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1. Habermas and Critical Social Theory Sudarsan, P Indian Philosophical Quarterly: Journal of the Department of Philosophy -University of Poona, vol. 25, no. 2, pp. 253-266, April 1998 ... it. His predecessors like Max Horkheimer, Theodor Adorno, and Herbert Marcuse indulged in unbridled criticism of the instrumental and purposive tendencies and wallowed in anguish arising out of the commodity fetishism, culture 2. The future of commodity fetishism [L'avenir du fétichisme de la marchandise] Sherlock, S. 1 Sociological focus (Ohio), vol. 30, no. 1, pp. 61-78, 1997 ... examines the status of Marx's theory of commodity fetishism and Adorno's theory of reification given recent challenges in poststructuralist theory particularly by Jacques Derrida and Jean Baudrillard. It is argued that the 3. Habermas and Critical Social Theory Sudarsan, P Indian Philosophical Quarterly: Journal of the Department of Philosophy -University of Poona, vol. 25, no. 2, pp. 253-266, April 1998 Jurgen Habermas tries to chart a course for philosophy along the lines specified by modernism sans the foundational claim, so characteristic of Kant and Hegel, by allocating the roles of interpreter and critique to it. His predecessors like ... 4. THE SYMBOLISM OF MARX: FROM ALIENATION TO FETISHISM. Rasmussen, David M Cultural Hermeneutics, vol. 3, pp. 41-55, May 1975 ... (heidegger, Eliade, Ricoeur, Schutz) approaches to language, I demonstrate how marx accounted for the cohesion of capitalism by shifting from the category of alienation to that of commodity fetishism. Noting the connection with ... 5. Community Subjects / La communaute des sujets. Leger, Marc James ETC (Montreal, Quebec), no. 81, pp. 39-41, 48-9, March/April/May 2008 ... identity. The first is Nicolas Bourriaud's relational aesthetics, which describes unfinished, open-ended works that are oriented toward social interaction. However, despite the idea that the participant viewer is part of the work, the model ... 6. The idle idol, or why abstract art ended up looking like a Chinese room. Morris, Robert Critical Inquiry, vol. 34, no. 3, pp. 440-467, Spring 2008 ... He reflects on judgements about form and beauty in philosophy, analyses Roland Barthes' commentary on photography, and studies 1
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Page 1: Habermas and Critical Social Theory

1. Habermas and Critical Social TheorySudarsan, PIndian Philosophical Quarterly: Journal of the Department of Philosophy -University of Poona, vol. 25, no. 2, pp. 253-266, April 1998... it. His predecessors like Max Horkheimer, Theodor Adorno, and Herbert Marcuse indulged in unbridled criticism of the instrumental and purposive tendencies and wallowed in anguish arising out of the commodity fetishism, culture

2. The future of commodity fetishism [L'avenir du fétichisme de la marchandise]Sherlock, S.1

Sociological focus (Ohio), vol. 30, no. 1, pp. 61-78, 1997... examines the status of Marx's theory of commodity fetishism and Adorno's theory of reification given recent challenges in poststructuralist theory particularly by Jacques Derrida and Jean Baudrillard. It is argued that the

3. Habermas and Critical Social TheorySudarsan, PIndian Philosophical Quarterly: Journal of the Department of Philosophy -University of Poona, vol. 25, no. 2, pp. 253-266, April 1998Jurgen Habermas tries to chart a course for philosophy along the lines specified by modernism sans the foundational claim, so characteristic of Kant and Hegel, by allocating the roles of interpreter and critique to it. His predecessors like ...

4. THE SYMBOLISM OF MARX: FROM ALIENATION TO FETISHISM.Rasmussen, David MCultural Hermeneutics, vol. 3, pp. 41-55, May 1975... (heidegger, Eliade, Ricoeur, Schutz) approaches to language, I demonstrate how marx accounted for the cohesion of capitalism by shifting from the category of alienation to that of commodity fetishism. Noting the connection with ...

5. Community Subjects / La communaute des sujets.Leger, Marc JamesETC (Montreal, Quebec), no. 81, pp. 39-41, 48-9, March/April/May 2008... identity. The first is Nicolas Bourriaud's relational aesthetics, which describes unfinished, open-ended works that are oriented toward social interaction. However, despite the idea that the participant viewer is part of the work, the model ...

6. The idle idol, or why abstract art ended up looking like a Chinese room.Morris, RobertCritical Inquiry, vol. 34, no. 3, pp. 440-467, Spring 2008... He reflects on judgements about form and beauty in philosophy, analyses Roland Barthes' commentary on photography, and studies representation in Cubism, including the work of Picasso, and Marcel Duchamp's readymades. He considers the idea ...

7. Critique of Relational Aesthetics.Martin, StewartThird Text, vol. 21, no. 4, pp. 369-86, July 2007Nicolas Bourriaud's Relational Aesthetics has emerged as the text for a new generation of artists, curators, and critics, but what has been lacking is a

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critique of the political economy of social exchange that it implicitly proposes. Bourriaud's 

8. Value: Art: Politics: criticism, meaning and interpretation after postmodernism.(edited by and introduction by) Harris, Jonathan; (essay by) Barrell, John; (essay by) Boime, Albert; (essay by) Smith, Paul; (essay by) Eisenman, Stephen F.; (essay by) Clark, T. J.; (essay by) Baackmann, Susanne; (essay by) Craven, David; (essay by) Wagner, Anne M.; (essay by) Orton, Fred; (essay by) Wallach, Alan; (essay by) Tagg, John; (essay by) Mattick, Paul; (essay by) Jones, Amelia; (essay by) Taylor, BrandonLiverpool, England: Liverpool University Press, 2007, Value: Art: Politics, ISBN: 9781846310423... and his knowledge of Karl Marx's notion of commodity fetishism; Wagner's introduction to her book 'Three artists (three women): modernism and the art of Hesse, Krasner, and O'Keeffe'; the work of Jasper Johns, with a focus on his painting 'Catenary 

9. An experiential account of aesthetic value.Goldman, Alan H.Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism, vol. 64, no. 3, pp. 331-342, Summer 2006... audience in regard to the artwork, and suggests that to value artworks for their non-aesthetic properties is a form of fetishism. He concludes that the aesthetic value of an artwork can not come apart from the value of the experience of it.

10. Fetishimage: the necessity of poetic languageMari, BartomeuIndex (Sweden), no. 1, 1998, pp. 62-7, (1 colour)... contrasts with both the academic categorizations and the philosophy of aesthetics that traditionally govern considerations of what art is, and traces the origins in Western culture of the schism between the world of poetic imagery ...

11. The aesthetics of value, the fetish of method: a case study at the Peabody Museum.Lee, Pamela MRes (Cambridge, Mass.), no. 27, pp. 133-45, Spring 1995... issues as questions of value in the theorization of fetishism and to consider gift exchange. She demonstrates that the specific organization of these objects both satisfies the critical readings that understand display as necessarily ideological ...

