Radical Philosophy Review

Volume 16, Issue 1, 2013

Critical Refusals, Part 1

Herbert Marcuse, Leo Löwenthal, Charles Reitz
Pages 21-23

The Dialectics of Liberation and Radical Activism
An Exchange of Letters between Herbert Marcuse and Leo Löwenthal

Warm regards are exchanged between old friends who are seriously bent on changing the world, not merely analyzing it. Mutual appreciation is evident, as is some tension. Herbert Marcuse’s militant critique of US war-making, waste-making, and poverty is taking Europe by storm. Leo Löwenthal tips his hat with subtle irony and humor to Marcuse’s 1967 triumphs as a public intellectual and political theorist. Activist students give Marcuse great credit because other Frankfurt theorists like Max Horkheimer and Theodor Adorno have remained aloof from this protest. Löwenthal remains more skeptical than Marcuse about the goals of the student movement, which seem to him too ideological and insufficiently radical.