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The Philosophical Discourse of Modernity: Twelve Lectures (Studies in Contemporary German Social Thought) [Hardcover]

Juergen Habermas (Author), Frederick Lawrence (Author)
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)


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September 30, 1987 Studies in Contemporary German Social Thought
The Philosophical Discourse of Modernity is a tour de force that has the immediacy and accessibility of the lecture form and the excitement of an encounter across, national cultural boundaries. Habermas takes up the challenge posed by the radical critique of reason in contemporary French poststructuralism.

Tracing the odyssey of the philosophical discourse of modernity, Habermas's strategy is to return to those historical "crossroads" at which Hegel and the Young Hegelians, Nietzsche and Heidegger made the fateful decisions that led to this outcome. His aim is to identify and clearly mark out a road indicated but not taken: the determinate negation of subject-centered reason through the concept of communicative rationality. As The Theory of Communicative Action served to place this concept within the history of social theory, these lectures locate it within the history of philosophy. Habermas examines the odyssey of the philosophical discourse of modernity from Hegel through the present and tests his own ideas about the appropriate form of a postmodern discourse through dialogs with a broad range of past and present critics and theorists.

The lectures on Georges Bataille, Michel Foucault, Jacques Derrida, and Cornelius Castoriadis are of particular note since they are the first fruits of the recent cross-fertilization between French and German thought. Habermas's dialogue with Foucault - begun in person as the first of these lectures were delivered in Paris in 1983 culminates here in two appreciative yet intensely argumentative lectures. His discussion of the literary-theoretical reception of Derrida in America - launched at Cornell in 1984 - issues here in a long excursus on the genre distinction between philosophy and literature. The lectures were reworked for the final time in seminars at Boston College and first published in Germany in the fall of 1985.

Jürgen Habermas is Professor of Philosophy at the University of Frankfurt. The Philosophical Discourse of Modernity is included in the series Studies in Contemporary German Social Thought, edited by Thomas McCarthy.

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Editorial Reviews

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"Destined to be the most widely discussed intervention into the increasingly heated controversy over the apparent transition from modernity to postmodernity, Habermas's latest major effort is certain to raise the level of the debate several notches." Martin Jay



"These lectures may provide the best entrée into Habermas's thought for non-specialists of any of his writings." Peter C. Hodgson , Religious Studies Review

--This text refers to the Paperback edition.

Language Notes

Text: English, German (translation)

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 450 pages
  • Publisher: The MIT Press; 2nd Printing edition (September 30, 1987)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0262081636
  • ISBN-13: 978-0262081634
  • Product Dimensions: 9.2 x 6.1 x 1.3 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 2 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #511,635 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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36 of 37 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Leaves no stone unturned, December 25, 2000
Though I am almost always disturbed by Habermas's borderline naivety concerning what he calls the "unfinished project of modernity," in this volume he rises to the heights I always thought him capable. In 400+ pages (a big book, but always just short enough on the essays to be concise and clear), Habermas shows his command of almost all post-Kantian philosophy. His criticisms are almost always on-target, and even though I do not follow his conclusions (has he read and dealt seriously with ALL of Heidegger? what does he do with metaphysics that are expressly anti-metaphysical, such as those of Bergson, Whitehead, and James?), I am always amazed at his insights and explanations. Interestingly enough, much of what Habermas is explicating (critique of foundations) has always been found in theoretical form in Gadamer, and in cosmological form in Whitehead. Habermas always seems to hold out hope that some sort of Rawlsian "original position" will be found (can Habermas really think that there could ever be such a thing as an "ideal speech situation," devoid of what Gadamer calls the Wirkungsgeschichte, or history which affects it?). For my part, I cannot accept this. Insofar as modernity wanted to find such a situation, it was guilty of what Whitehead called "misplaced concrescence." Habermas makes himself succeptible to the same criticisms. But even though I all too often find Habermas too optimistic in regards the quest of modernity, I am never disappointed when he writes about that quest. I believe this is one of Habermas's finest books, worth the time and effort required to read it.
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47 of 52 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent overview of 200 centuries of thought, July 20, 2000
By A Customer
This is truly a masterpiece. Especially if you're somebody schooled in the incredibly repetitive and tedious Anglo-Saxon tradition, this book will surely be a revelation. You'll need some philosophical training to understand a lot of this, but if you want a brilliant, sweeping evaluation of most of the most important thinkers in Europe post-Kant, with just the perfect balance of detail and summary, and of exegesis and polemic, then this book is essential.

Habermas begins by showing how the discourse of modernity and postmodernity, the concepts that transmitted philosophy from the Humean/Kantian epistemologist's study to the real world, began with Hegel, and how it has been developed since then in different directions, but nobody has really risen to Marx's challenge successfully. Somebody who doesn't know Heidegger and Derrida too well may get the impression that they're not as important as they actually are, due to Habermas' necessarily selective treatment of their work, but other than that the way Habermas dissects the nature of modernity and postmodernity, and then shows how the future can still be hopeful with 'communicative rationality' rather than the solipsistic nature of pre-Habermasian philosophy which inevitably ends up in postmodern tangles, is brilliant.

