Debating Critical Theory
Engagements with Axel Honneth
Herausgeber: Christ, Julia; Loick, Daniel; Lepold, Kristina
Debating Critical Theory
Engagements with Axel Honneth
Herausgeber: Christ, Julia; Loick, Daniel; Lepold, Kristina
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Bringing together leading scholars in contemporary social and political philosophy, this volume takes up the central themes of Axel Honneth's work as a starting point for debating the present and future of critical theory, as a form of socially grounded philosophy for analyzing and critiquing society today.
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Bringing together leading scholars in contemporary social and political philosophy, this volume takes up the central themes of Axel Honneth's work as a starting point for debating the present and future of critical theory, as a form of socially grounded philosophy for analyzing and critiquing society today.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Essex Studies in Contemporary Critical Theory
- Verlag: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
- Seitenzahl: 332
- Erscheinungstermin: 2. Oktober 2020
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 20mm
- Gewicht: 540g
- ISBN-13: 9781786614797
- ISBN-10: 1786614790
- Artikelnr.: 58816118
- Essex Studies in Contemporary Critical Theory
- Verlag: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
- Seitenzahl: 332
- Erscheinungstermin: 2. Oktober 2020
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 20mm
- Gewicht: 540g
- ISBN-13: 9781786614797
- ISBN-10: 1786614790
- Artikelnr.: 58816118
Julia Christ is a permanent researcher at the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS) in Paris, France. Kristina Lepold is an assistant professor at the Department of Philosophy at Goethe University Frankfurt, Germany and currently a visiting scholar at Harvard University, USA Daniel Loick is a fellow at the Center for Humanities and Social Change at Humboldt University Berlin, Germany. Titus Stahl is an assistant professor of philosophy at the University of Groningen, The Netherlands.
Julia Christ, Kristina Lepold, Daniel Loick, Titus Stahl: Debating Critical
Theory. An Introduction
Section I: Critique
Chapter 1: Raymond Geuss: Realism, Yet Again
Chapter 2: Rainer Forst: Kantian Republicanism vs. the Neo-Republican
Machine: The Meaning and Practice of Political Autonomy
Chapter 3: Sally Haslanger: Taking a Stand: Second-Order Social Pathologies
or First-Order Critique
Chapter 4: Martin Saar: Immanent Normativity and the Fact of Domination:
Notes on "Immanent Critique"
Chapter 5: Didier Fassin: Moral Economy - A Critical Reappraisal
Chapter 6: Robin Celikates: Radical Civility. Social Struggles and the
Domestication of Dissent
Section II: Recognition
Chapter 7: Frederick Neuhouser: Rousseau on the Nature of Social Inequality
Chapter 8: Martin Hartmann: Repressive Empathy? A Plea for
Contextualization
Chapter 9: Joel Whitebook: On Human Sociability
Section III: Social Freedom
Chapter 10: Bruno Karsenti: Ethical Life and Anomy. From Social Philosophy
to Sociology of the State
Chapter 11: David Miller: Socialism and the Nation-State
Chapter 12: Seyla Benhabib: Hegel's Concept of the Person and International
Human Rights
Chapter 13: Beate Roessler: Fashioning Our Selves? On understanding and
criticizing the digitized society
Chapter 14: Christoph Menke: The Crisis of Liberalism: The Dialectic of
Politics and Police
Section IV: Progress
Chapter 15: Philip Kitcher: John Dewey Goes to Frankfurt. Pragmatism,
Critical Theory, and the Invisibility of Moral/Social Problems
Chapter 16: Christopher F. Zurn: Political Progress: Piecemeal, Pragmatic,
And Processual
Chapter 17: Amy Allen: Psychoanalysis and the Critique of Progress
Theory. An Introduction
Section I: Critique
Chapter 1: Raymond Geuss: Realism, Yet Again
Chapter 2: Rainer Forst: Kantian Republicanism vs. the Neo-Republican
Machine: The Meaning and Practice of Political Autonomy
Chapter 3: Sally Haslanger: Taking a Stand: Second-Order Social Pathologies
or First-Order Critique
Chapter 4: Martin Saar: Immanent Normativity and the Fact of Domination:
Notes on "Immanent Critique"
Chapter 5: Didier Fassin: Moral Economy - A Critical Reappraisal
Chapter 6: Robin Celikates: Radical Civility. Social Struggles and the