12. Le droit inégal face au monde sans qualité: Valeur, fétichisme et justice chez MarxWiser, AntoninArchives de Philosophie, vol. 71, no. 3, pp. 469-488, July-September 2008In Das Kapital, fetishism appears to be more closely linked to generic exchange conditions than to capitalist exploitation. Consequently, fetishism may endure in the postcapitalist society envisioned by Marx in this same ...

13. Fétichisme et politique positiveGane, MikeArchives de Philosophie, vol. 70, no. 1, pp. 23-40, Printemps 2007... to a Renaissance neofetishism. The combination of fetishism and positivism was justified on a number of grounds, not only epistemologically. This article examines the evolution of the concept of fetishism in Comte's work and ...

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14. One Nation Under God Or Taking the Lord's Name in Vain?: Christian Reflections on the Pledge of AllegianceKao, Grace YJournal of the Society of Christian Ethics, vol. 27, no. 1, pp. 183-204, Spring-Summer 2007... question whether such preoccupation rises to the level of fetishism or even idolatry. Finally, I conclude that pacifists and others who are critical of America's expanding military empire have good reason to reject the Pledge of Allegiance entirely, ...

15. A Phenomenology of Fetishism: Alienated Production and the Appearance of RaceCarastathis, AnnaInternational Studies in Philosophy, vol. 39, no. 2, pp. 17-33, 2007

16. Alienation in the Older MarxCowling, MarkContemporary Political Theory, vol. 5, no. 3, pp. 319-339, August 2006... relate simply to 'selling'; that the concept of the fetishism of commodities does not require a philosophical notion of an alienated man; and that many of Marx's references to the 'many-sided man' can be read as emotionally charged empirical ... View Record

17. Marcuse: vigencia de un pensamiento inactualCampos, Ronulfo VargasRevista de Filosofia de la Universidad de Costa Rica, vol. 44, no. 111-112, pp. 145-152, January-August 2006The paper offers a thematic sketch of Herbert Marcuse focused on his analysis of over-repression in advanced industrial societies. The Freudian and Marxist sources and categories of Marcusian social theory are studied, and the theory's political ends ... View Record

18. Individual and Community: Toward a New 'Brave New World'Lee, Kyung HeePrajña Vihara: Journal of Philosophy and Religion, vol. 6, no. 2, pp. 101-114, July-December 2005... claims of individual freedom have deteriorated into fetishism and selfishness and have become objects of severe criticism. I would like to investigate the original meaning of individualism in Western modern thought and then find out how to 

19. La herencia del fetichismo y el desafío de la hegomenía en una época de rebeldía generalizadaKohan, NéstorUtopia y Praxis Latinoamericana: Revista Internacional de Filosofia Iberoamericana y teoria Social, vol. 10, no. 29, pp. 79-102, April-June 2005... the social and political importance of the theory of fetishism and the alienation of Marx when analyzing the social criticism that the development of the hegemonic forces of capitalism on a global scale deserved. The poststructuralist and post-Marxist ...

20. Capital e barbárieBranco De Moura, Mauro CasteloFilsofia-Unisinos: Revista do Programa de Pós-Graduacao em Filosofia da Universidade do Vale do Rio dos Sinos, vol. 5, no. 9, pp. 209-221, July-December 2004

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The permanent and unlimited growth of capital, the climactic figure of the fetishoid triad (merchandise, money and capital), can only take place at the expense of the subordination of the satisfaction of human needs and of human life to its ...

21. 'My Precious': Tolkien's Fetishized RingMilbank, AlisonBassham, Gregory.(2004). The Lord of the Rings and Philosophy: One Book to Rule Them All, Bassham, Gregory (ed). (pp. 33-45). Chicago: Open Court.

22. Fetishes and RaritiesLingis, AlphonsoInternational Studies in Philosophy, vol. 35, no. 2, pp. 27-39, 2003The concept of fetish has been, in psychoanalysis, the primary concept in the analysis of neurosis, and, in social and political critical theory, the primary critical concept in the analysis of alienation. The history of this concept, first used to ...

23. The Concept of Fetishism in Marx's Thought (Elements for a General Marxist Theory of Religion): Part II of IIDussel, EnriqueRadical Philosophy Review, vol. 6, no. 2, pp. 93-129, 2003... provides a textual "rereading" of Karl Marx's theory of fetishism according to his scattered but significant comments on religion as they extend throughout the whole of his work. In Part I, "The Place of the Subject of Religion in the Whole Work ...

24. The Confusion of Marxian and Freudian Fetishism in Adorno and BenjaminMiyasaki, DonovanPhilosophy Today, vol. 46, no. 4, pp. 429-443, Winter 2002... Freudian theory in their analyses of cultural commodity fetishism, and they both confuse the Marxian and Freudian theories of fetishism in their analyses. By disentangling the Marxian and Freudian elements in their views, I show ...

25. Marx and JusticeDaly, JamesInternational Journal of Philosophical Studies, vol. 8, no. 3, pp. 351-370, October 2000... demanding 'a fair wage', which is not even a coherent concept. Capitalism is not only a moral injustice, but an ontological injustice, a violation of the worker's humanity. It is coercion into alienation, fetishism and idolatry. (edited)

26. Fetishism and Hysteria: The Economies of Feminism Ex UteroSquier, SusanJournal of Medical Humanities, vol. 21, no. 2, pp. 59-69, Summer 2000... essentialisms: hysteria, a female disorder, and fetishism, whether understood as the psychosexual response to female lack, or as capitalism's motor, the displacement of desire onto commodities. The essay explores how, if we think of ...

27. Lesbian Desire and Fetishism in Newsletter on Philosophy and Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Issues, Timothy F. Murphy (ed)Oliver, KellyAmerican Philosophical Association Newsletters, vol. 99, no. 2, pp. 238-241, Spring 2000

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This article is a review of the positions of Judith Butler, Teresa de Lauretiis and Elizabeth Grosz on the notion of lesbian desire.

28. Globaliser la globalisation?Hunyadi, MarkStudia Philosophica: Jahrbuch der Schweizerischen Philosophischen Gesellschaft, vol. 58, pp. 83-98, 1999... regulation. It becomes evident then that both the fetishism of globalization and the globalization of fetishism are grounded in a conceptual confusion between two types of rules already carefully distinguished by Wittgenstein.

29. Habermas and Critical Social TheorySudarsan, PIndian Philosophical Quarterly: Journal of the Department of Philosophy -University of Poona, vol. 25, no. 2, pp. 253-266, April 1998Jurgen Habermas tries to chart a course for philosophy along the lines specified by modernism sans the foundational claim, so characteristic of Kant and Hegel, by allocating the roles of interpreter and critique to it. His predecessors like

30. Auguste Comte and the Return to PrimitivismPickering, MaryRevue Internationale de Philosophie, vol. 52, no. 203, pp. 51-77, March 1998

31. Pleroma: Reading in HegelHamacher, Werner; Walker, Nicholas (trans); Jarvis, Simon (trans)Utica: Meridian, 1998.... the historical and the systematic aspects of Hegel's philosophy, addressing Kant and religious fetishism, Nietzsche and the impossible repetition of the same, Marx and the aroma of religion, Freud and the hysterical body, Hamacher's ...

