Description

Book Synopsis
There is no normative concept more appealing today than the idea of individual freedom. Political party manifestos are drawn up, legal reforms are defended, military interventions are undertaken, even decisions in personal relationships are justified – all in the name of individual freedom. But our understanding of freedom is impoverished if we try to grasp its essence merely in terms of the subjective rights of the individual.

In his new book, Axel Honneth shows that we still have a lot to learn from the tradition of philosophy about a rational concept of freedom. Honneth begins by re-examining the work of Hegel and Marx in order to clarify the concept of freedom. He then explores various social problem areas in which the ideals of freedom are directly confronted by contemporary obstacles. Honneth ends by examining potential forces which could give new impetus to our struggle for freedom.

This new book by one of the leading social and political philosophers writing today will be of great interest to students and scholars of philosophy, political theory, social theory, and the social sciences and humanities generally.

Trade Review
“This collection of superbly translated essays demonstrates once again that Axel Honneth is not only an academic philosopher of the first rank but also a public intellectual of international significance. The astounding range of essays included here – on topics from the contradictions in our understanding of childhood to the history of European solidarity to the relation between education and democracy – will be of supreme interest to philosophers and non-philosophers alike who have some inkling of the poverty of both our dominant conceptions of freedom and of the social institutions that are grounded in them.”
Frederick Neuhouser, Barnard College, Columbia University

“These powerful and incisive essays are a major contribution to the contemporary struggle against fetishized conceptions of individual freedom. Their relevance in a world trying desperately to escape the impasse of neoliberalism is clear.”
Raymond Geuss, Professor (Emeritus), University of Cambridge

Table of Contents
Acknowledgements

Preface



Part I: Forms of Social Freedom



1. The Depths of Recognition

The legacy of Jean-Jacques Rousseau



2. On the Poverty of Our Freedom

Relevance and limits of the Hegelian ethical system



3. The Normativity of Ethical Life



4. Hegel and Marx

A reassessment after one century



5. Economy or Society?

The greatness and limits of Marx’s theory of capitalism



6. Three, Not Two Concepts of Liberty

A proposal to enlarge our moral self-understanding



Part II: Deformations of Social Freedom



7. The Diseases of Society

Approaching a nearly impossible concept



8. Education and the Democratic Public Sphere

A neglected chapter of political philosophy



9. Democracy and the Division of Labour

A blind spot in political philosophy



10. Childhood

Inconsistencies in our liberal imagination



Part III. Sources of Social Freedom


11. Denaturalizations of the Lifeworld

On the threefold use of the humanities



12. Is There an Emancipatory Interest?

An attempt to answer critical theory's most fundamental question



13. A History of Moral Self-Correction

Tracing European solidarity



Notes

Index

The Poverty of Our Freedom: Essays 2012 - 2019

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    A Paperback / softback by Axel Honneth

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      View other formats and editions of The Poverty of Our Freedom: Essays 2012 - 2019 by Axel Honneth

      Publisher: John Wiley and Sons Ltd
      Publication Date: 30/06/2023
      ISBN13: 9781509556335, 978-1509556335
      ISBN10: 1509556338
      Also in:
      Philosophy

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      There is no normative concept more appealing today than the idea of individual freedom. Political party manifestos are drawn up, legal reforms are defended, military interventions are undertaken, even decisions in personal relationships are justified – all in the name of individual freedom. But our understanding of freedom is impoverished if we try to grasp its essence merely in terms of the subjective rights of the individual.

      In his new book, Axel Honneth shows that we still have a lot to learn from the tradition of philosophy about a rational concept of freedom. Honneth begins by re-examining the work of Hegel and Marx in order to clarify the concept of freedom. He then explores various social problem areas in which the ideals of freedom are directly confronted by contemporary obstacles. Honneth ends by examining potential forces which could give new impetus to our struggle for freedom.

      This new book by one of the leading social and political philosophers writing today will be of great interest to students and scholars of philosophy, political theory, social theory, and the social sciences and humanities generally.

      Trade Review
      “This collection of superbly translated essays demonstrates once again that Axel Honneth is not only an academic philosopher of the first rank but also a public intellectual of international significance. The astounding range of essays included here – on topics from the contradictions in our understanding of childhood to the history of European solidarity to the relation between education and democracy – will be of supreme interest to philosophers and non-philosophers alike who have some inkling of the poverty of both our dominant conceptions of freedom and of the social institutions that are grounded in them.”
      Frederick Neuhouser, Barnard College, Columbia University

      “These powerful and incisive essays are a major contribution to the contemporary struggle against fetishized conceptions of individual freedom. Their relevance in a world trying desperately to escape the impasse of neoliberalism is clear.”
      Raymond Geuss, Professor (Emeritus), University of Cambridge

      Table of Contents
      Acknowledgements

      Preface



      Part I: Forms of Social Freedom



      1. The Depths of Recognition

      The legacy of Jean-Jacques Rousseau



      2. On the Poverty of Our Freedom

      Relevance and limits of the Hegelian ethical system



      3. The Normativity of Ethical Life



      4. Hegel and Marx

      A reassessment after one century



      5. Economy or Society?

      The greatness and limits of Marx’s theory of capitalism



      6. Three, Not Two Concepts of Liberty

      A proposal to enlarge our moral self-understanding



      Part II: Deformations of Social Freedom



      7. The Diseases of Society

      Approaching a nearly impossible concept



      8. Education and the Democratic Public Sphere

      A neglected chapter of political philosophy



      9. Democracy and the Division of Labour

      A blind spot in political philosophy



      10. Childhood

      Inconsistencies in our liberal imagination



      Part III. Sources of Social Freedom


      11. Denaturalizations of the Lifeworld

      On the threefold use of the humanities



      12. Is There an Emancipatory Interest?

      An attempt to answer critical theory's most fundamental question



      13. A History of Moral Self-Correction

      Tracing European solidarity



      Notes

      Index

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