[EM] critical theory - election methods as a remedy
Michael Allan
mike at zelea.com
Mon Mar 9 01:29:01 PDT 2009
Fred Gohlke wrote:
> Thank you for the Habermas reference. As you say, his thought is
> central to the discussion on this thread. I have not read 'The
> Structural Transformation of the Public Sphere', but a couple of
> years ago, my younger brother found considerable material about him
> for me. What I've read of Habermas' work 'light's my fire'...
You and he have similar aims.
> One of the reasons Habermas' work (and the work of Dr. Alasdair MacIntyre
> at Notre Dame) seem so important to me is that they establish a basis for
> additional academic work in the field. I am not an academic, and I have no
> idea whether any such work is underway...
There's a sense in which his work ought to be less academic, and more
practical. He carries the torch for a branch of philosophy known as
the Frankfurt School of Critical Theory ^[1]. The aims of Critical
Theory are threefold: i) theoretical, to describe the structure and
function of society; ii) critical, to diagnose what is wrong with it;
and iii) remedial, to prescribe the means of correction. But while
Habermas has contributed greatly to the theoretical and critical
aims,^[2,3] he has entirely neglected the remedial. We are thus left
in a state of suspense, awaiting the prescription.
It happens that you have a prescription, in the form of an election
method. It also happens that I have one, and it bears a resemblance
to yours. Where the philosophers have provided the theory, therefore,
we may provide the practice.
[1] James Gordon Finlayson. 2007. Political, moral and critical
theory: on the practical philosophy of the Frankfurt School. The
Oxford Handbook of Continental Philosophy. Edited by Brian Leiter
and Michael Rosen. Oxford University Press.
http://books.google.ca/books?id=XDc1PNyijGYC&pg=PR7#PPA626,M1
[2] Jürgen Habermas. 1981. The Theory of Communicative Action.
Volume 1. Reason and Rationalization of Society. Translated by
Thomas McCarthy, 1984. Beacon Hill, Boston.
http://books.google.ca/books?id=kuFhjNZuHTAC
[3] Jürgen Habermas. 1981. The Theory of Communicative Action.
Volume 2. Lifeworld and System: a Critique of Functionalist
Reason. Translated by Thomas McCarthy, 1987. Beacon Hill,
Boston. http://books.google.ca/books?id=7MjA1PfFWeQC
--
Michael Allan
Toronto, 647-436-4521
http://zelea.com/
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