The Philosophy Book

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307


See also: Jeremy Bentham 174 ■ Karl Marx 196–203 ■ Theodor Adorno 266–67 ■ Edgar Morin 338 ■
Niklas Luhmann 339 ■ Noam Chomsky 304–05 ■ Edward Said 321


CONTEMPORARY PHILOSOPHY


By establishing a public sphere, we
also open up more opportunities for
recognizing that we have interests
in common with other private
individuals—interests that the
state may fail to serve. This can
lead to questioning the actions of
the state. Habermas believes that
the growth of the public sphere
helped to trigger the French
Revolution in 1789.
The expansion of the public
sphere, from the 18th century
onward, has led to a growth of
democratically elected political
institutions, independent courts,
and bills of rights. But Habermas
believes that many of these brakes
on the arbitrary use of power are
now under threat. Newspapers, for
example, can offer opportunities
for reasoned dialogue between
private individuals, but if the press
is controlled by large corporations,
such opportunities may diminish.
Informed debate on issues of
substance is replaced with
celebrity gossip, and we are
transformed from critical, rational
agents into mindless consumers. ■


Jürgen Habermas Jürgen Habermas grew up in
Germany under the Nazi regime.
His realization that “we had been
living in a criminal system”,
following the Nuremburg trials
(1945–46), was to have a lasting
effect on his philosophy.
On completing his doctorate in
1954, he studied with members of
the Frankfurt School, including
Max Horkheimer and Theodor
Adorno. During the 1960s and
1970s, he lectured at universities
in Bonn and Gottingen. In 1982, he
became Professor of Philosophy at
the University at Frankfurt, where
he taught until his retirement in


  1. More recently, Habermas
    has himself taken an active role
    in the public sphere, entering
    into debates on Holocaust denial
    and global terrorism.


Key works

1962 The Structural
Transformation of the
Public Sphere
1981 The Theory of
Communicative Action
1985 The Philosophical
Discourse of Modernity
2005 Between Naturalism
and Religion

A society’s traditions are
not necessarily in the best
interests of individuals.

...builds
consensus.

Individuals need to be
able to question and
change these traditions.

They can do this by reasoningtogether
in the publicsphere, which...

Society is dependent upon a
criticism of its own traditions.

...brings about
change.

...strengthens
society.
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