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Between Philosophy and Social Science

Le Principe espérance, tome 1
On the Pragmatics of Communication
The Liberating Power of Symbols
The Inclusion of the Other
Solidarity
The dialectics of seeing
Self-consciousness and self-determinantion
The principle of hope. Vol.3
Critique and Power
Between Philosophy and Social Science
Vorstudien und Ergänzungen zur Theorie des kommunikativen Handelns
Moral consciousness and communicative action
Cultural-political interventions in the unfinished project of enlightenment
Communicative action
Praktische Intersubjektivität
Gadamer's century
Inclusion of the Other
Nachmetaphysisches Denken
The crisis of parliamentary democracy
History and structure
The utopian function of art and literature
Drei Studien zu Hegel
Wissenschaftsorganisation und politische Erfahrung
Zur Logik der Sozialwissenschaften
Naturrecht und menschliche Würde
The new conservatism
Moral Conciousness and Communicative Action
Kampf um Anerkennung
Hegel's ontology and the theory of historicity
Philosophical interventions in the unfinished project of enlightenment
The philosophical discourse of modernity
The critique of power
Philosophisch-politische Profile
Justification and Application
The persistence of modernity
Prismen
Strukturwandel der Öffentlichkeit
Contradictions of the welfare state
Zur Metakritik der Erkenntnistheorie
Observations on "the spiritual situation of the age"
Communicative Ethics Controversy
Disorganized capitalism
Philosophical-Political Profiles
Fragments of modernity
Habermas and the Public Sphere
Understanding and explanation
G. H. Mead
Crisis of Parliamentary Democracy
Die postnationale Konstellation
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440
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~7h 20min
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English
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Published 1993 MIT Press 9 views
ISBN
0262581426, 9780262581424
Editions
Paperback
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About Author

Max Horkheimer

Max Horkheimer ( HORK-hy-mər; German: [ˈhɔɐ̯kˌhaɪmɐ]; 14 February 1895 – 7 July 1973) was a German philosopher and sociologist best known for his role in developing critical theory as director of the Institute for Social Research, commonly associated with the Frankfurt School. Advancing a materialist theory of reason and society, Horkheimer analyzed the rise of instrumental reason, the erosion of the concept of truth, the decline of individual autonomy, the social-psychological roots of authoritarianism, and the reproduction of domination under modern capitalism. These concerns became fundamental to critical theory. His most influential works include Eclipse of Reason (1947), Dialectic of Enlightenment (1947, with Theodor W. Adorno), and a series of foundational essays written in the 1930s for the Zeitschrift für Sozialforschung, later collected in Between Philosophy and Social Science and Critical Theory: Selected Essays. He also composed aphoristic reflections between the late 1920s and the 1960s, published posthumously as Dämmerung (Dawn and Decline).

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