32. The Fetishism of Modernities: Epochal Self-Consciousness in Contemporary Social and Political ThoughtYack, BernardNotre Dame: Univ Notre Dame Pr, 1997.In addition to the much-needed clarification of the uses and abuses of the term "modernity," Yack here provides a fresh look at familiar modern ideas and practices such as nationalism, constitutionalism and liberal democratic politics. Our world, the 

33. Marx, Natural Religion, and CapitalismPrincipe, Michael ADialogos: Revista del Departmento de Filosofia Universidad de Puerto Rico, vol. 31, no. 67, pp. 155-164, January 1996... with a religious metaphysic. The chapter on commodity fetishism in Capital is illustrative. However, some commentators go wrong by assuming that Marx compares capitalism to Christianity. Rather the analogy is to natural religion. Furthermore, ...

34. Rationality and Social Labor in Marx.Khalil, Elias LCritical Review: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Politics and Society, pp. 239-265, Winter-Spring 1990... empowerment of goods with value. This is commodity fetishism, which vanishes when relations of production become actually collective--matching the transhistorical essence of labor. Marx's concept of social labor is adjudged inadequate. It ...

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35. FETISHISM, ARGUMENT, AND JUDGMENT IN CAPITAL.Finocchiaro, Maurice AStudies in Soviet Thought, vol. 38, pp. 237-244, October 1989

36. Hegel's Critique of Marx: The Fetishism of DialecticsMaker, William ADesmond, William J.(1989). Hegel and His Critics, Desmond, William J (ed). Albany: SUNY Pr.Marx claims that his philosophy is rooted in the correct understanding of dialectics which he achieved by eliminating Hegel's idealistic errors. This essay turns Marx on his head by showing: (1) That it is Hegel who properly grasps the nature ...

37. COMMODITY FETISHISM.Ripstein, ArthurCanadian Journal of Philosophy, vol. 17, pp. 733-748, December 1987Marx's discussion of commodity fetishism in the first volume of "capital" is usually interpreted as criticism of the way in which economists often view markets as natural phenomena. It is shown that marx is actually making the further claim ...

38. THE VIOLENCE OF ABSTRACTION: THE ANALYTIC FOUNDATIONS OF HISTORICAL MATERIALISM.Sayer, DerekNY: BLACKWELL, 1987.

39. FROM THE ONTOLOGY OF SOCIAL BEING TO HISTORY AND CLASS CONSCIOUSNESS (IN HUNGARIAN).Infranca, AntoninoMagyar Filozofiai Szemle, no. 4, pp. 770-781, 1987... I.E., In its reified form, Dominated by commodity fetishism. The analysis of labour in its last historical form leads then to its ontological appraisal in the "ontology" and, As such, Constitutes its necessary presupposition. What indeed ...

40. OBJECTIVITY, SCIENCE AND SOCIETY: INTERPRETING NATURE AND SOCIETY IN THE AGE OF THE CRISIS OF SCIENCE.Komesaroff, Paul ALONDON: ROUTLEDGE & K PAUL, 1986.... puts forward original and unorthodox ideas in the philosophy and sociology of the natural sciences. It starts from the conviction that modern societies face deep problems rooted in unresolved dilemmas concerning the meaning, The technical ...

41. MORALITY AND FETISHISM.Schott, RobinCogito: An International Journal for Philosophy, Society, and Politics, vol. 3, pp. 61-74, December 1985Although in kant's philosophy morality promises an arena of freedom lacking in the cognitive domain, His moral theory reveals the same commitment to an objectified world-View evident in his discussion of knowledge. The moral person is alienated ...

42. MARX ON THE CHOICE BETWEEN SOCIALISM AND COMMUNISM.Moore, StanleyCAMBRIDGE: HARVARD UNIV PR, 1980.Marx contrasts two types of postcapitalist economy: in one exploitation has been abolished but not exchanged; in the other both have been abolished. Moore examines the arguments he offers to support his claim that the first is in some sense inferior ...

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43. MARX'S CAPITAL: PHILOSOPHY AND POLITICAL ECONOMY.Pilling, GeoffreyLONDON: ROUTLEDGE & K PAUL, 1980.... the nature of marx's concepts is reviewed; the opening chapters are analyzed and finally the notion of fetishism is analysed in an effort to show that it lies at the foundation of marx's entire philosophical critique of political economy.

44. ESTRANGEMENT AND THE DICTATORSHIP OF THE PROLETARIAT.Kain, Philip JPolitical Theory: An International Journal of Political Philosophy, vol. 7, pp. 509-520, November 1979... economy. Thus it should be marked by alienation or fetishism. But marx denies this in chapter 1 of volume I of "capital". The reason being that the workers would be in control of their exchange rather than controlled by it. In earlier writings, ...

45. KARL MARX'S THEORY OF HISTORY: A DEFENCE.Cohen, G APRINCETON: PRINCETON UNIV PR, 1978.... clarity and rigour which distinguish modern analytical philosophy. The book is organized around a novel distinction between material and social properties of society, Which lends unity to its treatment of central issues in marxism: the connection ...

46. PHILOSOPHICAL FETISHISM.De Grood, David HRevolutionary World, pp. 23-25, 1977Though rohatyn's article, "alienation and philosophy," identifies much of the source of alienation in today's philosophical world, It is flawed. Bourgeois philosophy is in a deep crisis and philosophy in the united ...

47. MARX'S ANALYSIS OF COMMODITY EXCHANGE--A REPLY TO CARVER.Steinvorth, UlrichInquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy, vol. 19, pp. 99-108, Spring 1976... marx's value theory (terrell carver, 'marx's commodity fetishism', "inquiry", Volume 18, 1975) is accepted, But his rejection of it criticized by explicating the reasons marx gives for his theory after his faulty analysis of exchange-Value at ...

48. THE SYMBOLISM OF MARX: FROM ALIENATION TO FETISHISM.Rasmussen, David MCultural Hermeneutics, vol. 3, pp. 41-55, May 1975... from the category of alienation to that of commodity fetishism. Noting the connection with hegel, I indicate how the speculative anthropology of hobbes, Locke and rousseau can be overcome and why the sociology of knowledge must accommodate

49. MARX'S COMMODITY FETISHISM.Carver, TerrellInquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy, vol. 18, pp. 39-63, Spring 1975Marx's work in the first chapters of "capital" is sometimes taken to be 'metaphysical', Since his remarks do not lend themselves to 'scientific' testing against quantitative data. I argue that marx aimed to re-Present the economic theory of his day ...

50. The Mirror of ProductionBaudrillard, JeanSt Louis: Telos, 1975.

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... Marxism which has created a productivist model and a fetishism of labor. He argues that we must break the mirror of production which "reflects all of Western metaphysics," and free the Marxist logic from the restrictive context of political ...

