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81. The Philosophical Review: Volume > 98 > Issue: 3
K. R. Dove Hegel's Ontology and the Theory of Historicity
... HISTORICITY. By HER­ BERT MARCUSE. Translated by Seyla Benhabib ... . "Marcuse began in Germany in the twenties by being something of a ... with a heavy sex interest. ..." Thus Allan Bloom on Marcuse's role in The ...
82. Radical Philosophy Review: Volume > 16 > Issue: 1
Imaculada Kangussu Marcuse on Phantasy
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This paper elucidates the role of phantasy in comprehending the “real world.” Drawing on Marcuse’s synthesis of the Freudian definition of phantasia—an intellectual capacity and psychic activity that maintains the highest degree of autonomy from reality—and the Kantian concept of imagination (Einbildungskraft), it uses the name “Brazil” to illustrate the phantasy of an earthly paradise.
...Marcuse on Phantasy ... .” Drawing on Marcuse’s synthesis of the Freudian definition of phantasia—an intellectual ... Marcuse on Phantasy Imaculada Kangussu ...
83. Techné: Research in Philosophy and Technology: Volume > 9 > Issue: 3
Andrew Feenberg Reply to Dahlstrom and Scharff
...’s and Robert Scharff’s comments on my book, Heidegger and Marcuse ... continues to influence Marcuse’s thought long after Heidegger I ... distinction—an apparent contradiction or confusion—third, that Marcuse ...
84. Radical Philosophy Review: Volume > 16 > Issue: 1
Contributors
.... He is coeditor (with W. Mark Cobb) of Herbert Marcuse: A ... Marcuse’s Heideggerian Marxism (University of Nebraska Press, 2005 ... and Democratic Vision: Herbert Marcuse and Recent Liberation Philosophies ...
85. Radical Philosophy Review: Volume > 16 > Issue: 2
Wolfgang Leo Maar Beyond and Within Actual Society: The Dialectics of Power and Liberation
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The materialist approach of One-Dimensional Man emerges in a later work in which Marcuse connects the notion of “new sensibility” to a “complex intermediary function of the intellect.” Revolutionary praxis “is not simply negation but contradiction,” and thus Marcuse’s “new idea of reason” constructs a liberating rationality upon a technological one. This is accomplished by moving from an abstract “concept” of possibility to the perception of possibility as a “social alternative.” Here I examine the “dialectical logic” of human rights, which critiques an unfree world and asserts itself as a political determinant dependent on the rupturing of established power.
... which Marcuse connects the notion of “new sensibility” to a “complex intermediary ... contradiction,” and thus Marcuse’s “new idea of reason” constructs a liberating rationality ... later work in which Marcuse connects the notion of “new ...
86. Graduate Faculty Philosophy Journal: Volume > 6 > Issue: 1
Herbert Marcuse, Frederick Olafson Heidegger’s Politics: An Interview
...Marcuse, Herbert ... 'S POLITICS: AN INTERVIEW WITH HERBERT MARCUSE BY FREDERICK OLAFSON* Olafson: Professor ... Marcuse, you are very widely known as a social philosopher and a Marxist; but I think ...
87. Philosophy Now: Volume > 99
Dharmender Dhillon Dave Chappelle’s Block Party
... to the critical theorist Herbert Marcuse (1888 ... ’. Marcuse: Father of the New Left As a German Jewish intellectual ... escaping the Third Reich, Marcuse settled in exile in ...
88. The Review of Metaphysics: Volume > 24 > Issue: 1
R. J. B. Herbert Marcuse: An Exposition and a Polemic
...Herbert Marcuse ... Although Marcuse has been lavishly praised and severely condemned, he has been ... Intyre was the ideal philosopher to write an intelligent critique of Marcuse. Mac ...
89. Proceedings of the American Catholic Philosophical Association: Volume > 64
Edward Papa Analytic Philosophy and the Question of Tolerance
... philosophers, however, concede this point. Herbert Marcuse, for example, criticizes ... tolerance as a socially destructive force. Marcuse’s argument should be taken seriously ... tolerance presented by Herbert Marcuse in an article entitled “Repressive Tolerance ...
