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Sociobiophysicality, Cold War, and Critical Theor y: Human-Ecological Transformation and Contemporary Ecological Subjectivity

01 Jan 2013-
TL;DR: Lukacs as mentioned in this paper pointed out that the problem of why and with what justification we should view this human-created world as constitutive of human reason never arises, and pointed out the connection between the fundamental problems of this philosophy and the basis in existence from which these problems spring.
Abstract: forms of life characteristic of its (capitalist) context, while remaining bound to the immediacy of the forms of appearance of that context” (Postone, 2002: 79). Regarding modern Western science, Lukacs asserts: The more highly developed it [modern science] becomes and the more scientific, the more it will become a formally closed system of partial laws. It will then find that the world lying beyond its confines, and in particular the material base which it is its task to understand, its own concrete underlying reality lies, methodologically and in principle, beyond its grasp. (Lukacs, 1971 [1923]: 104) Lukacs here criticizes the economist Tugan-Baranovsky’s attempts to explain production in purely quantitative terms. The formalism of bourgeois thought, according to Lukacs, has political implications: The reified world appears henceforth quite definitively—and in philosophy, under the spotlight of ‘criticism it is potentiated still further—as the only possible world, the only conceptually accessible, comprehensible world vouchsafed for us humans (...) By confining itself to the study of the ‘possible conditions’ of the validity of the forms in which its underlying existence is manifested, modern bourgeois thought bars its own way to a clear view of the problems bearing on the birth and death of these forms, and on their real essence and substratum. (Lukacs, 1971 [1923]: 110) Lukacs then works through the antinomies of bourgeois thought, as indicated by the problems and contradictions of modern Western philosophy. Here Lukacs focuses on Kant’s concept of the thing-in-itself and the more general notion that the world can be known to us to the degree to which it is created by us. Lukacs (1971 [1923]: 112) regards the latter as the defining problem of modern Western philosophy. However, Lukacs is not simply interested in the intellectual history of Western philosophy. Rather, his aim is to 90 Tugan-Baranovsky’s student, Nikolai Kondratiev, would later become well known for his theory of longterm cycles of economic expansion and contraction. It is interesting to note here the connection to Arrighi (1994), whose theory of structural transformation within the capitalist world-system, which draws heavily from Kondratiev, I critique in chapter four along lines similar to, yet distinct from, Lukacs’s critique of Tugan-Baranovsky. 85 grasp “the connection between the fundamental problems of this philosophy and the basis in existence from which these problems spring and to which they strive to return by the road of the understanding” (Lukacs, 1971 [1923]: 112). When writing about the idea that the world can be known to us to the degree to which it is created by us, Lukacs (1971 [1923]: 112) indicates that the question of “why and with what justification” we should view this human-created world as constitutive of human reason never arises. According to Lukacs, the reason this basic question never arises can be explained with reference to the intrinsic relationship between social structure and subjectivity. To put it another way, Lukacs explains that bourgeois thought exhibits a “double tendency,” which is also characteristic of bourgeois society, and that it expresses this opposition between an objective material world and subjective consciousness: On the one hand, it [bourgeois thought] acquires increasing control over the details of its social existence, subjecting them to its needs. On the other hand it loses—likewise progressively—the possibility of gaining intellectual control of society as a whole and with that it loses its own qualification for leadership. (Lukacs, 1971 [1923]: 121) Lukacs (1971 [1923]: 122) believes this problem is ultimately rooted in the division between theory and practice. Lukacs’s theory of praxis seeks to move beyond traditional subject-object epistemology. He indicates that both subject and object develop simultaneously through practice—and that this process is thoroughly dialectical. In other words, through praxis the subject both constitutes and is constituted by social structure. This practical activity, according to Lukacs, is also historically determinate. It is on this basis that Lukacs is able ground his explanation of the antinomies of bourgeois thought, particularly the opposition between objective matter and subjective consciousness, in the relationship between social structure and subjectivity, a relationship reflective of the contradictory nature of modern capitalist society: [M]an in capitalist society confronts a reality ‘made’ by himself (as a class) which appears to him to be a natural phenomenon alien to himself; he is wholly at the mercy of its ‘laws’, his activity is confined to the exploitation of the inexorable fulfillment of certain individual laws for his own (egoistic) interests. But even while ‘acting’ he remains, in the nature of the case, the object and not the subject of events. The field of his activity thus becomes wholly internalized: it consists on the one hand of the awareness of the laws which he uses and, on the other, of his awareness of his inner reactions to the course taken by events. (Lukacs, 1971 [1923]: 135)

