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  1. Intersubjectivity and ecology: Habermas on natural history.Felix Kämper - forthcoming - Constellations.
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  • (1 other version)The problem of anthropocentrism and the human kind of personhood.Bennett Gilbert - forthcoming - Sage Journals: Philosophy and Social Criticism.
    Philosophy & Social Criticism, Ahead of Print. Neither of the seemingly straightforward approaches of retaining the human at the top of the hierarchy of beings and of flattening human personhood solves the question of non-human personhood. But the concept of personhood does have the resources to address this issue, if we take it as a kind of moral agency. The way that humans develop moral agency through their temporality, historicity and community must be mapped onto the personhood of animals, but (...)
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  • (1 other version)Bibliography: Jürgen Habermas: An international bibliography.James W. Goulding, Susan L. Kline & Cary J. Nederman - 1980 - Political Theory 8 (2):259-285.
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  • (1 other version)Jürgen Habermas: An International Bibliography.James W. Goulding, Susan L. Kline & Cary J. Nederman - 1980 - Political Theory 8 (2):259-285.
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  • Science, normativity and skill: Reviewing and renewing the anthropological basis of Critical Theory.Lenny Moss & Vida Pavesich - 2011 - Philosophy and Social Criticism 37 (2):139-165.
    The categories and contours of a normative social theory are prefigured by its ‘anthropological’ presuppositions. The discourse/communicative-theoretic basis of Habermasian theory was prefigured by a strong anthropological demarcation between an instrumentally structured realm of science, technology and labor versus a normatively structured realm of social interaction. An alternative anthropology, bolstered by current work in the empirical sciences, finds fundamental normative needs for orientation and ‘compensation’ also to be embedded in embodied material practices. An emerging anthropologically informed concept of skill that (...)
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  • Discourse Ethics and Nature.Angelika Krebs - 1997 - Environmental Values 6 (3):269-279.
    The question this paper examines is whether or not discourse ethics is an environmentally attractive moral theory. The answer reached is: no. For firstly, nature has nothing to gain from the discourse ethical shift from mono-logical moral reflection to discourse, as nature cannot partake in discourse. And secondly, nature (even sentient animal nature) has no socio-personal integrity, which, according to discourse ethics, it is the function of morality to protect. Discourse ethics is a thoroughly anthropocentric moral theory.
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  • Habermas and transcendental arguments: A reappraisal.Michael Power - 1993 - Philosophy of the Social Sciences 23 (1):26-49.
    Habermas's transcendentalism in Knowledge and Human Interests ( KHI) deserves to be reappraised for a number of reasons. Prevailing conceptions of strong transcendental arguments, which inform many of his critics, cannot be sustained. The analytic reception of Kant suggests a more modest role for them that is remarkably similar to Habermas's claims for the paradigm of rational reconstruction. Hence a reinterpretation of transcendentalism provides a new basis for establishing a continuity between his early and later work. Habermas's underlying argument structure (...)
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