You can hardly expect any one text to be perfectly right, and I do have a few annoyances - mainly 1) his treatment of Searle's attack upon Derrida, which leaves the situation seeming a little more lopsided in favour of Searle than it really was (you get the impression Searle beat Derrida, when in fact Derrida really won the argument, he just failed to emphasise a few things) & 2) his treatment of Horkheimer and Adorno's pessimism, which in many ways, though disheartening, is still a little more realistic than his own optimistic point of view (he could've said that, despite Adorno's pessimism, communicative rationality is the best way to go, rather than making it seem as if we're on a direct, quick road to his utopian 'ideal speech situation'), and finally 3) when he assumes that "metaphysical world views" are "outdated", he ignores the possibility of going right back to Hegel and revitalising him with the positive, rather than the negative-Nietzschean, insights of the last 200 years, especially that of Lévinas Heideggerean theology and the late Derrida's 1990s writings on religion. A possibility that's difficult but he dismisses a little too easily.

Other than that, though, this is an astounding book of a quality immensely superior to the mass of over-rated rubbish you get these days, like Foucalt and Rorty.

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5.0 out of 5 stars Habermas's Take on Hegel to Foucault, Ends with Habermas, September 30, 2011
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I'm an art history graduate student at Stony Brook, and I'm taking a course on Habermas and Aesthetics. We had to read the PDM, this review was written as a class assignment, and not specifically for amazon, so there are some references to the prof and one to a student who gave a presentation I quote.

The Philosophical Discourse of Modernity, hereafter referred to as the PDM, is based on a series of public lectures given by Jürgen Habermas during the summer of 1983 and the winter 1983-1984 at the University of Frankfurt. There are twelve chapters in the PDM, each of which contains Habermas's description of a particular philosopher's, or grouping of philosophers', discourse(s) in regards to Modernity. Out of the twelve chapters, ten are based on the lectures from those two semesters from nineteen-eighty-three to nineteen-eighty-four at the University of Frankfurt, and two of the chapters are later additions which were added to the PDM after the lectures. The later additions are the fifth chapter, The Entwinement of Myth and Enlightenment: Max Horkheimer and Theodor Adorno, and the last chapter, which is the twelfth chapter: The Normative Content of Modernity. The PDM was published in German in nineteen-eighty-five by Suhrkamp Verlag, and in English in nineteen-ninety by MIT Press.

In the first paragraph of the introduction to the PDM Thomas McCarthy writes that: "Habermas is concerned here to respond to the challenge of posed by the radical critique of reason... (Habermas's) strategy is to return to those historical "crossroads" at which Hegel and the Young Hegelians, Nietzsche, and Heidegger made the fateful decisions that led to this outcome; his aim is to identify and clearly mark out a road indicated but not taken: the determinate negation of subject-centered reason by reason understood as communicative action." Here McCarthy is describing the method Habermas takes throughout the book, showing the moments when communicative reason might have emerged, but instead the idea of subject-centered reason persevered. Joe Benavides, in his class presentation Habermas, Heidegger, Derrida, explained why the Hegelian dialectic, which invented modernism, fails for Habermas, to detect the error of choosing subject-centered reason over communicative reason, writing: "Hegel's tools, then, as the conceptual flagstone of a modernity that understood itself as already completely self-understood, were never the kinds of tools that could reflect critically on modernity as an evolving process."

The way to read PDM is not as a textbook, or even an ordinary series of lectures meant to convey a body of knowledge. The PDM does not deliver information in a pedagogical manner until the last two chapters, where Habermas lays out his own theories of the normative content of modernity, and communicative reason. The first ten chapters are closer to an erudite detective story, where the original conviction (subject-centered reason) has been overturned based on DNA evidence, and a new detective (Habermas) is looking for the real criminal (the failure to offer an alternative form of reason), the one missed by the first detective.

The shortest version of this book would read that Descartes originated the idea of every human being is a subject, and that this subject thinks. For each of Descartes's subjects the world divides into subject and object. This type of thinking, where there is a subject (the person who experiences), and the object (everything in the world, up to and including other human beings) is one particular way of thinking that created a lot of enthusiasm in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. This type of thinking is called subject-centered or instrumental reason by Habermas, a subject-centered reason leads to strategic action. Strategic action is a form of behavior where the world and all the people in it are reduced to objects. Most of the PDM deals with different philosophers' attempts to dismantle or sidestep instrumental reason. In Occidental philosophy, Instrumental reason is considered bad for basically two historical reasons: the first is European Imperialism and secondly the historically unprecedented violence in the twentieth century. The major single event linked to the failure of instrumental reason is the Nazi's final solution, where human beings were exterminated based on reason. One other important way that Instrumental reason is considered immoral is because it transforms other people into objects, in the process stripping them of being and reducing them to either being tools or obstacles.

