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Gordon Finlayson

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  • All publications (22)
  • Critical Theory and Practical Philosophy: On the Normative Credentials of Frankfurt School Social Criticism
    In Brian Leiter & Michael Rosen (eds.), The Oxford handbook of continental philosophy, Oxford University Press. 2007.
  • Critical Theory and Practical Philosophy: On the Normative Credentials of Frankfurt School Social Criticism
    In Brian Leiter & Michael Rosen (eds.), The Oxford handbook of continental philosophy, Oxford University Press. 2007.
  • The Politics of Time: Modernity and Avant-Garde (review)
    Radical Philosophy 85. 1997.
  •  182
    Where the right gets in. On Rawl's criticism of Habermas's conception of legitimacy
    Many commentators have failed to identify the important issues at the heart of the debate between Habermas and Rawls. This is partly because they give undue attention to differences between their respective devices of representation, the original position and principle, neither of which are germane to the actual dispute. The dispute is at bottom about how best to conceive of democratic legitimacy. Rawls indicates where the dividing issues lie when he objects that Habermas’s account of democratic…Read more
    Many commentators have failed to identify the important issues at the heart of the debate between Habermas and Rawls. This is partly because they give undue attention to differences between their respective devices of representation, the original position and principle, neither of which are germane to the actual dispute. The dispute is at bottom about how best to conceive of democratic legitimacy. Rawls indicates where the dividing issues lie when he objects that Habermas’s account of democratic legitimacy is comprehensive and his is confined to the political. But his argument is vitiated by a threefold ambiguity in what he means by “comprehensive doctrine.” Tidying up this ambiguity helps reveal that the dispute turns on the way in which morality relates to political legitimacy. Although Habermas calls his conception of legitimate law “morally freestanding”, and as such distinguishes it from Kantian and Natural Law accounts of legitimacy, it is not as freestanding from morality as he likes to present it. Habermas’s mature theory contains conflicting claims about relation between morality and democratic legitimacy. So there is at least one important sense in which Rawls's charge of comprehensiveness is made to stick againstHabermas’s conception of democratic legitimacy, and remains unanswered
    John RawlsPolitical Legitimacy
  •  39
    Robert R Williams, Recognition: Fichte and Hegel on the Other, Albany: SUNY Press, 1991, pp 352, Hb $59.50, Pb $19.95
    Hegel Bulletin 14 (1-2): 47-50. 1993.
  • Peter Osborne, The Politics of Time: Modernity and Avant-Garde
    Radical Philosophy. forthcoming.
  •  1
    Schelling and Modern European Philosophy (review)
    Radical Philosophy 72. 1995.
    Friedrich Schelling
  • R R Williams's Recognition: Fichte & Hegel On The Other (review)
    Bulletin of the Hegel Society of Great Britain 27 47-50. 1993.
    G. W. F. Hegel
  • R B Pippin's Modernism As A Philosophical Problem (review)
    Bulletin of the Hegel Society of Great Britain 25 64-69. 1992.
    G. W. F. Hegel
  •  51
    Robert B Pippin, Modernism as a Philosophical Problem, Oxford: Basil Blackwell, 1991, pp viii + 218, Pb £10.95
    Hegel Bulletin 13 (1): 64-69. 1992.
  •  4
    On Peter Gordon’s Adorno and Existence
    Adorno Studies 2 (1): 56-63. 2018.
    Gordon Finlayson's response to Peter Gordon’s Adorno and Existence.
  • Naming, myth and history: Berlin after the Wall
    Radical Philosophy 74. 1995.
    Social and Political Philosophy
  •  52
    Does Hegel's Critique of Kant's Moral Theory Apply to Discourse Ethics?
    Hegel Bulletin 19 (1-2): 17-34. 1998.
