This preprint develops a critical examination of Axel Honneth's recognition theory as a framework for diagnosing social pathologies in contemporary European societies. Honneth argues that the good life requires recognition across three spheres — love, law, and solidarity — and that withholding recognition constitutes a fundamental injustice. This paper identifies a structural paradox: states and institutions can formally recognise minority identities while simultaneously refusing acceptance — the deeper transformation of attitudes, institutions, and power relations that genuine inclusion demands. Drawing on Nancy Fraser's redistribution-recognition dilemma, Charles Taylor's authenticity framework, and Judith Butler's performative misrecognition, and applying empirical cases from European migration and minority policy (2015–2025), three original formal models are introduced: the Recognition Deficit Index (RDI), the Misrecognition Topology Matrix (MTM), and the Acceptance Gap Formula (AGF). These operationalise the recognition-acceptance distinction for empirical social theory research. The analysis concludes that identity politics strategies oriented purely toward visibility produce a hollow politics of recognition that leaves structural misrecognition intact. Submitted to Zenodo as preprint, June 2026. Author: Bibhu Kalyan Pradhan, MISHA, MAHE Manipal.
Bibhu Kalyan Pradhan (Wed,) studied this question.
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