David M. Rasmussen

This is a database entry with public information about a philosopher who is not a registered user of PhilPeople.
  •  1
    Gadamer at 100
    Philosophy and Social Criticism 28 (5): 491-522. 2002.
  •  1
    Paul Ricoeur
    Philosophy and Social Criticism 33 (1): 5. 2007.
  •  50
    Preserving the Eidetic Moment: A Contribution of Phenomenology to Critical Theory
    Telos: Critical Theory of the Contemporary 2008 (145): 177-191. 2008.
    Phenomenology and Critical Theory sprang from the same historical root, namely, eighteenth- and nineteenth-century Enlightenment and post-Enlightenment thought. In my Handbook of Critical Theory,1 I traced the development of Critical Theory from its Hegelian and Marxist origins to its manifestation in the first and second generations of the so-called Frankfurt School. Although I won't do the same for phenomenology here, it is worth noting that the two traditions, phenomenology and Critical Theor…Read more
  •  30
    Habermas II (edited book)
    SAGE. 2010.
    v. 1. The engagement with postmodernity and phenomenology. Hermeneutics and epistemology. Metaphysics -- v. 2. Normativity and reason. Discourse ethics -- v. 3. Law, democracy, and the public sphere. Cosmopolitanism and the nation state -- v. 4. Habermas and psychology. Habermas and bioethics. Habermas and feminism. Aesthetics. Habermas and religion. Habermas and science.
  •  69
    Reading Habermas
    Philosophical Quarterly 42 (166): 129. 1992.
    In the past decade the work of Jurgen Habermas has sparked off a series of lively debates over modernity and post-modernity, the nature of language, the interplay of law and politics and the dilemmas of morality. Significantly, these debates unfold in the context of his particular reading of the modern philosophical tradition from the German enlightment to the present period. In this original interpretation, David Rasmussen provides both guide and critique to the later Habermas encountered in th…Read more
  •  72
    Violent Islamism beyond borders: Can human rights prevail?
    with Volker Kaul and Alessandro Ferrara
    Philosophy and Social Criticism 42 (4-5): 363-374. 2016.
    The argument that sectarian conflicts in the Arab Middle East have been persistent since time immemorial is erroneous. While these views may seem compelling with the rise of ISIL, they are in fact very dangerous: they downgrade Islamic societies to primordial, selective and static features. I will argue for a different set of propositions. First, violence is not unique to Islamic societies. Extreme illiberal ideologies prevailed in Christian Europe both during the Thirty Years War and during the…Read more
  •  236
    This article problematizes the republican reliance on contemporary ‘states as they are’ as protectors and guarantors of the republican notion of freedom as non-domination. While the principle of freedom as non-domination constitutes an advance over the liberal principle of freedom as non-interference, its reliance on the national, territorial, legal-technical and extra-economic contemporary state prevents the theoretical uncovering of its full potential. The article argues that to make the most …Read more
  •  141
    The right to politics and republican non-domination
    with Volker Kaul and Alessandro Ferrara
    Philosophy and Social Criticism 42 (4-5): 465-475. 2016.
    Against pronouncements of the recent demise of both democracy and the political, I maintain that there is, rather, something amiss with the process of politicization in which social grievances are translated into matters of political concern and become objects of policy-making. I therefore propose to seek an antidote to the de-politicizing tendencies of our age by reanimating the mechanism that transmits social conflicts and grievances into politics. To that purpose, I formulate the notion of a …Read more
  •  75
    The Kurdish struggle and the crisis of the Turkishness Contract
    with Volker Kaul and Alessandro Ferrara
    Philosophy and Social Criticism 42 (4-5): 397-405. 2016.
    In this article, inspired by Whiteness Studies, I propose two concepts that allow us to see the question of ethnicity as well as the history of the Turkish Republic through the lens of privilege: Turkishness and the Turkishness Contract. By Turkishness, I mean a patterned but mostly unrecognized relationship between Turkish individuals’ ethnic position and their ways of seeing, hearing, feeling and knowing – as well as not seeing, not hearing, not feeling and not knowing. These ways and states o…Read more
  •  68
    The long crisis of the nation-state and the rise of religions to the public stage
    with Volker Kaul and Alessandro Ferrara
    Philosophy and Social Criticism 42 (4-5): 351-356. 2016.
    The aim of this article is to identify the main factors of the current crisis of the nation-state and to demonstrate how many of the voids left by this crisis are filled by religions. The main characteristic of the nation-state is the principle of sovereignty. The apogee of the nation-state is the political form of industrialization. National identity is possible only when the state proves to its citizens that the fact of being a member of it carries benefits and privileges and will always bring…Read more
  •  137
    Towards Critical Cultural Theory (Editorial Statement)
    Philosophy and Social Criticism 1 (1): 1-2. 1973.
  •  55
    Two cheers for the impunity norm
    with Volker Kaul and Alessandro Ferrara
    Philosophy and Social Criticism 42 (4-5): 487-499. 2016.
    International criminal law is dedicated to the battle against impunity. However, the concept of impunity lacks clarity. Providing that clarity also reveals challenges for the current state and future prospects of the project of ICL, which this article frames in cosmopolitan terms. The ‘impunity norm’ of ICL is generally presented in a deontic form. It holds that impunity for perpetrators of international crimes is a wrong so profound that states and international bodies have a pro tanto duty to …Read more
  •  46
    The crisis of the republican model and its religious outcomes: A case study of the Great Middle East
    with Volker Kaul and Alessandro Ferrara
    Philosophy and Social Criticism 42 (4-5): 375-385. 2016.
