Habermas

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Civil Society
claim
critical theory for advanced philosophy students
deliberative
deliberative democracy
Deliberative Politics
Deliberative Procedure
Deliberative Stance
Desirability Characterizations
Discourse Morality
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Good Life
Habermas's Discourse Morality
habermass
Habermas’s Discourse Morality
Ideal Deliberative Procedure
interpretations
kantian
Kantian pragmatism
Overlapping Consensus
PDM
philosophy of language
PNC.
politics
Postmetaphysical Thinking
postsecular thought
pragmatism
Procedural Democracy
public
Public Autonomy
Public Reason
rational
Rational Interpretations
rationality in society
reason
Reasonable Rejectability
Reflective Endorsement
Scanlon's Contractualism
Scanlon’s Contractualism
Social Reproduction
social theory analysis
Transcendental Argument

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415773256
  • Weight: 390g
  • Dimensions: 138 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 17 Aug 2015
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Jürgen Habermas is one of the most important German philosophers and social theorists of the late twentieth and early twenty-first century. His work has been compared in scope with Max Weber’s, and in philosophical breadth to that of Kant and Hegel.

In this much-needed introduction Kenneth Baynes engages with the full range of Habermas’s philosophical work, addressing his early arguments concerning the emergence of the public sphere and his initial attempt to reconstruct a critical theory of society in Knowledge and Human Interests. He then examines one of Habermas’s most influential works, The Theory of Communicative Action, including his controversial account of the rational interpretation of social action. Also covered is Habermas’s work on discourse ethics, political and legal theory, including his views on the relation between democracy and constitutionalism, and his arguments concerning human rights and cosmopolitanism. The final chapter assesses Habermas’s role as a polemical and prominent public intellectual and his criticism of postmodernism in The Philosophical Discourse of Modernity, in addition to his more recent writings on the relationship between religion and democracy.

Habermas is an invaluable guide to this key figure in contemporary philosophy, and suitable for anyone coming to his work for the first time.

Kenneth Baynes is Professor of Philosophy at Syracuse University, USA. He works primarily in social and political philosophy, with a special focus in critical theory and modern and contemporary German philosophy. He is a co-editor of After Philosophy: End or Transformation? and Discourse and Democracy, and the author of The Normative Grounds of Social Criticism: Kant, Rawls and Habermas.

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