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The Idea of a Critical TheoryThe Idea of a Critical Theory

The Idea of a Critical Theory1981

Habermas and the Frankfurt School

Raymond Geuss

About this book

Habermas and earlier members of the Frankfurt School have presented critical theory as a radically new form of knowledge. It is differentiated from the natural sciences as essentially 'reflective': the knowledge it provides guides us towards enlightenment as to our true interests, and emancipation from often unsuspected forms of external and internal coercion. Its first paradigms are in the writings of Marx and Freud. In this book Raymond Geuss sets out these fundamental claims and asks whether they can be made good. Is a science which does not simply describe and explain social phenomena, but also criticizes? The concept of ideology plays a crucial role in this discussion. Geuss carefully analyses it here, its relation to our beliefs and interests, and the account of truth and confirmation required by its critique and the concomitant goal of self-knowledge. The book does not presuppose acquaintance with the works of the Frankfurt School and can serve as a lucid introduction to their central, distinctive theses. But in its scrupulous and incisive consideration of these, and the modified support for them that emerges, it will also interest experts on critical theory and others concerned with the methods and purposes of the social sciences in general.

Details

First published
1981
Pages
118
ISBN-13
9780521284226
OL Work ID
OL1829542W

Subjects

Critical theoryFrankfurt school of sociologyInstitut für SozialforschungCriticism and interpretismPhilosophy, germanSociology of Knowledge

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Book data from Open Library. Cover images courtesy of Open Library.