51. A Phenomenology of Fetishism: Alienated Production and the Appearance of RaceCarastathis, AnnaInternational Studies in Philosophy, vol. 39, no. 2, pp. 17-33, 2007

52. Alienation in the Older MarxCowling, MarkContemporary Political Theory, vol. 5, no. 3, pp. 319-339, August 2006... relate simply to 'selling'; that the concept of the fetishism of commodities does not require a philosophical notion of an alienated man; and that many of Marx's references to the 'many-sided man' can be read as emotionally charged empirical ...

53. Marcuse: vigencia de un pensamiento inactualCampos, Ronulfo VargasRevista de Filosofia de la Universidad de Costa Rica, vol. 44, no. 111-112, pp. 145-152, January-August 2006The paper offers a thematic sketch of Herbert Marcuse focused on his analysis of over-repression in advanced industrial societies. The Freudian and Marxist sources and categories of Marcusian social theory are studied, and the theory's political ends ...

54. The Concept of Fetishism in Marx's Thought (Elements for a General Marxist Theory of Religion): Part II of IIDussel, EnriqueRadical Philosophy Review, vol. 6, no. 2, pp. 93-129, 2003... provides a textual "rereading" of Karl Marx's theory of fetishism according to his scattered but significant comments on religion as they extend throughout the whole of his work. In Part I, "The Place of the Subject of Religion in the Whole Work ...

55. Habermas and Critical Social TheorySudarsan, PIndian Philosophical Quarterly: Journal of the Department of Philosophy -University of Poona, vol. 25, no. 2, pp. 253-266, April 1998Jurgen Habermas tries to chart a course for philosophy along the lines specified by modernism sans the foundational claim, so characteristic of Kant and Hegel, by allocating the roles of interpreter and critique to it. His predecessors like ...

56. 'No Happiness without Fetishism': Minima Moralia As Ars AmandiGeulen, Eva"'No Happiness without Fetishism': Minima Moralia As Ars Amandi" in Feminist Interpretations of Theodor Adorno, Heberle, Renée, 97-112.(2006). Feminist Interpretations of Theodor Adorno. (pp. 97-112). University Park: Pennsylvania State Univ Pr.

57. The Injustice of Justice : Normative Dialectics According to Ibsen, Cavell and AdornoForst, Rainer1; Wenning, MarioGraduate Faculty philosophy journal, vol. 28, no. 2, pp. 39-51, 2007

58. Le Sublime aujourd'hui: D'un discours sur le pouvoir de l'art et de la littérature, et de sa possible réécritureBessière, Jean

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Marot, Patrick (ed. and preface). 2007. La Littérature et le sublime. (pp. 419-58). Toulouse, France: PU du Mirail, 519 pp

59. The Injustice of Justice: Normative Dialectics According to Ibsen, Cavell and AdornoForst, RainerGraduate Faculty Philosophy Journal, vol. 28, no. 2, pp. 39-51, 2007

60. Against voluptuous bodies : late modernism and the meaning of paintingBernstein, J. M.Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 2006, xiv, 400 pp.

61. Modernist artRobbe-Grillet, Alain; Smith, David; Merleau-Ponty, Maurice; Hilton, Roger; Greenberg, Clement; Adorno, Theodor Wiesengrund; Newman, Barnett; Fried, Michael; Olitski, Jules; Cavell, Stanley; Tucker, William; Scott, Tim; Wollheim, RichardArt in theory 1900-2000: an anthology of changing ideas. Edited by Charles Harrison; Paul Wood. 2003, pp. 762-809... Greenberg; an extract from `Commitment' (1962) by Theodor Adorno; an interview with Dorothy Gees Seckler (1962) by Barnett Newman; excerpts from `After Abstract Expressionism' (1962) by Greenberg; extracts from Three American Painters (1965) by ...

62. role of rules [Le rôle des règles]Rosen, Michael1; Biletzki, Anat (Editor, Editeur scientifique)1

International journal of philosophical studies, vol. 9, no. 3, pp. 369-384, 2001... Continental tradition (notably, Nietzsche, Gadamer and Adorno) have retained a quasi-Kantian conception of judgement while rejecting the idea of it as rule-governed. But there have been exceptions to this within Continental philosophy, most prominently, ...

63. 'Coriolanus' and the failure of performatives.Plotz, JohnELH, vol.63, no.4, pp.809, 1996Source Record ... 'How To Do Things With Austin and Searle' and Stanley Cavell's 'Coriolanus and Interpretations of Politics' place the blame for the tragedy in 'Coriolanus' upon Coriolanus' unwillingness to accept the world in which he moved in. They cannot 

64. The Philosophy of Art: Readings Ancient and ModernNeill, Alex (eds.); Ridley, Aaron (eds.)New York: McGraw-Hill, 1995.... material from Hume, Kant, Bullough, Sibley, Walton, Cavell, Isenberg, Wimsatt and Beardsley, Hirsch, Wollheim, Baxandall, Robinson, Fish, Sontag; 4) Art: Purposes and Perils--including material from Plato, Aristotle, Tolstoy, Dewey, Adorno, ...

65. THE ENDS OF PHILOSOPHY.Redner, HarryTOTOWA: ROWMAN & ALLANHELD, 1986.... philosophising, Such as a psychoanalytic model of language and a critical theory of rationality. Other attempts to continue philosophising by adorno, Habermas, Foucault, Derrida, Gadamer, Cavell, And toulmin are also examined.

66. ‘The Power To Develop Dispositions’: Revisiting John Dewey's Democratic Claims For EducationBALDACCHINO, JOHN1

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Journal of Philosophy of Education, vol. 42, no. 1, pp. 149-163, February, 2008... its lineage, moving from Emerson's metaphilosophy to Cavell's ethics. As Hansen et al. invariably engage with the latter, this review will question, through Adorno and Horkheimer's critique of pragmatisation, whether Deweyan pragmatism

67. On When Words are Called for: Cavell, McDowell, and the Wording of the WorldBaz, AvnerInquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy, vol. 46, no. 4, pp. 473-500, December 2003Taking my bearing from Stanley Cavell's reading of Wittgenstein, in which, as I argue, the notion of 'the point of an utterance' plays a central role, I develop a criticism of McDowell on two levels. First, I try to show that McDowell ...

68. Adorno als KlassikerBubner, RüdigerPhilosophische Rundschau, vol. 50, no. 4, pp. 273-283, December 2003It is an unexpected paradox that the radical critic, Th. W. Adorno, on the occasion of his centenary turns into a classic with the extraordinary help of publisher, editor, biographers and

69. Theodor W. Adorno from Exile to ReconciliationWolf-gazo, ErnestKutadgubilig: Felsefe-Bilim Arastirmalari Dergisi (Philosophy-Science Research Journal), vol. 4, pp. 45-68, November 2003This essay is written in honor of T.W. Adorno's 100th anniversary of his birth. It focuses upon persons and places in relation to his exile and reconciliation. The thesis of the essay is as follows: The process from exile to reconciliation ...

