Jürgen Habermas Showed What Philosophy Could Be

After more than seventy years writing and thinking about democracy, capitalism, and the possibility of emancipatory politics, the German philosopher Jürgen Habermas died on Friday, age ninety-six. For a generation of political theorists and philosophers, his work was a touchstone. The author of over thirty books, he was interested in fundamental questions about how we ought to live together without domination and exploitation. But much of his writing is today underread and misunderstood.

I read Habermas around when I was twenty years old and an undergraduate studying policy management at Carleton University in Ottawa. Never an especially attentive policy analyst, I preferred spending my time resolving a never-ending existential crisis brought about by my wavering Catholic faith. Right after I graduated from high school I started reading philosophy, without paying all that much attention to its political content. From the very beginning, I was attracted to the most reactionary thinkers. It’s not too much to say I absorbed Carl Schmitt, Friedrich Nietzsche, and especially Martin Heidegger like a sponge. They combined a religious intensity with a covert kind of elitism. This alloyed perfectly with my broody angst nurtured by years of dealing with demanding customers as a cashier. Heidegger et al. struck me as visionary thinkers who gave the middle finger to the kind of very polite, very Canadian liberalism my country was and is rightly known for. In another world I probably stuck with them and walked a very sinister path.

Habermas would seem an unlikely philosopher to cure anyone of their attraction to hard-right thinking. His writing is anything but visionary and striking. Abandon all hope of thunder-and-lightning aphorisms and musings like “God is dead!” or “What is the meaning of Being?” Stick around to learn about the Peircean turn to post-metaphysical thinking through a transition to pragmatism and ordinary language philosophy. Never one to have a…

La suite est à lire sur: jacobin.com
Auteur: Matt McManus

Pour l’actu indépendante

🌍 Soutenez l’info libre. Gardez OnePlanète vivant et sans pub
→ ko-fi.com/oneplanetecom

Buy Me a Coffee at ko-fi.com