90. Philosophy Research Archives: Volume > 9
Michael Chiarello The Philosophical Critique of Radicalism and Its Limits
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Too much rationalist social philosophy is polarized into radical and conservative factions, both seeking support for rival claims to intellectual authority. Moreover, each faction can raise what it sees as a valid critique of the other. To the uncommitted, this mutual critique presents a reductio ad absurdum of rationalism and invites violence and despair. The radicalist claim that a rationalist social philosophy is necessarily radical clashes with the conservative critique which sees radicalism demanding the impossible from reason. So the question is whether this radical controversy between opposing rationalisms is amenable to rational resolution.This question is addressed through an examinalion of three writers: two radicals, Jean-Paul Sartre, who presents a comprehensive rationalism, and Herbert Marcuse, whose rationalism is irrationally grounded and authoritarian, and a conservative, Karl Popper, whose critique of comprehensive rationalism is effective against Sartre’s view, but whose own concession to irrationaIism unwittingly supports Marcuse’s approach.Yet, if Popper’s approach can be improved by abandoning both polarization and the exclusion of all radicalism, then we may have a rational social philosophy of a new non-authoritarian sort. The prospects for such a new approach are considered in the last section.
...-Paul Sartre, who presents a comprehensive rationalism, and Herbert Marcuse, whose ... whose own concession to irrationaIism unwittingly supports Marcuse’s approach ... -Paul Sartre, who presents a comprehensive rationalism, and Herbert Marcuse, whose ...
91. Radical Philosophy Review: Volume > 16 > Issue: 1
Osha Neumann Who's Winning--Eros or Thanatos?: Eros and Civilization and the Death of Nature
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Freud speculated that the course all living beings travel from birth to death is determined by a contest between a life instinct (Eros) and a death instinct (Thanatos). He believed that instinctual repression required by civilization tended to strengthen Thanatos. Herbert Marcuse argued that civilization did not require quite as much repression as Freud assumed. This joyous suggestion was greeted with enthusiasm by the countercultural political movements of the 1960s. I ask whether Marcuse was overly optimistic, given the fact that humanity appears to be hell-bent on destroying itself due to its inability to deal with global warming.
... strengthen Thanatos. Herbert Marcuse argued that civilization did not require quite as ... enthusiasm by the countercultural political movements of the 1960s. I ask whether Marcuse ... Thanatos. Herbert Marcuse argued that civilization did not require ...
92. Heidegger Studies: Volume > 7
Thomas Regehly Übersicht über die "Heideggeriana" im Herbert Marcuse-Archiv der Stadt- und Universitätsbibliothek in Frankfurt am Main
...Übersicht über die "Heideggeriana" im Herbert Marcuse-Archiv der Stadt- und ... Ubersicht fiber die "Heideggeriana" im Herbert Marcuse-Archiv der ... " betitelten Text nennt Herbert Marcuse in unmittelbarem AnschluB an die zitierte ...
93. Radical Philosophy Review: Volume > 16 > Issue: 1
Mark O'Brien Marcuse and the Language of Power: The Unfair Discourse of "Fairness" in the Coalition Government's Policy Presentation
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This paper considers the political manipulation of language in the UK governmental fairness agenda. It employs Marcuse’s analytical notion of the suppression of the transitive meaning of “the word” within “the sentence.” Further to this it links the operationalizing of language with positivist and uncritical policy epistemologies used by the UK coalition government. Using this theoretical framework the paper draws out the two broad meanings of the term “fairness” used to legitimate public-sector cuts on the one hand, and by researchers concerned with issues of structural inequality on the other.
...Marcuse and the Language of Power ... governmental fairness agenda. It employs Marcuse’s analytical notion of the suppression of ... Marcuse and the Language of Power The ...
94. Radical Philosophy Review: Volume > 16 > Issue: 2
Contributors
... student of Herbert Marcuse, she is an internationally renowned ... and Democratic Vision: Herbert Marcuse and Recent Liberation Philosophies ... : 10.5840/radphilrev201316249 lection of essays on Marcuse; a ...
