Abstract
The article challenges the notion that political realism necessarily requires a
distinctively political normativity. Drawing on the works of Weber and
Nietzsche, it offers an alternative reading of political realism. The article
uncovers in Williams’ scholarship a dual-layered legitimacy framework,
displaying three inherent demands (namely, discursive, intelligibility, and
reflective vindication demand) in his idea of legitimacy. In so doing, the
article demonstrates how political realism employs its own prescriptive
resources to critically scrutinize politics, while highlighting the crucial
distinction between political realism and applied ethics. The article finally
contends that political realism can, through immanent critique, maintain its
evaluative standards and critical potency without necessarily engaging with
political normativity.