|
|
Title: Reification: A New Look At An Old Idea (The Berkeley Tanner Lectures)
Purchase
Item
Manufacturer: Oxford University Press, USA
List Price: $29.95
Our Price: $23.15
|
|
| Customer Reviews: |
| Reification: A New Look At An Old Idea (The Berkeley Tanner Lectures) by Oxford University Press, USA excellent | | Honneth's piece is very good, while Geuss's response is a real highlight. A succinct piece for anyone interested in the themes of the Frankfurt School. | | Reification: A New Look At An Old Idea (The Berkeley Tanner Lectures) by Oxford University Press, USA Product Description | | In the early 20th century, Marxist theory was enriched and rejuvenated by adopting the concept of reification, introduced by the Hungarian theorist Georg Lukacs to identify and denounce the transformation of historical processes into ahistorical entities, human actions into things that seemed part of an immutable "second nature." For a variety of reasons, both theoretical and practical, the hopes placed in de-reification as a tool of revolutionary emancipation proved vain. In these original and imaginative essays, delivered as the Tanner Lectures at the University of California, Berkeley in 2005, the distinguished third-generation Frankfurt School philosopher Axel Honneth attempts to rescue the concept of reification by recasting it in terms of the philosophy of recognition he has been developing over the past two decades. Three distinguished political and social theorists: Judith Butler, Raymond Geuss, and Jonathan Lear, respond with hard questions about the central anthropological premise of his argument, the assumption that prior to cognition there is a fundamental experience of intersubjective recognition that can provide a normative standard by which current social relations can be judged wanted. Honneth listens carefully to their criticism and provides a powerful defense of his position. |
Vista Revealed
CARS: “Princeton University researchers today announced that Microsoft’s new Windows Vista operating system is nothing but a suit full of bats.”
Fri, 02 Feb 2007 19:13:04 GMT
|
Interview with RSSJobs Creator
Phil Wolff interviews Steve Rose: “I started playing with the RSS format, creating some feeds for my own personal use, and I thought this would be useful for checking a local University’s job board. I wrote a quick java servlet to parse the new job listing and return the results as RSS. It was so cool!”
Wed, 06 Aug 2003 21:28:01 GMT
|
|
|
|
|
|
|