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Название The Rorty-Habermas debate: toward freedom as responsibility
Авторы Kilanowski Marcin
Коллекция Электронные книги зарубежных издательств ; Общая коллекция
Тематика EBSCO eBooks
Тип документа Другой
Тип файла PDF
Язык Английский
Права доступа Доступ по паролю из сети Интернет (чтение, печать, копирование)
Ключ записи on1244617847
Дата создания записи 03.04.2021

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  • Contents
  • From the Author
  • Acknowledgments
  • Introduction
    • The Specter of Auschwitz
    • Pragmatism
    • On Sources and Crucial Issues
    • Step by Step
  • I Opening: First Comes Dewey
    • Introduction
    • From Crisis to New Liberalism
    • Individual and Community
    • Which Political Form?
    • Radical Democracy
    • Dialogue and Education
    • Toward Great Community
    • Utopian Project
    • Followers
  • II On Rorty’s Sociopolitical Thought
    • Introduction
      • Rorty and Dewey
      • Philosophy and the Mirror of Nature
      • Contingency
      • Ethnocentrism
      • Whichever Kind of Politics
      • Breaking with the Tradition
    • From Contingency to Irony
      • On Contingency
        • Two Approaches to Truth
        • Contingency of Language and Self
        • New Languages, New Vocabularies, New Ways of Thinking
        • Rationality
        • Relativism?
        • Beyond Relativism
        • Usefulness
        • The Place of “Truth” in the Political Sphere
      • On Irony
        • Ironists and Metaphysicians
        • Ironic Theorists and Liberal Theorists
        • Freeing from Metaphysical Longing
    • Toward an Ideal Liberal State
      • On Ethnocentrism
      • Contingent Liberal Society
    • Toward a New Liberal Discourse
      • On Liberal Institutions
        • From Deconstruction to Alternative Solutions
        • Toward Tolerance
        • Problems and Progress
      • Toward Limiting Cruelty and Suffering
        • Liberal Utopia
        • From Objectivity to Solidarity
        • Pain, Suffering, and Human Solidarity
        • Solidarity is Contingent
      • Communication
        • Toward Agreement
        • “Equality of Opportunity” and the “Standard Bourgeois Freedoms”
    • Objections
      • Two Basic Objections
      • Attempt at Answering the First Objection: Does the Concept of Irony Contribute to the Weakening of Liberal Society?
      • Attempt at Answering the Second Objection: Is Ironism to Be Reconciled with Solidarity?
    • On Division into the Private and the Public
      • Blaming the Truth
      • The Private and the Public
      • Can We Make Such a Division?
      • Rorty’s Inconsistence?
      • Unjustified Fears
      • Is It Already “As Good”?
      • All Categories Are Good—As Long as They Bring Us Advantage
    • Conclusion
  • III On Habermas’s Theory of Communicative Action
    • Introduction
      • From Radical Criticism to Reform
      • The Structure of the Theory of Communicative Action
    • Central Problems in the Theory of Action
      • Communicative Rationality and Communicative Action
        • Communicative Rationality
        • Argumentation
        • Rational Action and Validity Claims
        • Validity of Expression and Justification
        • Universal Acceptance
        • Communicative Action
      • Lifeworld and System
        • Lifeworld—Implicit Knowledge and Context
        • Lifeworld and Formal World-Concepts
        • Narrowness of Culturalistic Concept of Lifeworld
        • The Role of Systems
        • Rationalization of the Lifeworld
        • Development of Law and Morality—An Aspect of the Rationalization of the Lifeworld
        • Contingency and Ideologies
        • Two Types of Action and the Two Mechanisms of Their Coordination
      • Dangers and the Possibility to Overcome Them
        • Reification and Cultural Impoverishment
        • Proving the Thesis on Reification—Juridification
        • Legal Institutions
        • Overcoming Dangers
        • Competition of Social Integration Principles
    • Constructing a Theory
      • Toward Universal Validity of Our Understanding of Rationality
      • Proof
      • No Ultimate Justifications—No Fundamentalist Claims
      • Are Validity Claims Universal?
    • Toward Social Theory
      • Social Theory—Societal Rationalization
      • The Ideal of the Fully Rational Life-Form—Utopianism
      • Cooperative Effort
      • Communication—Premises and Arguments (Ethics of Discourse)
      • Communication, History, and the Unity of Reason
      • Toward Modern Society
    • Recapitulation
  • IV On the Convergence of the Perspectives of Rorty and Habermas
    • The Convergence
      • Different Rhetoric
      • Rorty’s Fear of Idealization
      • Idealized Rational Acceptability
      • Presence of Idealization in the Philosophies of Habermas and Rorty
      • They Do Not Differ That Much
      • New Worlds
      • Creating New Worlds
      • Validity Claims
      • Rorty against the Idea of Communicative Rationality
      • Necessary Communicative Rationality
      • Difference
      • Issue of Understanding Human Nature
      • To Recapitulate: Much in Common
    • What Kind of Politics?
      • Democracy
      • Liberal Democracy without Philosophical Justification
      • Proceduralist Deliberative Politics
    • Toward Freedom as Responsibility
      • Two Concepts of Liberty
      • Rorty—Against the “Positive” Version of Freedom
      • Common Moral Convictions
      • Beyond Truth—Advocating Pluralism
      • Decentered Vision of the World
      • Reaching Understanding and Reproduction
      • Toward a Compromise
      • Concrete Values
      • Responsibility to Our Community
      • For Us to Be Better
      • Not to Hurt
      • Resigning from Violence
      • Toward Responsible Freedom
      • To Take Responsibility
    • Toward Liberal Utopia
      • Social Hope
      • Liberal Society
      • Communication and Complications
      • On Role of Philosophy and Philosophers, and on Responsibility
  • V Postscript: From Dewey to Rorty and Habermas
    • The Main Themes
    • Philosophy
    • From Truth to Freedom
    • Democracy—One of the Ways
    • Progress and Free Communication
    • Pragmatism and Utopias
  • Conclusion
    • Aims
    • Validity Claims
    • Formal Conditions
    • Arriving at a Consensus
    • Answering the Main Question
    • What to Do in Order for It Not to Happen Again?
    • It Will Be the Way We Decide
  • Notes
  • Bibliography
  • Index
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