95. Radical Philosophy Review: Volume > 16 > Issue: 1
Richard J. Bernstein Marcuse's Critical Legacy
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My aim in this paper is to engage in three interrelated tasks. First, I want to take a sweeping look at the historical vicissitudes of the concept of critique—in a style similar to the way in which Marcuse treated key concepts in the 1930s and 1940s, for example, in his famous essay “The Concept of Essence.” Second, my sketch of the history of critique is oriented to exploring Marcuse’s famous essay “Philosophy and Critical Theory.” I believe that in this 1937 essay, Marcuse put his finger on the central problem of critical theory—a problem that concerned him for the rest of this life. Third, I want to explore the critical legacy of Marcuse—a critical legacy that is revealed in the way in which it treated and constantly returned to this central problem.
...Marcuse's Critical Legacy ... style similar to the way in which Marcuse treated key concepts in the 1930s and 1940 ... of the history of critique is oriented to exploring Marcuse’s famous essay ...
96. Radical Philosophy Review: Volume > 16 > Issue: 1
Tyson E. Lewis A Genealogy of Life and Death: From Freud to Marcuse to Agamben
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In this paper, Tyson E. Lewis theorizes an alternative genealogy of biopolitics that enables us to historicize three distinct phases of the dialectic of life and death within overall transformations of the social and material relations of production. Freud, Marcuse, and Agamben each signal decisive transformations from death to life, life to death, and now the indistinction of death and life in a state of exception. In conclusion, Lewis argues for a new politics that does not simply champion one concept over the other but rather dwells precariously in their mutual exhaustion.
...From Freud to Marcuse to Agamben ... production. Freud, Marcuse, and Agamben each signal decisive transformations from death ... A Genealogy of Life and Death From Freud to Marcuse to ...
97. Radical Philosophy Review: Volume > 16 > Issue: 2
Nathan Nun Practical Aesthetics: Community Gardens and the New Sensibility
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This paper argues that community gardens, in addition to being economically practical, offer a promising example of an environment that fosters the new sensibility. After exploring Marcuse’s new sensibility and his critique of aesthetic experience under capitalism, the paper turns to some empirical studies of the benefits of the aesthetic qualities of community gardening. These studies correspond to Marcuse’s proposition that aesthetic environments can play a role in challenging domination. The last section of this paper considers how those involved in the D-Town Farm in Detroit self-consciously assert the community garden as a political project that challenges domination.
.... After exploring Marcuse’s new sensibility and his critique of aesthetic experience ... aesthetic qualities of community gardening. These studies correspond to Marcuse ... fosters the new sensibility. After exploring Marcuse’s new ...
98. Radical Philosophy Review: Volume > 16 > Issue: 1
Christian Garland Negating That Which Negates Us: Marcuse, Critical Theory, and the New Politics of Refusal
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Marcuse’s thought is significant for the renewal of a critical theory with a basis in radical praxis or what can be defined as a politics of refusal: the negation of that which negates us. To be sure, refusal and resistance should not be mistaken as simply passive withdrawal or retreat but the active form of a radically different mode-of-being and mode-of-doing: Marcuse’s own definition of “the Great Refusal.” It is thus possible to speak of a negative ontology, and this paper—with extensive reference to Marcuse’s thought—will aim to be a small contribution to that project.
...Marcuse, Critical Theory, and the New Politics of Refusal ... Marcuse’s thought is significant for the renewal of a critical theory with a ... different mode-of-being and mode-of-doing: Marcuse’s own definition of “the Great ...
99. Techné: Research in Philosophy and Technology: Volume > 9 > Issue: 3
Robert C. Scharff Feenberg on Marcuse: “Redeeming” Technological Culture
...Feenberg on Marcuse ... , “Redeeming” Technological Culture/62 Feenberg on Marcuse ... University of New Hampshire In his new book, Heidegger and Marcuse ...
100. Listening: Volume > 8 > Issue: 1/2/3
Thomas Ferguson Herbert Marcuse's "On the Question of Reform or Revolution": An Introductory Note
...Herbert Marcuse's "On the Question of Reform or Revolution": An Introductory ... AN INTERVIEW Herbert Marcuse^s ^^On the Question of Reform or ... The remarks that follow by Herbert Marcuse are excerpted from ...