The PDM and the various bodies of work which Habermas analyzes all share an underlying theme. The most important theme is Modernity as it relates to reason. In the PDM the critique is against philosophers who attempt to take down the Enlightenment ideal of social progress through the destruction of subject-centered reason. It is not that Habermas disagrees with the philosophers he critiques about the premise that the world seen through the lens of subject-centered reason is a failure, it is that Habermas takes issue with what those critiques leave behind, and the method they employ. On November 22nd, 2011 Dr. Eduardo Mendieta explained Habermas's critique of the totalizing critique of reason this way: "The rhetorical excesses of the modern critiques of reason, there is an incongruity of what philosophers are allowed to claim and how they support the claims. We need to be suspect of it, if a philosopher is going to make a claim they need to be able to support the claim. Any critique of reason must be able to give an account of their own total critique."

Habermas spends four chapters critiquing his contemporaneous philosophers: Heidegger, Derrida, and Foucault. Heidegger gets a different treatment than Derrida and Foucault, because Heidegger's project is to rescue subject-centered reason from Nietzsche withering attacking on all reason. Habermas asserts that Heidegger makes the mistake of stripping subjectivity to the point where it allows for racism and nationalism, quoting Habermas: "No matter whether modern ideas make their entry in the name of reason or of the destruction of reason, the prism of the modern understanding of Being refracts all normative orientations into the power claims of a subjectivity crazed with self-aggrandizement." (134) Here, Habermas is saying that Heidegger does an amazing thing, where Heidegger is capable of stripping subjectivity down to some base layer where it exists below norms, and that Heidegger does this, whether he knows it or not, in bad faith to modern project of social progess.

Habermas agrees with Derrida and Foucault, whom he critiques for their method and their failure to offer and alternative construction of reason, that instrumental reason is a bad form of thinking. However, he disagrees with both their critiques of reason, because all the critiques of reason are based in reason. My understanding of Habermas's argument is that the Postmodern critique of reason with reason creates the philosophical equivalent of a Mobius strip. A Mobius strip is a long thin strip of paper, wrapped once around its length-wise axis, so that the two ends of the paper touch. One side is twisted so that the top of one end of the strip can be connected to the bottom of the other end. It looks like a curving version of the infinity symbol, '. You can run your finger along the strip and touch all sides, making it a one sided three-dimensional shape, despite the fact that superficially it appears to have two sides. There's a joke that goes: "That's more one-sided than a Mobius strip." The point of my metaphor is that a Mobius strip is ostensibly a two sided form, but which can be traced back to a single origin. Habermas contends that other philosophers' critiques of reason with reason is like Derrida and Foucault saying that the Mobius trip is two sided, but in reality it is one sided. Foucault and Derrida, because the origin of their argument is embedded in what they are critiquing cannot account for the origin of their own reason. The fact that a critique of reason is based in reason means that the form of the critique is flawed, and that the critique critiques itself no matter how cleverly this critique is hidden in impartial objectivity like Foucault's view from nowhere, Derrida multiple viewpoints, or any other approach. Habermas makes the meta-point that reason cannot critique reason, and that is the end of it for him.

In the last two chapters of the PDM, Habermas explains that the way that reason can be salvaged is to reconsider it. Reason, and with it the project of Modern social progress, can be salvaged if we reconsider reason as communication. This allows reason to break from the subject/object model first asserted by Descartes, and transforms it into an activity which occurs between multiple people. Something about communication allows people to consider their thinking in a more objective way, and Habermas sees this as the way to preserve Modernity. Communication makes the speakers reflect on what they are communicating, and this is a good thing for Habermas, who believes that the path to social progress and rational thinking is through communication.

In the last two chapters of the PDM Habermas presents his theory of reason as communicative action and the normative content of modernity, which taken together redefine reason, taking it out of the hands of one individual and instead asserting that reason is formed in relationships, and through communication. Habermas thinks that the act of communication produces self-awareness as part of the communicative act. This self-awareness offers a way to avoid limiting the subject to subject-centered reason, and instead offers the alternative of communicative reason. According to my class notes... Read more ›
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In his famous introduction to the collection of his studies on the sociology of religion, Max Weber takes up the "problem of universal history" to which his scholarly life was dedicated, namely, the question why, outside Europe, "the scientific, the artistic, the political, or the economic development . . . did not enter upon that path of rationalization which is peculiar to the Occident?" Read the first page
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Max Weber, Young Hegelians, Right Hegelians, Foucault Again, Questions Concerning the Theory of Power, National Socialist, Hegel's Concept of Modernity, Left Hegelians, The Undermining of Western Rationalism, The Order of Things, French Revolution, Genealogy of Morals, Hegelian Right, National Socialism, New Paganism, United States, Western Marxism, Aesthetic Education of Man, Agnes Heller, Arnold Gehlen, Birth of Tragedy, Carl Schmitt, Second International, Walter Benjamin
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