70. Les Lumières et la dialectique: De Hegel à Adorno et HorkheimerThérien, ClaudeRevue Philosophique de Louvain, vol. 101, no. 4, pp. 568-592, November 2003... treatment of Diderot's The Nephew of Rameau and Adorno and Horkheimer's treatment of de Sade's History of Juliette, the present essay highlights the dialectic tradition's critique of the Enlightenment. Since Kant, there has been ...

71. The Ethical Culmination of Aristotle's MetaphysicsLong, Christopher PEpoche: A Journal for the History of Philosophy, vol. 8, no. 1, pp. 121-140, Fall 2003... thinkers as Martin Heidegger, Hans-Georg Gadamer, Theodor Adorno, and Emmanuel Levinas, the article rethinks the relationship between ethics and ontology by reinvestigating the relationship between Aristotle's Metaphysics and Nicomachean ...

72. How 'Unfinished' Should the Project of Humanism Be?Matustík, Martin BeckTheory, Culture and Society, vol. 20, no. 4, pp. 143-152, August 2003... Habermas's paper delivered in 1980 upon receiving the Adorno Prize of the city of Frankfurt. Habermas launched a defense of the unfinished project of modernity, later in his twelve Paris lectures complemented by a vigorous polemic with postmodernity. ...

73. Making Adorno's Ethics and Politics ExplicitSmith, Nick

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Social Theory and Practice: An International and Interdisciplinary Journal of Social Philosophy, vol. 29, no. 3, pp. 487-498, July 2003

74. Specific and Generic Objects in Cavell and Thomas AquinasStone, Abraham DPhilosophy and Phenomenological Research, vol. 67, no. 1, pp. 48-74, July 2003... different questions of knowledge, as analyzed by Stanley Cavell, and that in particular the question the Cavellian skeptic asks corresponds to God's causation in creation. As I have explained in detail elsewhere, and discuss briefly here, this ...

75. Husserl As Trunk of the American Continental TreeEmbree, LesterInternational Journal of Philosophical Studies, vol. 11, no. 2, pp. 177-190, June 2003... arose in the United State and includes such figures as Adorno, Arendt, Beauvoir, Cairns, Carr, Cavailles, Deleuze, Derrida, Fink, Foucault, Funke, Gadamer, Gurwitsch, Habermas, Heidegger, Held, Ihde, Jaspers, Jonas, Kersten, Kristeva, Ingarden, ...

76. Cultural Paths and Aesthetic Signs: A Critical Hermeneutics of Aesthetic ValidityZuidervaart, LambertPhilosophy and Social Criticism, vol. 29, no. 3, pp. 315-340, May 2003... account of aesthetic validity that supports a nonesoteric notion of artistic truth. Using Gadamer and Adorno to read Kant through Hegelian eyes, I reconstruct the aesthetic dimension from three polarities in modern Western societies. (edited)

77. I Think, Therefore I May Not Exist: Cavell, Skepticism, and the Melodrama of the Unknown WomanHall, Ronald LPhilosophical Investigations, vol. 26, no. 2, pp. 149-166, April 2003Stanley Cavell's interpretation of the later Wittgenstein inherits the Cartesian picture of the self as private and in need of ratification by another to exist. God provided this for Descartes's cogito. In God's absence, it is other human ...

78. On Philosophy As Therapy: Wittgenstein, Cavell, and Autobiographical Writing (Symposium: Wittgenstein and Literary Aesthetics)Hagberg, GarryPhilosophy and Literature, vol. 27, no. 1, pp. 196-210, April 2003... pursuing a better understanding of the process of achieving conceptual "perspicuity" as it functions in the writings of Wittgenstein and Cavell, a methodologically clarifying analogy between philosophical and autobiographical writing emerges.

79. Beyond the Message in a Bottle: The Other Critical TheoryPensky, MaxConstellations: An International Journal of Critical and Democratic Theory, vol. 10, no. 1, pp. 135-144, March 2003

80. Critical Theory, Aesthetics, and Black ModernitySimpson, Lorenzo CLott, Tommy L.(2003). A Companion to African-American Philosophy: Blackwell Companions to Philosophy, Lott, Tommy L (ed). (pp. 386-398). Malden MA: Blackwell Publishing

81. Critical TheorySherman, David

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Solomon, Robert C.(2003). The Blackwell Guide to Continental Philosophy, Solomon, Robert C (ed). (pp. 188-218). Malden MA: Blackwell Publishing.

82. Pragmatism, Postmodernism, and the Future of PhilosophyStuhr, John JNew York: Routledge, 2003.... engages the work of Continental philosophers, like Adorno, Foucault, and Deleuze, to explore fundamental questions of how we might think and live differently in the future. Along the way, the book addresses important issues in public policy, ...

83. Stanley CavellEldridge, Richard (eds.)Cambridge: Cambridge Univ Pr, 2003.Stanley Cavell has been one of the most creative and independent contemporary philosophical voices. At the core of his thought is the view that skepticism is not a theoretical position to be refuted by philosophical theory but a reflection ...

84. Stanley Cavell and EthicsBates, StanleyEldridge, Richard.(2003). Stanley Cavell, Eldridge, Richard (ed). (pp. 15-47). Cambridge: Cambridge Univ Pr.This article assesses the relationship of Stanley Cavell's philosophical work to the mainstream of 20th century analytical moral philosophy. The article first discusses the history of analytical moral philosophy in the first half of the ...

85. The Names of ActionGould, TimothyEldridge, Richard.(2003). Stanley Cavell, Eldridge, Richard (ed). (pp. 48-78). Cambridge: Cambridge Univ Pr.

86. Stanley Cavell's Vision of the Normativity of Language: Grammar, Criteria, and RulesMulhall, StephenEldridge, Richard.(2003). Stanley Cavell, Eldridge, Richard (ed). (pp. 79-106). Cambridge: Cambridge Univ Pr.This essay assesses Cavell's interpretation of Wittgenstein's conception of criteria and grammar, which dissents from the common conception that they approximate to rules. The essay looks in detail at these phases of Cavell's ...

87. Aesthetics, Modernism, Literature: Cavell's Transformations of PhilosophyBernstein, J MEldridge, Richard.(2003). Stanley Cavell, Eldridge, Richard (ed). (pp. 107-142). Cambridge: Cambridge Univ Pr

88. A Second Primavera: Cavell, German Philosophy, and RomanticismDesmond, WilliamEldridge, Richard.(2003). Stanley Cavell, Eldridge, Richard (ed). (pp. 143-171). Cambridge: Cambridge Univ Pr.This is a discussion of Stanely Cavell's engagement with German philosophy, idealism especially, and also with Romanticism, here discussed primarily in terms of S. T. Coleridge. Cavell's philosophical situation as between America, ...

89. Cavell on American Philosophy and the Idea of AmericaEldridge, RichardEldridge, Richard.(2003). Stanley Cavell, Eldridge, Richard (ed). (pp. 172-189). Cambridge: Cambridge Univ Pr.Drawing centrally on the writings of Thoreau and Emerson, Stanley Cavell has

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argued in favor of a distinctly American philosophy as an activity of the perfectionist cultivation of freedom and in favor of America as a central place for that cultivation. ...

