ABSTRACT

In a modern, plural society, there can be no settled agreement on the concrete legal content of a country’s constitution. The idea of the constitution is nonetheless pivotal in contemporary, liberal-minded theories of political justification, such as the ones advanced by Jürgen Habermas and John Rawls. Justification in these theories depends finally on “constitutional patriotism,” a consciously shared sentiment arising from an ethical assessment of their country by the country’s people, according to which the country credibly pursues a certain regulative political ideal for which the constitution stands.