    Several years ago Jürgen Habermas wrote a short answer to the question: “Does Hegel's Critique of Kant apply to Discourse Ethics?” The gist of his short answer is, “no”. Insofar as Hegel's criticisms of the formalism and abstract universalism of the moral law never even applied to Kant's moral theory in the first place, they also fail to apply to discourse ethics. Insofar as Hegel's criticisms of the rigorism of the moral law and of Kant's conception of autonomy do hit the mark, discourse ethics…Read more
    Several years ago Jürgen Habermas wrote a short answer to the question: “Does Hegel's Critique of Kant apply to Discourse Ethics?” The gist of his short answer is, “no”. Insofar as Hegel's criticisms of the formalism and abstract universalism of the moral law never even applied to Kant's moral theory in the first place, they also fail to apply to discourse ethics. Insofar as Hegel's criticisms of the rigorism of the moral law and of Kant's conception of autonomy do hit the mark, discourse ethics successfully draws their sting by reconceiving Kant's moral standpoint along the following lines. 1. Kant wrongly undertakes to establish the moral law as a “fact of reason”: discourse ethics derives the moral standpoint from two premises — one formal, a rationally reconstructed logic of argumentation, and one material, namely our intuitions about how to justify utterances. 2. Kant wrongly contends that we must be able to think of ourselves as both intelligible characters, inhabiting a noumenal world, and as empirical characters inhabiting the world of appearances: discourse ethics allows that in everyday contexts of action and in the context of moral discourse we have one character that has real needs and interests. 3. Kant is also mistaken in arguing that moral autonomy requires human beings to abstract away from their needs and interests and to will universalizable maxims for the sake of their universal form: discourse ethics understands moral autonomy to consist in the free adoption of a standpoint from which conflicts of interest can be impartially regulated, by giving special weight to the satisfaction of universalizable interests. 4. Kant misconceives the categorical imperative as an objective test of universalizability that is applied by individual wills in isolation: discourse ethics reconceives the moral universalism as an ideal of intersubjective agreement of participants in discourse. On the differences between the principles of discourse ethics and Kant's categorical imperative Habermas is wont to cite McCarthy's summary of his — Habermas' — position: “Rather than ascribing as valid to all others any maxim that I can will to be a universal law, I must submit my maxim to all others for the purposes of discursively testing its claim to universality. The emphasis shifts from what each can will without contradiction to be a general law, to what all can will in agreement to be a universal norm”.
  •  1
    M Quant's Hegel's Begriff Der Handlung (review)
    Bulletin of the Hegel Society of Great Britain 32 47-52. 1995.
    G. W. F. Hegel
  •  40
    Michael Quante, Hegels Begriff der Handlung, Stuttgart-Bad Cannstaat: Frommann-Holzboog, 1993, pp 262, DM110
    Hegel Bulletin 16 (2): 47-52. 1995.
  • Conference Report: Hegel and contemporary ethics
    Radical Philosophy 87. 1998.
  • Does Hegel's Critique Of Kant's Moral Philosophy Apply To Discourse Ethics?
    Bulletin of the Hegel Society of Great Britain 37 17-34. 1998.
    G. W. F. Hegel
  •  2
    'Political Moral and Critical Theory. On the Practical Philosophy of the Frankfurt School'
    In Brian Leiter & Michael Rosen (eds.), The Oxford handbook of continental philosophy, Oxford University Press. 2007.
    20th Century German PhilosophyTheodor W. Adorno
  •  2
    Conference Report: The Spirit of Postmodernism ; Rethinking Critical Theory ; Maurice Blanchot
    with Michael Reid and John Lechte
    Radical Philosophy 64. 1993.
  • Conference Report: British Society for Phenomenology, Oxford, 15-17 April 1994; Foucault Conference, London, 25 June 1994 (review)
    with Jane Chamberlain
    Radical Philosophy 68. 1994.
  • Conference Report: Marxism 93, London, 1993; Modernism: Poetics, Politics, Practice, King’s College, Cambridge, 1993
    Radical Philosophy 66. 1994.
  • Andrew Bowie, Schelling and Modern European Philosophy
    Radical Philosophy. forthcoming.
    Friedrich Schelling
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