90. 'Disowning Knowledge': Cavell on ShakespeareCascardi, Anthony JEldridge, Richard.(2003). Stanley Cavell, Eldridge, Richard (ed). (pp. 190-205). Cambridge: Cambridge Univ Pr.

91. Cavell on Film, Television, and OperaRothman, WilliamEldridge, Richard.(2003). Stanley Cavell, Eldridge, Richard (ed). (pp. 206-238). Cambridge: Cambridge Univ Pr

92. The Holocaust and the Possibility of ArtLeaman, OliverGarrard, Eve.(2003). Moral Philosophy and the Holocaust, Garrard, Eve (ed). (pp. 247-255). Aldershot: Ashgate Publishing.Adorno is often taken to have argued that after the Holocaust there can be no art. Since there obviously was art after the Holocaust, and indeed in the Holocaust, he may be suggesting that the cultural framework within which art takes place 

93. Does Literature Think? Literature As Theory for an Antimythical EraGourgouris, StathisStanford: Stanford Univ Pr, 2003.... Independence, to Flaubert, Genet, and DeLillo, to thinkers such as Spinoza, Bergson, and Adorno--Gourgouris here restages the quarrel between poetry and philosophy as a central problem in post-Enlightenment thinking. (publisher, edited)

94. Can One Live after Auschwitz? A Philosophical ReaderTiedemann, Rolf (eds.); Adorno, Theodor WStanford: Stanford Univ Pr, 2003.What took place in Auschwitz revokes what Adorno termed the "Western legacy of positivity," the innermost substance of traditional philosophy. The prime task of philosophy then remains to reflect on its own failure, its own complicity in ...

95. Aesthetics and EthicsEldridge, RichardLevinson, Jerrold.(2003). The Oxford Handbook of Aesthetics, Levinson, Jerrold (ed). (pp. 722-732). Oxford: Oxford Univ Pr.... value that have been prominent in both aesthetics and ethics: value realism, intuitionism, (neo-Aristotelian) particularism, (neo-Humean) sensibility theory, (neo-Kantian) autonomy theory, and expressive holism (Murdoch, Cavell, and others).

96. Two Testimonies in American Philosophy: Stanley Cavell, Henry BugbeeMooney, Edward FJournal of Speculative Philosophy: A Quarterly Journal of History, Criticism, and Imagination, vol. 17, no. 2, pp. 108-121, 2003Stanley Cavell defines a philosophical quest as "finding one's own voice." In A Pitch of Philosophy: Autobiographical Exercises, he ties this search to vocation, a theme that is also central in Henry Bugbee's neglected classic The ...

97. Grief Suspended: Lingis, Cavell, EmersonDumm, Thomas L"Grief Suspended: Lingis, Cavell, Emerson" in Encounters with Alphonso Lingis, Hooke, Alexander E; Fuchs, Wolfgang W (eds), 165-

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172 .(2003). Encounters with Alphonso Lingis, Hooke, Alexander E; Fuchs, Wolfgang W (eds). (pp. 165-172 ). Lanham MD: Lexington Books.... (via a contemporary American philosopher, Stanley Cavell) by recounting Emerson's meditations over the death of his young son. These meditations center on the notion of "caducous." Although many of us tend to associate grief with desolation ...

98. Adorno's Concept of the Self: A Marriage of Freud and Hegelian MarxismSherratt, YvonneRevue Internationale de Philosophie, vol. 58, pt. 1, no. 227, pp. 101-117, January 2004

99. Adorno's Negative Dialectic: Philosophy and the Possibility of Critical RationalityO'connor, BrianCambridge MA: MIT Press, 2004.To explicate the context in which Adorno's philosophy operates--the tradition of modern German philosophy, from Kant to Heidegger--O'Connor examines in detail the ideas of these philosophers as well as Adorno's self-defining ...

100. The Cambridge Companion to Critical TheoryRush, Fred (eds.)Cambridge: Cambridge Univ Pr, 2004.... figures in critical theory, including Horkheimer, Adorno, Marcuse, Benjamin, and Habermas, as well as lesser known but important thinkers such as Pollock and Neumann. The volume surveys the shared philosophical concerns that have given impetus ...

101. Benjamin, Adorno, and the Decline of the AuraRosen, MichaelRush, Fred.(2004). The Cambridge Companion to Critical Theory, Rush, Fred (ed). (pp. 40-56). Cambridge: Cambridge Univ Pr.This article compares the social theories of Benjamin and Adorno and argues that, despite their personal closeness, the two had fundamentally different conceptions of how cultural phenomena are to be explained. Whereas Adorno's can ...

102. 'The Dead Speaking of Stones and Stars': Adorno's Aesthetic TheoryBernstein, J MRush, Fred.(2004). The Cambridge Companion to Critical Theory, Rush, Fred (ed). (pp. 139-164). Cambridge: Cambridge Univ Pr.

103. The Cambridge Companion to AdornoHuhn, Tom (eds.)Cambridge: Cambridge Univ Pr, 2004.... philosopher and aesthetic theorist Theodor Wiesengrund Adorno (1903-69) was one of the main philosophers of the first generation of the Frankfurt School of Critical Theory. An accomplished musician, Adorno first focused on the theory ...

104. Negative Dialectic As Fate: Adorno and HegelBernstein, J MHuhn, Tom.(2004). The Cambridge Companion to Adorno, Huhn, Tom (ed). (pp. 19-50). Cambridge: Cambridge Univ Pr.

105. Weighty Objects: On Adorno's Kant-Freud InterpretationWhitebook, JoelHuhn, Tom.(2004). The Cambridge Companion to Adorno, Huhn, Tom (ed). (pp. 51-78). Cambridge: Cambridge Univ Pr.

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106. Adorno, Marx, MaterialismJarvis, SimonHuhn, Tom.(2004). The Cambridge Companion to Adorno, Huhn, Tom (ed). (pp. 79-100). Cambridge: Cambridge Univ Pr.The essay specifies Adorno's materialism through a discussion of his relationship to Marx. Adorno does not understand Marx's writing as science but as criticism. Marx is concerned with the criticism of a "real illusion", the ...

107. Leaving Home: On Adorno and HeideggerGandesha, SamirHuhn, Tom.(2004). The Cambridge Companion to Adorno, Huhn, Tom (ed). (pp. 101-128). Cambridge: Cambridge Univ Pr.This essay attempts to show how T.W. Adorno's philosophy is articulated as a thorough-going response to the philosophy of Martin Heidegger, from its earliest to its latest expressions. It begins with Adorno's and Heidegger's ...

108. Is Experience Still in Crisis? Reflections on a Frankfurt School LamentJay, MartinHuhn, Tom.(2004). The Cambridge Companion to Adorno, Huhn, Tom (ed). (pp. 129-147). Cambridge: Cambridge Univ Pr.

