Building on the philosophical synergy between postliberalism and Gianni Vattimo’s weak thought outlined in Postliberalism and Weak Thought (2025), this essay extends the analysis into the economic domain. While postliberal thinkers like Patrick J. Deneen diagnose liberalism’s triumph as eroding organic community bonds through market and state dominance—fueling isolation, precarity, and populist resentment—top-down postliberal remedies risk reproducing the very metaphysical impositions they critique. This piece proposes a left postliberalism: a non-authoritarian alternative that incorporates Vattimo’s hermeneutic, pious weakening of institutional tutelage (pietas) to enable bottom-up self-organization. Universal basic income (UBI), framed as Guy Standing’s “common dividends” from plundered commons and justified by Philippe Van Parijs’s luck-egalitarian rationale, serves as the practical economic instrument: it neutralizes market coercion without moralistic state paternalism, freeing time and resources for voluntary commoning—cooperatives, mutual aid, and local solidarity—thus allowing the common good to emerge organically and pluralistically.
Sergio Ruvalcaba Solorio (Fri,) studied this question.