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The Habermas-Luhmann Debate

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Fifty years ago, the two leading German philosophers and sociologists since the Second World War, Jürgen Habermas and Niklas Luhmann, embarked on a sweeping and contentious debate that would contin...
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  • 31 August 2021
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Fifty years ago, the two leading German philosophers and sociologists since the Second World War, Jürgen Habermas and Niklas Luhmann, embarked on a sweeping and contentious debate that would continue for decades. Their coauthored 1971 book Theory of Society or Social Technology laid out their opposing positions on meaning, communication, consensus, and dissent—and ultimately the foundations of modern social thought. Habermas and Luhmann would elaborate their disagreement in the years to come in a controversy whose aftershocks divided social theorists by presenting what appeared to be two fundamentally divergent views of the nature of society and what systems theory was capable of explaining.

This is the first book in English about one of the most important conflicts in social theory today. Gorm Harste analyzes the Habermas-Luhmann debate from its inception through Habermas’s most recent works, exploring issues such as methodology, ideology, truth, history, and politics. He contextualizes their positions in terms of how each grappled with the legacy of Nazism and sought to provide grounding for an antitotalitarian politics. Harste follows the evolution of the debate, as the fundamental dispute over the normative and practical desirability of agreement and disagreement came to touch upon political questions including the rule of law, the separation of powers, human rights, individualization, and secularization. Ultimately, Harste emphasizes the convergence between Habermas and Luhmann—and the pressing need for social theorists to further unite these two formative accounts of contemporary society.

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Price: $160.00
Pages: 424
Publisher: Columbia University Press
Imprint: Columbia University Press
Publication Date: 31 August 2021
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9780231159142
Format: Hardcover
BISACs: PHILOSOPHY / Movements / Critical Theory, POLITICAL SCIENCE / History & Theory
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This is the most comprehensive, informed, sophisticated, and, in a word, the best book or essay that has ever been written on the famous debate between Habermas and Luhmann. Harste shows with great thoroughness and brilliance that this was not only a debate from 1971, with some smaller rearguard actions in the 1980s and early 1990s, but instead a lifelong concern of both scholars.
Gorm Harste is associate professor of political science at Aarhus University. He is a specialist in theories of European state building, and his books in English include Law and Intersystemic Communication: Understanding “Structural Coupling” (2013).

Preface and Acknowledgments
Part I: A Debate Unlike Any Other
Introduction
1. The Historical Context of the Debate
Part II: Meaning, Language, and Communication
2. How a Debate Takes Off
3. Intersubjectivity and Lifeworld
Part III: Between History and Evolution
4. History and Evolution: The Initial Debates
5. Evolution and History: The Harvest (1977– )
Part IV: The Debate on Legitimacy
6. Complexity and Democracy (1968–71)
7. Paradoxes of Legitimacy: Crises and Risks (1973–91)
8. “Before the Law” (1992– )
Part V: Further Debates
9. Broader Perspectives—Luhmann, Habermas, Foucault, and Bourdieu
Epilogue: Habermas’s Limitations to Secularization (2019)
Notes
Reference List
Index