    There is a necessity to build a new republican regime in the Great Middle East, based on a broad sense of citizenship, on a respect for pluralism, and on re-evaluating difference as a positive element rather than as a threat. However, this re-building will succeed only when it is accompanied by a restoration of the religious space. The reformist national model is the best and most appropriate model for real situations within the current historical period. It is a model that is able to develop ac…Read more
  •  60
    States and communities competing for global power
    with Volker Kaul and Alessandro Ferrara
    Philosophy and Social Criticism 42 (4-5): 386-396. 2016.
    The question of immigration and its corollary community and minority formation has always been analysed in relation to states. However, the increasing importance of solidarity beyond national borders on the grounds of one or several identities – national, religious, ethnic, regional – removes the claim of recognition of a collective identity from a national level to an international level and, in the European Union, to a supranational level. Such an evolution places territory at the core of the …Read more
  •  54
    Rawls, Religion, and the Clash of Civilizations
    Télos 2014 (167): 107-125. 2014.
    In this essay I deal with two conceptions of the political—one that entails a clash of civilizations associated with an Schmittian critique of liberalism, and a second that envisions the political as an emerging domain in relationship to the idea of overlapping consensus. The discovery of the emerging domain of the political in the later work of John Rawls separates the comprehensive from the political in a way that breaks the link between modernization and secularization. In so doing Rawls acco…Read more
  •  56
    ‘République and laïcité’: What is at stake in contemporary France?
    with Volker Kaul and Alessandro Ferrara
    Philosophy and Social Criticism 42 (4-5): 440-447. 2016.
    How should one define the republican democratic and ‘laïque’ spirit in both the most concise and effective manner, as well as that most suited to the French case? The republican spirit resides without doubt in refusing submission to any single individual whoever that individual may be. The democratic spirit does not consist of decreeing the sovereignty of the people, but in developing formal modalities of political life allowing the people not to be divested of it. The ‘laïque’ spirit rejects al…Read more
  •  87
    Republican conception of liberty in early republican Turkey and its contemporary implications
    with Volker Kaul and Alessandro Ferrara
    Philosophy and Social Criticism 42 (4-5): 429-439. 2016.
    Established in 1923, Turkey has been a republic without a dominant republican conception of liberty. A chance to install such a conception was missed in the early republican period and never recaptured. The republic was unable to get rid of vestiges of the authoritarian tradition of the past. Centuries-old authoritarian tradition persisted well into the recent and the contemporary periods. Presenting ample evidence, the article underlines the weight of history and the legacy of authoritarian men…Read more
  •  117
    Preserving the eidetic moment:Reflections on the work of Paul Ricoeur
    Research in Phenomenology 37 (2): 195-202. 2007.
    The paper argues that Paul Ricoeur's The Philosophy of the Will retained a certain fidelity to phenomenology's early emphasis on subjectivity. When Ricoeur turned to the philosophy of language, he found a way to retain a certain emphasis on subjectivity and individuality that would make his work distinctive among other approaches to the philosophy of language. Hence, the title, Preserving the Eidetic Moment, intends to characterize Ricoeur's distinctive contribution to philosophy. The paper goes…Read more
  •  185
    Moral Consciousness and Communicative Action
    Philosophical Quarterly 43 (173): 571. 1993.
    This long-awaited book sets out the implications of Habermas's theory of communicative action for moral theory. "Discourse ethics" attempts to reconstruct a moral point of view from which normative claims can be impartially judged. The theory of justice it develops replaces Kant's categorical imperative with a procedure of justification based on reasoned agreement among participants in practical discourse.Habermas connects communicative ethics to the theory of social action via an examination of…Read more
  •  59
    Legitimacy, sovereignty, solidarity and cosmopolitanism (review)
    Philosophy and Social Criticism 40 (1): 13-18. 2014.
  •  267
    How is valid law possible?: A review of faktizität und geltung by Jürgen Habermas (review)
    Philosophy and Social Criticism 20 (4): 21-44. 1994.
  •  85
    Digital spaces, public places and communicative power: In defense of deliberative democracy
    with Volker Kaul and Alessandro Ferrara
    Philosophy and Social Criticism 42 (4-5): 476-486. 2016.
    The deliberative model of politics has recently been criticized for not being very well equipped to conceptualize current developments such as the misinterpretation of political difference, the digital turn, and public protests. A first critique is that this model assumes a conception of public spheres that is too idealistic. A second objection is that it misconceives the relationship between empirical reality and normativity. Third, it is assumed that deliberative democracy offers an antiquated…Read more
  •  67
    Cultural pluralism?
    with Volker Kaul and Alessandro Ferrara
    Philosophy and Social Criticism 42 (4-5): 448-455. 2016.
    This article is an analysis of the ideological production of the idea of cultural pluralism. It points at the impossibility of inhabiting two or more civil societies at once. It points at the fact that culture alive cannot be accessed. It recommends attention to the ungeneralizable huge subaltern populations of the world that often also constitute an electorate. It recommends linguistic rather than cultural pluralism and a nurturing of the understanding of the right to intellectual labor in educ…Read more
  •  61
    Communicative Action and the Fate of Modernity
    Theory, Culture and Society 2 (3): 133-144. 1985.
  •  132
    Between Autonomy and Sociality
    Philosophy and Social Criticism 1 (1): 3-45. 1973.
  •  155
  •  47
    The Narrative path: the later works of Paul Ricoeur (edited book)
    with T. Peter Kemp
    MIT Press. 1988.
    This book provides a perceptive analysis of the "narrative turn" that led Paul Ricoeur to his magisterial work Time and Narrative. Ricoeur has for many years explored the intersections of diverse strands of European philosophy, but it is his recent work that has attracted the most discussion and engendered the most debate in Europe and America. The Narrative Path explores the roots and meaning of that work. Two of the book's five essays reach back to Ricoeur's earlier work to clarify his themes:…Read more