Domestication of Dissent
Section II: Recognition
Chapter 7: Frederick Neuhouser: Rousseau on the Nature of Social Inequality
Chapter 8: Martin Hartmann: Repressive Empathy? A Plea for
Contextualization
Chapter 9: Joel Whitebook: On Human Sociability
Section III: Social Freedom
Chapter 10: Bruno Karsenti: Ethical Life and Anomy. From Social Philosophy
to Sociology of the State
Chapter 11: David Miller: Socialism and the Nation-State
Chapter 12: Seyla Benhabib: Hegel's Concept of the Person and International
Human Rights
Chapter 13: Beate Roessler: Fashioning Our Selves? On understanding and
criticizing the digitized society
Chapter 14: Christoph Menke: The Crisis of Liberalism: The Dialectic of
Politics and Police
Section IV: Progress
Chapter 15: Philip Kitcher: John Dewey Goes to Frankfurt. Pragmatism,
Critical Theory, and the Invisibility of Moral/Social Problems
Chapter 16: Christopher F. Zurn: Political Progress: Piecemeal, Pragmatic,
And Processual
Chapter 17: Amy Allen: Psychoanalysis and the Critique of Progress
Julia Christ, Kristina Lepold, Daniel Loick, Titus Stahl: Debating Critical
Theory. An Introduction
Section I: Critique
Chapter 1: Raymond Geuss: Realism, Yet Again
Chapter 2: Rainer Forst: Kantian Republicanism vs. the Neo-Republican
Machine: The Meaning and Practice of Political Autonomy
Chapter 3: Sally Haslanger: Taking a Stand: Second-Order Social Pathologies
or First-Order Critique
Chapter 4: Martin Saar: Immanent Normativity and the Fact of Domination:
Notes on "Immanent Critique"
Chapter 5: Didier Fassin: Moral Economy - A Critical Reappraisal
Chapter 6: Robin Celikates: Radical Civility. Social Struggles and the
Domestication of Dissent
Section II: Recognition
Chapter 7: Frederick Neuhouser: Rousseau on the Nature of Social Inequality
Chapter 8: Martin Hartmann: Repressive Empathy? A Plea for
Contextualization
Chapter 9: Joel Whitebook: On Human Sociability
Section III: Social Freedom
Chapter 10: Bruno Karsenti: Ethical Life and Anomy. From Social Philosophy
to Sociology of the State
Chapter 11: David Miller: Socialism and the Nation-State
Chapter 12: Seyla Benhabib: Hegel's Concept of the Person and International
Human Rights
Chapter 13: Beate Roessler: Fashioning Our Selves? On understanding and
criticizing the digitized society
Chapter 14: Christoph Menke: The Crisis of Liberalism: The Dialectic of
Politics and Police
Section IV: Progress
Chapter 15: Philip Kitcher: John Dewey Goes to Frankfurt. Pragmatism,
Critical Theory, and the Invisibility of Moral/Social Problems
Chapter 16: Christopher F. Zurn: Political Progress: Piecemeal, Pragmatic,
And Processual
Chapter 17: Amy Allen: Psychoanalysis and the Critique of Progress
Theory. An Introduction
Section I: Critique
Chapter 1: Raymond Geuss: Realism, Yet Again
Chapter 2: Rainer Forst: Kantian Republicanism vs. the Neo-Republican
Machine: The Meaning and Practice of Political Autonomy
Chapter 3: Sally Haslanger: Taking a Stand: Second-Order Social Pathologies
or First-Order Critique
Chapter 4: Martin Saar: Immanent Normativity and the Fact of Domination:
Notes on "Immanent Critique"
Chapter 5: Didier Fassin: Moral Economy - A Critical Reappraisal
Chapter 6: Robin Celikates: Radical Civility. Social Struggles and the
Domestication of Dissent
Section II: Recognition
Chapter 7: Frederick Neuhouser: Rousseau on the Nature of Social Inequality
Chapter 8: Martin Hartmann: Repressive Empathy? A Plea for
Contextualization
Chapter 9: Joel Whitebook: On Human Sociability
Section III: Social Freedom
Chapter 10: Bruno Karsenti: Ethical Life and Anomy. From Social Philosophy
to Sociology of the State
Chapter 11: David Miller: Socialism and the Nation-State
Chapter 12: Seyla Benhabib: Hegel's Concept of the Person and International
Human Rights
Chapter 13: Beate Roessler: Fashioning Our Selves? On understanding and
criticizing the digitized society
Chapter 14: Christoph Menke: The Crisis of Liberalism: The Dialectic of
Politics and Police
Section IV: Progress
Chapter 15: Philip Kitcher: John Dewey Goes to Frankfurt. Pragmatism,
Critical Theory, and the Invisibility of Moral/Social Problems
Chapter 16: Christopher F. Zurn: Political Progress: Piecemeal, Pragmatic,
And Processual
Chapter 17: Amy Allen: Psychoanalysis and the Critique of Progress