Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Theory caught up in dialectics: Some reflections on Asger Sørensen’s capitalism, alienation and critique
View through CrossRef
This paper presents three interconnected examinations of Asger S?rensen?s
arguments in Capitalism, Alienation and Critique, which thematize S?rensen?s
overarching understanding of the relationship between theory and practice:
his general methodological perspective on critical theory, its distinctive
epistemology and its anchoring in the empirical world. The paper authors
each try to push S?rensen on these crucial points by considering how
S?rensen?s variant of critical theory actually operates, scrutinizing in
more detail the particular relationship between the ?experience of
injustice?, which for S?rensen constitutes the empirical foothold for
critical theory, and the theoretical diagnosis of social reality which the
critical theorist should formulate against the backdrop of this experience.
National Library of Serbia
Title: Theory caught up in dialectics: Some reflections on Asger Sørensen’s capitalism, alienation and critique
Description:
This paper presents three interconnected examinations of Asger S?rensen?s
arguments in Capitalism, Alienation and Critique, which thematize S?rensen?s
overarching understanding of the relationship between theory and practice:
his general methodological perspective on critical theory, its distinctive
epistemology and its anchoring in the empirical world.
The paper authors
each try to push S?rensen on these crucial points by considering how
S?rensen?s variant of critical theory actually operates, scrutinizing in
more detail the particular relationship between the ?experience of
injustice?, which for S?rensen constitutes the empirical foothold for
critical theory, and the theoretical diagnosis of social reality which the
critical theorist should formulate against the backdrop of this experience.
Related Results
From Horkheimer to Honneth and back again: A comment on Asger Sørensen’s capitalism, alienation and critique
From Horkheimer to Honneth and back again: A comment on Asger Sørensen’s capitalism, alienation and critique
This article comments on Asger Sørensen’s stimulating book “Capitalism, Alienation and Critique”. The article argues that Sørensen overlooks an important methodological contiunuity...
Critical theory and the future of humanity: A reply to Asger Sørensen
Critical theory and the future of humanity: A reply to Asger Sørensen
The article entails a critical discussion of the book Capitalism, Alienation and Critique by Asger Sørensen. Like Sørensen’s book, it stresses the importance of the first generatio...
Game Theory in Business Ethics: Bad Ideology or Bad Press?
Game Theory in Business Ethics: Bad Ideology or Bad Press?
Solomon’s article and Binmore’s response exemplify a standard exchange between the game theorist and those critical of applying game theory to ethics. The critic of game theory lis...
Feminism, capitalism and the cunning of history
Feminism, capitalism and the cunning of history
Building on historical narrative and social-theoretical analysis, Fraser explores the place of second-wave feminism in relation to three specific moments in the history of capitali...
Compulsory Creativity: A Critique of Cognitive Capitalism
Compulsory Creativity: A Critique of Cognitive Capitalism
Contemporary capitalism can be labelled cognitive capitalism. In this dynamic, demanding and extremely transformative mode of production, knowledge becomes a strategic force of pro...
Sørensen’s Bataille: Notes on the ‘apolitical’
Sørensen’s Bataille: Notes on the ‘apolitical’
In Capitalism, Alienation and Critique, part of the development of Asger
S?rensen?s overall argument is a disagreement with Georges Bataille. The
crux of the argument is that...
La narrativité critique
La narrativité critique
Cet article veut envisager la narrativité critique du double point de vue de la composante narrative de la critique littéraire et de la dimension critique du récit. Au moyen d'exem...
Dialectics of leadership
Dialectics of leadership
Mainstream leadership studies tend to privilege and separate leaders from followers. This article highlights the value of rethinking leadership as a set of dialectical relationship...