1st Edition

Communicative Reason A Sociological Restatement

By Patrick O'Mahony Copyright 2025
    392 Pages 2 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    The book examines philosophical and sociological approaches within critical theory and more widely from the vantage point of communicative reason. It seeks to revitalize the sociological dimension of critical theory by advancing a critical sociology of reason. It does so fully in the knowledge that reason is a contentious concept in sociology and other disciplines. Nonetheless, building on Habermas’s original insight, it argues that an extensively modified version of communicative reason is indispensable. This modified approach will draw extensively from Peirce’s pragmatist semiotics and critical cognitive sociology. Such a focus has significant implications for meta-theoretical, theoretical-empirical, and methodological approaches in critical theory, critical sociology, and related disciplines. This book will be of interest to readers in the social sciences, humanities, and philosophy who value the importance of a social theory of a reasonable society for their disciplines and for increasingly essential interdisciplinary activities. The book will also appeal to many in critical theory and beyond who are interested in the cognitive foundations of normative orders, including unjust or pathological as well as actually or potentially just foundations. The book emphasizes both validity and critique within communicative reason and critical theory and accordingly presents a distinctive perspective on critical-reconstructive research.

    List of Figures

    Preface

     

    Introduction

    Chapter 1: Habermas, Communicative Reason, and the Social Sciences

    Chapter 2: Sociology and Reason: General Considerations

    Chapter 3: Reason and the Reflexive Turn in Sociology

    Chapter 4: The State of Reason in Sociology

    Chapter 5: Peirce, Reason, and Signification

    Chapter 6: Reasoning and Schemata in a Societal Frame

    Chapter 7: Towards a Sign-Mediated Societal Ontology

    Chapter 8: Reason, Communication, and Validity

    Chapter 9: Validity, Schemata, and Reasoning on Moral-Political Issues

    Chapter 10: Reasoning and Validity Standards

    Chapter 11: Reason and Critique

    Chapter 12: Critique and Reasoning Pathologies

     

    Index

    Biography

    Patrick O’Mahony is Senior Lecturer in the School of Sociology and Philosophy at University College, Cork, Ireland. He is the author of The Contemporary Theory of the Public Sphere, the editor of Nature, Risk and Responsibility: Discourses of Biotechnology, the co-author of Rethinking Irish History: Nationalism, Identity and Ideology and Nationalism and Social Theory and the co-editor of Irish Environmental Politics after the Communicative Turn.