Habermas Commentary/Books/TCA2

Commentary on Jürgen Habermas, The Theory of Communicative Action, vol. 2: Lifeworld and System
copyright 1981 by Suhrkamp Verlag, Frankfurt am Main (Germany)
third corrected edition 1985
translated by Thomas McCarthy
published 1987 by Beacon Press (Boston)

Note that the first four headings, below, appear in volume 1:

Introduction: Approaches to the Problem of Rationality
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Max Weber's Theory of Rationalization
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Intermediate Reflections: Social Action, Purposive Activity, and Communication
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From Lukacs to Adorno: Rationalization as Reification
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Here, in volume 2:

The Paradigm Shift in Mead and Durkheim: From Purposive Activity to Communicative Action

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To enter the space reserved for detailed commentary pertaining to a page, click on the page number. A blue page number indicates the presence of detailed commentary for that page.


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The Foundations of Social Science in the Theory of Communication

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The Authority of the Sacred and the Normative Background of Communicative Action

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The Rational Structure of the Linguistification of the Sacred

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100 Henrich's distinction between identity and numerical identification.
101 Tugendhat and qualitative identification. Separation of ego-identity from identification of the individual.
102 Predictive self-identification.
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Intermediate Reflections: System and Lifeworld

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The Concept of the Lifeworld and the Hermeneutic Idealism of Interpretive Sociology

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The Uncoupling of System and Lifeworld

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Talcott Parsons: Problems in Constructing a Theory of Society

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From a Normativistic Theory of Action to a Systems Theory of Society

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The Development of Systems Theory

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The Theory of Modernity

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Concluding Reflections: From Parsons via Weber to Marx

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A Backward Glance: Weber's Theory of Modernity

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Marx and the Thesis of Internal Colonization

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The Tasks of a Critical Theory of Society

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