109. Mephistopheles in Hollywood: Adorno, Mann, and SchoenbergSchmidt, JamesHuhn, Tom.(2004). The Cambridge Companion to Adorno, Huhn, Tom (ed). (pp. 148-180). Cambridge: Cambridge Univ Pr.... with Max Horkheimer) was the major product of Theodor Adorno's American exile. This essay examines its relationship to two other works, also produced by German exiles in Los Angeles: Thomas Mann's Doctor Faustus and Arnold Schoenberg's

110. Right Listening and a New Type of Human BeingHullot-kentor, RobertHuhn, Tom.(2004). The Cambridge Companion to Adorno, Huhn, Tom (ed). (pp. 181-197). Cambridge: Cambridge Univ Pr.... Urgent, then, is a contemporary evaluation of T. W. Adorno's thesis of the dialectic of enlightenment as a sacrificial entwinement of progress and regression. By these lights aspects of the transformation, under crisis, of America's civic ...

111. Authenticity and Failure in Adorno's Aesthetics of MusicPaddison, MaxHuhn, Tom.(2004). The Cambridge Companion to Adorno, Huhn, Tom (ed). (pp. 198-221). Cambridge: Cambridge Univ Pr.This article examines the concept of authenticity in Adorno's music aesthetics. First addressed are more familiar understandings of the term through a consideration of Adorno's critique of the historical performance movement in ...

112. Dissonant Works and the Listening PublicGoehr, LydiaHuhn, Tom.(2004). The Cambridge Companion to Adorno, Huhn, Tom (ed). (pp. 222-247). Cambridge: Cambridge Univ Pr.

113. Adorno, Heidegger, and the Meaning of MusicBowie, AndrewHuhn, Tom.(2004). The Cambridge Companion to Adorno, Huhn, Tom (ed). (pp. 248-278). Cambridge: Cambridge Univ Pr.

114. The Critical Theory of Society As Reflexive SociologyMüller-doohm, Stefan

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Huhn, Tom.(2004). The Cambridge Companion to Adorno, Huhn, Tom (ed). (pp. 279-301). Cambridge: Cambridge Univ Pr.A plural critical theory does not at all mean the exclusion of one version or the exclusive validity of the other. The various versions of critical theory stand instead to each other in a relationship of mutual complementarity. As a self-reflective ...

115. Genealogy and Critique: Two Forms of Ethical Questioning of MoralityMenke, ChristophHuhn, Tom.(2004). The Cambridge Companion to Adorno, Huhn, Tom (ed). (pp. 302-327). Cambridge: Cambridge Univ Pr.

116. Adorno's Negative Moral PhilosophySchweppenhäuser, GerhardHuhn, Tom.(2004). The Cambridge Companion to Adorno, Huhn, Tom (ed). (pp. 328-353). Cambridge: Cambridge Univ Pr.

117. Adorno's Social Lyric, and Literary Criticism Today: Poetics, Aesthetics, ModernityKaufman, RobertHuhn, Tom.(2004). The Cambridge Companion to Adorno, Huhn, Tom (ed). (pp. 354-375). Cambridge: Cambridge Univ Pr.

118. Adorno's Tom Sawyer Opera SingspielTiedemann, RolfHuhn, Tom.(2004). The Cambridge Companion to Adorno, Huhn, Tom (ed). (pp. 376-394). Cambridge: Cambridge Univ Pr.

119. Citizenship without Inclusion: Religious Democracy after Dewey, Emerson, and ThoreauSaito, NaokoJournal of Speculative Philosophy: A Quarterly Journal of History, Criticism, and Imagination, vol. 18, no. 3, pp. 203-215, 2004... Ralph Waldo Emerson, Henry David Thoreau and Stanley Cavell in relation to the fate of democratic citizenship in an age of globalization. Beyond the tension between patriotism and cosmopolitanism, the perfectionism of these philosophers--a ...

120. Recollecting One Who Is Dead: An Interpretation of Søren Kierkegaard's FuneralGlebe-møller, JenKierkegaard Studies: Yearbook, pp. 525-535, 2004... and burial. The interpretation is inspired by Th. Adorno's discussion of chapter IX of Works of Love. Special attention is given to Kierkegaard's notion of "den menige mand" (the common man) and to the accounts of contemporary ...

121. Sprit That Wants to Fly--Adorno Under a SpellDemirovic, AlexTrans/Form/Acao: Revista de Filosofia, vol. 27, no. 1, pp. 27-37, 2004The starting point of Demirovic's text is Adorno's idea that concepts as forms of thinking are constellations of power. Differently from many interpretations of Adorno as resigned, Demirovic shows that this assumption enables ...

122. Rethinking the Communicative Turn: Adorno, Habermas and the Problem of Communicative FreedomMorris, MartinInternational Studies in Philosophy, vol. 36, no. 1, pp. 215-216, 2004

123. The Actuality of Adorno: Critical Essays on Adorno and the Postmodern

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Pensky, Max (eds.)International Studies in Philosophy, vol. 36, no. 1, pp. 240-242, 2004

124. Powers and Particulars: Adorno and Scientific RealismEngelskirchen, HowardJournal of Critical Realism, vol. 3, no. 1, pp. 1-21, 2004This essay suggests that Adorno's failure to explore a 'things-with-powers' ontology explains, at least in part, the limits that constrain his thought and that undermine the compelling force of his critique of positivism. While insisting ...

125. Bhaskar, Adorno and the Dialectics of Modern FreedomNorrie, AlanJournal of Critical Realism, vol. 3, no. 1, pp. 23-48, 2004... realism's relation to Hegel. This paper addresses it by comparing and contrasting dialectical critical realism with Theodor Adorno's negative dialectics, the approach which probably comes closest to dialectical critical realism. (edited)

126. Confidentiality in the Context of Prejudice (in Turkish)Veysal, ÇetinFelsefelogos, vol. 24, no. 3, pp. 127-141, 2004

127. Currency of Adorno's Theory of Halbbildung (in Turkish)Toprak, Metin; Karabag, ImranFelsefelogos, vol. 24, no. 3, pp. 143-150, 2004

128. On the Skeptical 'Foundation' of EthicsPihlström, SamiHumanitas (Journal of the National Humanities Institute), vol. 17, no. 1-2, pp. 159-187, 2004... means for us. This view is central in neo-Wittgensteinian moral philosophy, in particular, but the paper shows that it is more widespread than one might think: natural points of comparison can be found, e.g., in Hume, Cavell, and Lévinas.

129. Identitarian Thinking and the Social Sciences: From Adorno to LevinasNuyen, Anh TuanInternational Studies in Philosophy, vol. 36, no. 4, pp. 65-88, 2004

130. The Meeting and Parting of Gernot Böhme's Aesthetics with Aesthetics of Nature of Th. W. Adorno (in Polish)Frydryczak, BeataSztuka i Filozofia (Art and Philosophy), vol. 24, pp. 30-33, 2004

131. Adorno's Concept of the Self: A Marriage of Freud and Hegelian MarxismSherratt, YvonneRevue Internationale de Philosophie, vol. 58, pt. 1, no. 227, pp. 101-117, January 2004

132. Adorno's Negative Dialectic: Philosophy and the Possibility of Critical RationalityO'connor, BrianCambridge MA: MIT Press, 2004.To explicate the context in which Adorno's philosophy operates--the tradition of modern German philosophy, from Kant to Heidegger--O'Connor examines in detail the ideas of these philosophers as well as Adorno's self-defining ...

