Can Networks Form Spheres? Habermas, the Digital Turn, and the Metaphorical Limits of Public Opinion
Abstract
Digital platforms and their algorithms have reignited the debate over how we conceptualize the structure and dynamics of public opinion. This article compares two central metaphors—the “sphere” and the “network”—to assess their ability to diagnose contemporary communication processes. Drawing on four features of Habermas’s public sphere (location, symmetry, openness, and anchoring), we show that the spherical image still offers a decisive benchmark for judging deliberative quality. The network, by contrast, provides a key descriptive power for mapping digital flows and revealing algorithmic asymmetries, yet this metaphor lacks its own normative guidelines. We conclude that recovering the spatial dimensions of the public sphere supplies a uniquely valuable critical framework for efforts aimed at exploring normative principles of democratic public opinion.
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