In this volume Axel Honneth deepens and develops his highly
influential theory of recognition, showing how it enables us both
to rethink the concept of justice and to offer a compelling account
of the relationship between social reproduction and individual
identity formation.
Drawing on his reassessment of Hegel’s practical philosophy,
Honneth argues that our conception of social justice should be
redirected from a preoccupation with the principles of distributing
goods to a focus on the measures for creating symmetrical relations
of recognition. This theoretical reorientation has far-reaching
implications for the theory of justice, as it obliges this theory
to engage directly with problems concerning the organization of
work and with the ideologies that stabilize relations of
domination.
In the final part of this volume Honneth shows how the theory of
recognition provides a fruitful and illuminating way of exploring
the relation between social reproduction and identity formation.
Rather than seeing groups as regressive social forms that threaten
the autonomy of the individual, Honneth argues that the
‘I’ is dependent on forms of social recognition
embodied in groups, since neither self-respect nor self-esteem can
be maintained without the supportive experience of practising
shared values in the group.
This important new book by one of the leading social philosophers
of our time will be of great interest to students and scholars in
philosophy, sociology, politics and the humanities and social
sciences generally.
İçerik tablosu
Preface
I. Hegelian Roots
From Desire to Recognition: Hegel’s Grounding of
Self-Consciousness
The Realm of Actualized Freedom: Hegel’s Notion of a ‘Philosophy of
Right’
II. Systematic Consequences
The Fabric of Justice: On the Limits of Contemporary
Proceduralism
Labour and Recognition: A Redefinition
Recognition as Ideology: The Connection between Morality and
Power
Dissolutions of the Social: The Social Theory of Luc Boltanski and
Laurent Thévenot
Philosophy as Social Research: David Miller’s Theory of
Justice
III. Social and Theoretical Applications
Recognition between States: On the Moral Substrate of
International Relations
Organized Self-Realisation: Paradoxes of Individualisation
Paradoxes of Capitalist Modernisation: A Research Programme (with
Martin Hartmann)
IV. Psychoanalytical Ramifications
The Work of Negativity: A Recognition-Theoretical
Revision of Psychoanalysis
The I in the We: Recognition as a Driving Force of Group
Formation
Facets of the Presocial Self: A Rejoinder to Joel Whitebook
Disempowering Reality: Secular Forms of Consolation
Yazar hakkında
Axel Honneth is Professor of Philosophy at the Johann Wolfgang Goethe University, Frankfurt.