133. Benjamin, Adorno, and the Decline of the AuraRosen, MichaelRush, Fred.(2004). The Cambridge Companion to Critical Theory,

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Rush, Fred (ed). (pp. 40-56). Cambridge: Cambridge Univ Pr.This article compares the social theories of Benjamin and Adorno and argues that, despite their personal closeness, the two had fundamentally different conceptions of how cultural phenomena are to be explained. Whereas Adorno's can ...

134. Negative Dialectic As Fate: Adorno and HegelBernstein, J MHuhn, Tom.(2004). The Cambridge Companion to Adorno, Huhn, Tom (ed). (pp. 19-50). Cambridge: Cambridge Univ Pr.

135. 'The Dead Speaking of Stones and Stars': Adorno's Aesthetic TheoryBernstein, J MRush, Fred.(2004). The Cambridge Companion to Critical Theory, Rush, Fred (ed). (pp. 139-164). Cambridge: Cambridge Univ Pr

136. Weighty Objects: On Adorno's Kant-Freud InterpretationWhitebook, JoelHuhn, Tom.(2004). The Cambridge Companion to Adorno, Huhn

137. Adorno, Marx, MaterialismJarvis, SimonHuhn, Tom.(2004). The Cambridge Companion to Adorno, Huhn, Tom (ed). (pp. 79-100). Cambridge: Cambridge Univ Pr.The essay specifies Adorno's materialism through a discussion of his relationship to Marx. Adorno does not understand Marx's writing as science but as criticism. Marx is concerned with the criticism of a "real illusion", the ...

138. Is Experience Still in Crisis? Reflections on a Frankfurt School LamentJay, MartinHuhn, Tom.(2004). The Cambridge Companion to Adorno, Huhn, Tom (ed). (pp. 129-147). Cambridge: Cambridge Univ Pr

139. Right Listening and a New Type of Human BeingHullot-kentor, RobertHuhn, Tom.(2004). The Cambridge Companion to Adorno, Huhn, Tom (ed). (pp. 181-197). Cambridge: Cambridge Univ Pr.... Urgent, then, is a contemporary evaluation of T. W. Adorno's thesis of the dialectic of enlightenment as a sacrificial entwinement of progress and regression. By these lights aspects of the transformation, under crisis, of America's civic ...

140. Authenticity and Failure in Adorno's Aesthetics of MusicPaddison, MaxHuhn, Tom.(2004). The Cambridge Companion to Adorno, Huhn, Tom (ed). (pp. 198-221). Cambridge: Cambridge Univ Pr.This article examines the concept of authenticity in Adorno's music aesthetics. First addressed are more familiar understandings of the term through a consideration of Adorno's critique of the historical performance movement in

141. Dissonant Works and the Listening PublicGoehr, LydiaHuhn, Tom.(2004). The Cambridge Companion to Adorno, Huhn, Tom (ed). (pp. 222-247). Cambridge: Cambridge Univ Pr.

142. Adorno, Heidegger, and the Meaning of MusicBowie, AndrewHuhn, Tom.(2004). The Cambridge Companion to Adorno, Huhn, Tom (ed). (pp. 248-278). Cambridge: Cambridge Univ Pr.

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143. The Critical Theory of Society As Reflexive SociologyMüller-doohm, StefanHuhn, Tom.(2004). The Cambridge Companion to Adorno, Huhn, Tom (ed). (pp. 279-301). Cambridge: Cambridge Univ Pr.A plural critical theory does not at all mean the exclusion of one version or the exclusive validity of the other. The various versions of critical theory stand instead to each other in a relationship of mutual complementarity. As a self-reflective ...

144. Genealogy and Critique: Two Forms of Ethical Questioning of MoralityMenke, ChristophHuhn, Tom.(2004). The Cambridge Companion to Adorno, Huhn, Tom (ed). (pp. 302-327). Cambridge: Cambridge Univ Pr.

145. Adorno's Negative Moral PhilosophySchweppenhäuser, GerhardHuhn, Tom.(2004). The Cambridge Companion to Adorno, Huhn, Tom (ed). (pp. 328-353). Cambridge: Cambridge Univ Pr

146. Adorno's Social Lyric, and Literary Criticism Today: Poetics, Aesthetics, ModernityKaufman, RobertHuhn, Tom.(2004). The Cambridge Companion to Adorno, Huhn, Tom (ed). (pp. 354-375

147. Adorno's Tom Sawyer Opera SingspielTiedemann, RolfHuhn, Tom.(2004). The Cambridge Companion to Adorno, Huhn, Tom (ed). (pp. 376-394). Cambridge: Cambridge Univ Pr.

148. Sprit That Wants to Fly--Adorno Under a SpellDemirovic, AlexTrans/Form/Acao: Revista de Filosofia, vol. 27, no. 1, pp. 27-37, 2004The starting point of Demirovic's text is Adorno's idea that concepts as forms of thinking are constellations of power. Differently from many interpretations of Adorno as resigned, Demirovic shows that this assumption enables ...

149. Rethinking the Communicative Turn: Adorno, Habermas and the Problem of Communicative FreedomMorris, MartinInternational Studies in Philosophy, vol. 36, no. 1, pp. 215-216, 2004

150. The Actuality of Adorno: Critical Essays on Adorno and the PostmodernPensky, Max (eds.)

151. Powers and Particulars: Adorno and Scientific RealismEngelskirchen, HowardJournal of Critical Realism, vol. 3, no. 1, pp. 1-21, 2004This essay suggests that Adorno's failure to explore a 'things-with-powers' ontology explains, at least in part, the limits that constrain his thought and that undermine the compelling force of his critique of positivism. While insisting ...

152. Bhaskar, Adorno and the Dialectics of Modern FreedomNorrie, AlanJournal of Critical Realism, vol. 3, no. 1, pp. 23-48, 2004... realism's relation to Hegel. This paper addresses it by comparing and contrasting dialectical critical realism with Theodor Adorno's negative dialectics, the approach which probably comes closest to dialectical critical realism. (edited)

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153. Skeptical 'Foundation' of EthicsPihlström, SamiHumanitas (Journal of the National Humanities Institute), vol. 17, no. 1-2, pp. 159-187, 2004... means for us. This view is central in neo-Wittgensteinian moral philosophy, in particular, but the paper shows that it is more widespread than one might think: natural points of comparison can be found, e.g., in Hume, Cavell, and Lévinas.

154. Identitarian Thinking and the Social Sciences: From Adorno to LevinasNuyen, Anh TuanInternational Studies in Philosophy, vol. 36, no. 4, pp. 65-88, 2004

155. The Meeting and Parting of Gernot Böhme's Aesthetics with Aesthetics of Nature of Th. W. Adorno (in Polish)Frydryczak, BeataSztuka i Filozofia (Art and Philosophy), vol. 24, pp. 30-33, 2004

156.

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