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Metacritique
The Philosophical Argument of Jürgen Habermas
Through a critical account of the German philosophical tradition in which it stands, Garbis Kortian discusses Habermas's Knowledge and Human Interests.
Garbis Kortian (Author)
9780521296182, Cambridge University Press
Paperback, published 14 August 1980
144 pages
22.9 x 15.2 x 1.3 cm, 0.37 kg
Jürgen Habermas asserts, in the Preface to Knowledge and Human Interests, that a radical critique of knowledge, that is a metacritique of epistemology, is only possible as a social theory. In this essay, Garbin Kortian discusses the implications and philosophical import of this thesis, which is central to Habermas's work, through a critical account of the German philosophical tradition in which it stands. He relates the 'metacritical dimension' of Haberbas's thought to Hegel's critique of Kant, Marx's critique of Hegel, and the Frankfurt school's critique of positivism. Kortian presents his perspective on the philosophical problems Habermas's argument faces: the primacy of practice, this philosophy of understanding and the hermeneutic concept of understanding. This book, which was originally published in French, will interest students of philosophy and of the social and political sciences.
From an analytical perspective Charles Taylor and Alan Montefiore
Introduction
1. The problem
2. Hegel and the speculative structure of critical theory
3. Habermas and Enlightenment
4. Knowledge and interest
5. The practical perspective of critical theory and its aporias.
Subject Areas: Philosophy [HP]
