public space, because thanks to 
it,  social  life  unfolds  as  a  skein  that  structures  the  strengths  on  which 
human  life  is  built;  human  life  will  be  a  world  of  life  since  the 
communicative  processes  are  carried  out  in  an  open  way,  so  that  each 
member is wrapped by the presence of the other subjects that make up 
their  social conglomerate. Hence,  in  order  to  live  life,  it  is  necessary to 
establish  rules  and  conditions  that  allow  all  members  of  society  to 
provide them with security of action, to the extent that the sense of the 
social  is  reconstructed  between  the  private  individual  and  the  public 
social. This is where the public communication/political communication 
dichotomy comes into play. 
It follows that political communication reconstructs the social fabric 
for the purposes of present and future coexistence. The political will thus 
depend on the communicative process as an essential dimension for the 
conformation  of  the  structures  necessary  for  those  ends.  From  the 
current  theories  about  communication,  this  is  understood  as  we  have 
stated:  with  the  purpose  of  achieving  human  ends,  and  these  are 
conjugated  in  the  different  dimensions  in  which  the  world  of  life  is 
articulated:  social,  political,  economic,  scientific,  technological,  but  also 
domestic  and  reproduction  of  life,  among  others.  Therefore, 
communication implies the freedom to express what each subject prefers 
within the framework of his or her interests (Habermas, 1982), or his or 
her  sociopolitical  aspirations  in  the  context  of  the  pluralism  that 
characterizes human life in society (Sartori, 2009). 
Now,  seen  in  this  way,  the  relationship  between  public 
communication and the political, political communication will be nothing