The Cambridge Habermas lexicon / edited by Amy Allen, Pennsylvania State University and Eduardo Mendieta, Pennsylvania State University.

Over a career spanning nearly seven decades, Jürgen Habermas - one of the most important European philosophers of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries - has produced a prodigious and influential body of work. In this Lexicon, authored by an international team of scholars, over 200 entries define...

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Bibliographic Details
Online Access: Full Text (via Cambridge)
Other Authors: Allen, Amy (Editor)
Format: Electronic eBook
Language:English
Published: Cambridge ; New York : Cambridge University Press, 2019.
Edition:1 [edition].
Subjects:
Table of Contents:
  • Cover
  • Half-title page
  • Title page
  • Copyright page
  • Contents
  • List of Contributors
  • Preface
  • Chronology of Jürgen Habermas
  • List of Abbreviations
  • Works by Jürgen Habermas
  • I Terms
  • 1. Aesthetics
  • 2. All-Affected Principle
  • 3. Application and Justification
  • 4. Argumentation
  • 5. Authenticity
  • 6. Autonomy
  • 7. Axial Age (Achsenzeit)
  • 8. Civil Disobedience (Ziviler Umgehorsam)
  • 9. Civil Society (Bürgerliche Gesellschaft)
  • 10. Colonization of the Lifeworld
  • 11. Communicative Action
  • 12. Communicative Competence
  • 13. Communicative Freedom
  • 14. Communicative Power
  • 15. Communicative Rationality
  • 16. Consensus
  • 17. Conservatism
  • 18. Constitutional Patriotism
  • 19. Constitutional State and Constitutionalization
  • 20. Cosmopolitan Citizenship
  • 21. Counterfactual Presupposition
  • 22. Critical Hermeneutics
  • 23. Critical Theory
  • 24. Deconstruction
  • 25. Deliberative Democracy
  • 26. Detranscendentalization
  • 27. Discourse
  • 28. Discourse Ethics
  • 29. Enlightenment
  • 30. Equality
  • 31. Ethics and Morality
  • 32. Europe (European Citizenship and Public Sphere)
  • 33. Facticity
  • 34. Feminism
  • 35. Formal/Universal Pragmatics
  • 36. The Frankfurt School
  • 37. Free Will and Determinism
  • 38. Functional and Social Integration
  • 39. Functionalist Reason
  • 40. Genealogy
  • 41. Hermeneutics
  • 42. Historians' Debate
  • 43. Historical Materialism
  • 44. Human Nature
  • 45. Human Rights
  • 46. Ideal Speech Situation
  • 47. Ideology
  • 48. Illocutionary Force
  • 49. Immanent Critique
  • 50. Individuation
  • 51. Instrumental Reason
  • 52. Intellectual
  • 53. Jewish Philosophy
  • 54. Juridification
  • 55. Justice
  • 56. Knowledge Anthropology (Erkenntnisanthropologie)
  • 57. Language and the Linguistic Turn
  • 58. Late Capitalism
  • 59. Law
  • 60. Learning Processes
  • 61. Legitimation
  • 62. Lifeworld and System
  • 63. Linguistification
  • 64. Markets
  • 65. Mass Culture
  • 66. Mass Media
  • 67. Migrants and Refugees
  • 68. Modernity and Modernization
  • 69. Moral Development
  • 70. Multiculturalism
  • 71. Multiple Modernities
  • 72. Naturalism
  • 73. Nature
  • 74. Performative Self-Contradiction
  • 75. Philosophical Anthropology
  • 76. Philosophy of History
  • 77. Philosophy of the Subject/Consciousness
  • 78. Popular Sovereignty
  • 79. The Positivism Debate
  • 80. Postcolonialism/Decoloniality
  • 81. Postliberal Society
  • 82. Postmetaphysical Thinking
  • 83. Postmodernism and Poststructuralism
  • 84. Postnational
  • 85. Power
  • 86. Practical Reason
  • 87. Pragmatic Turn
  • 88. Pragmatism
  • 89. Praxis
  • 90. Principle of Self-Reconstruction (Selbsteinholungs Prinzip)
  • 91. Private and Public Autonomy
  • 92. Psychoanalysis
  • 93. Public Sphere
  • 94. Race
  • 95. Radical Reformism
  • 96. Rational Reconstruction
  • 97. Rationality/Rationalization
  • 98. Recognition
  • 99. Reification
  • 100. Religion
  • 101. Ritual and Myth
  • 102. Rule of Law