1st Edition
The Foundations of Postmetaphysical Thinking Habermas and the History of Philosophy, Volume I
Preface: Setting the Postmetaphysical Scene
I. Towards a Genealogy of Postmetaphysical Thinking
a. Religion and Theology
b. Practical Reason
c. The Human and Social Sciences
d. The Historical Standpoint
Summary
1. Crisis and Decline in Twentieth-Century Thought
2. Religion and Society
a. The Missionary Expansion of the Major World Religions
b. The Fundamentalist Radicalization of World Religion
c. Postmodern Forms of Religiosity
d. The Political Instrumentalization of Potentials for Violence
Further Reflections on Religion
3. The Unfolding of Postmetaphysical Thinking: From ‘the Particular’ to ‘the Universal’ (and back again)
4. Social Theory and Postmetaphysical Thinking: Human Development as a Learning Process
a. Co-Existence through Social Integration and Social Evolution
b. The Transformation of World Pictures and its Consequences
c. From World Pictures to the Lifeworld: Towards a Pragmatics of Language
II. Unearthing the Sacred Roots of the Axial Traditions
1. Cognitive Breakthrough and Preservation of the Sacred Core
a. Cognitive Achievements of the Axial Age
b. The Distinctiveness of Religion
c. Towards a Critical Theory of Religion
2. The Origins of Language and the Socio-Cultural Form of Life
III. Remarks on World Pictures in the Axial Age
Habermas’s First Intermediate Reflection: Conceptual Directions of the Axial Age
a. The Emergence, Development, and Transformation of World Pictures
b. The Socio-Ontological Centrality of the Lifeworld
i. The Lifeworld and the Preponderance of the Performative
ii. Illocutionary and Perlocutionary Acts
iii. Between Lifeworld, Objective World, and Everyday Worldc. The ‘Big Picture’ of World Pictures
d. The (Pre)Cosmopolitan Spirit of the Axial Age
IV. The Symbiosis of Faith and Knowledge in Christian Platonism and the Emergence of the Roman Catholic Church
Summary
V. The Progressive Differentiation of Sacerdotium and Regnum in Christian Europe
VI. The Path towards Modernity: Scientific, Religious, and Socio-Political Dimensions
VII. Towards the Separation of Faith and Knowledge: The Rise of Protestantism and Philosophy of the Subject
Summary
Biography
Simon Susen is Professor of Sociology at City St George’s, University of London. He is Associate Member of the Bauman Institute and, together with Bryan S. Turner, Editor of the Journal of Classical Sociology.
‘At an age when many devote themselves to writing their memoirs, Jürgen Habermas undertook the formidable task of retracing the history of Western philosophy. He did so not as a detached scholar but, rather, as a way of engaging with the vast intellectual edifice he himself had built and of situating it within that broader history. For us, as sociologists, there remained an urgent need for the rigorous and authoritative work that Simon Susen now provides – one that repositions this history of philosophy not only within the Habermasian corpus but also within the landscape of the contemporary social sciences. Only Simon Susen’s intellectual boldness and wide-ranging expertise could meet this challenge, bridging the widening gulf within our disciplines between philosophy, social theory, and empirical research.’
Luc Boltanski, Directeur d’études, École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales, Paris, France
‘Simon Susen’s comprehensive and deeply thoughtful engagement with Jürgen Habermas’s magnum opus, Also a History of Philosophy, is far more than a commentary on an important work of contemporary critical thought. In unpacking Habermas’s project, Susen offers an engrossing and incisive reflection on the intellectual legacies we inherit – and on the ways in which they shape our self-understanding as moderns.’Simone Chambers, Professor of Political Science, University of California, Irvine, USA
‘A welcome and important book. Simon Susen offers the clearest account available in English of Habermas’s views – not only on the history of philosophy but also on modernity, the relationship between faith and knowledge, and the future of freedom and the Enlightenment project. Perhaps the pre-eminent thinker of our era, Habermas has engaged with both public affairs and the most profound intellectual questions for more than 70 years. Most scholars who believe they understand his perspective have dipped only into one earlier phase of his work; Susen sheds light on the whole.’Craig Calhoun, University Professor of Social Sciences, Arizona State University, USA
‘This superb book combines a meticulous and very readable summary of Habermas's Auch eine Geschichte der Philosophie with a comprehensive presentation of constructive critical comments. The summary part draws a number of connections which are not explicit in Habermas's text or are lost in the details of his argument, while the critical comments should shape subsequent discussions on the relationship between faith and knowledge.’William Outhwaite, Emeritus Professor of Sociology, Newcastle University, UK






