Reason, History, and Politics: The Communitarian Grounds of Legitimation in the Modern Age

Voorkant
State University of New York Press, 16 mrt 1995 - 467 pagina's
Reason, History, and Politics shows that certain conceptions of rationality in current theories of science, technology, and law can account for neither the legitimacy of paradigm shifts nor the communitarian integrity of rational decision and learning internal to paradigms generally. Ingram proposes an alternative conception of reality that does.

Drawing on a rich literature that encompasses classical German Idealism, pragmatism, poststructuralism, and hermeneutics, Ingram shows how a specific model of art criticism and aesthetic judgment illuminates the kind of discursive rationality found in all domains of rational undertaking. The book synthesizes debates in law, political science, philosophy of science and history, and social philosophy, and covers Anglo-American, French, and German schools of philosophy, discussing topics such as critical legal studies, the logic of scientific discovery and explanation, and subjectivity, hegemony, and totalitarianism.
 

Inhoudsopgave

A Communitarian
27
Science and Technology as Practical Reason
69
AngloAmerican Communitarianism and
107
French Communitarianism and the Subjugation
151
Discourse Ethics and Democratic
201
Discourse Ethics and Adjudication
243
PART IV
277
Toward
343
Notes397
397
Bibliography421
421
Indexes437
437
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Over de auteur (1995)

David Ingram is Professor of Philosophy at Loyola University of Chicago. He is the author of Habermas and the Dialectic of Reason and Critical Theory and Philosophy and co-editor of Critical Theory: The Essential Readings.

Bibliografische gegevens