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TL;DR: In this article, Mol analyzes both globalization's destructive environmental consequences and its contribution to global environmental reform, focusing on three case studies, one involving the economic triad of the European Union, the NAFTA region, and Japan; another involving the relationship between the triad and developing countries; and a third involving three developing countries: Vietnam, the Netherlands Antilles, and Kenya.
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Book ChapterDOI
28 Jul 2008
TL;DR: The relationship between social science and critical theory has been extensively studied over the past century, and especially since the end of World War II, and countless efforts have been made in economics, psychology, political science, and sociology to illuminate the myriad manifestations of modern social life from a multiplicity of angles as discussed by the authors.
Abstract: Any endeavor to circumscribe, with a certain degree of precision, the nature of the relationship between social science and critical theory would appear to be daunting. Over the course of the past century, and especially since the end of World War II, countless efforts have been made in economics, psychology, political science, and sociology to illuminate the myriad manifestations of modern social life from a multiplicity of angles. It is doubtful that it would be possible to do justice to all the different variants of social science in an assessment of their relationship to critical theory. Moreover, given the proliferation of critical theories since the 1980s, the effort to devise a “map” that would reflect the particular orientations and intricacies of each approach to critical theory would also be exacting in its own right.1

36 citations


"Sociobiophysicality, Cold War, and ..." refers background in this paper

  • ...Otherwise, construction of (additional) “new” theories seeking to account for changes in the nature of change itself 23 For an account of perspectives that recognize their own immersion in time and space and those that do not, see Dahms, 2008....

    [...]

  • ...Insofar as the dominant methodological reductionism is unable to reflect upon its immersion in time and space (see Dahms, 2008), it is unable to critically reflect upon its own knowledge production as constitutive of the evolution of social reality....

    [...]

  • ...31 On the immersion of mainstream approaches to sociology in time and space see Dahms (2008)....

    [...]

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors re-examine Adorno's and Horkheimer's account of the disenchantment of nature in Dialectic of Enlightenment and argue that it is a historical process whereby we have come to find natural things meaningless and completely intelligible.
Abstract: In this article I re-examine Adorno's and Horkheimer's account of the disenchantment of nature in Dialectic of Enlightenment. I argue that they identify disenchantment as a historical process whereby we have come to find natural things meaningless and completely intelligible. However, Adorno and Horkheimer believe that modernity not only rests on disenchantment but also tends to re-enchant nature, because it encourages us to think that its institutions derive from, and are anticipated and prefigured by, nature. I argue that Adorno's Negative Dialecticsand Aesthetic Theory show how constellations and artworks generate an alternative form of reenchantment which is critical of modernity and its domination of nature. This form of re-enchantment finds natural beings to be mysteriously meaningful because they embody histories of immeasurable suffering. This experience engenders guilt and antipathy to human domination over nature.

36 citations


"Sociobiophysicality, Cold War, and ..." refers background in this paper

  • ...On the relationship between Adorno’s theory and Marx’s materialism, see Cook (2006, 2011), Jarvis (2004), and Stone (2006)....

    [...]

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The link between society and environment does not require that we engage in an effort of great abstraction as discussed by the authors. But it remains paradoxical that the intensity and scale of societally...
Abstract: Today, to perceive the link between society and environment does not require that we engage in an effort of great abstraction. What remains paradoxical is that the intensity and scale of societally...

35 citations

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TL;DR: LF Schritt vorwarts, LF neben RF absetzen, LF Schritt zuruck; RF vor dem LF kreuzen und LF Schritta zurucks; Linke Ferse vorne auftippen und RF neben LF absetze.
Abstract: FORWARD COASTER, BACK COASTER, CROSS, BACK, HEEL, STEP, CROSS, BACK HEEL, STEP 1 + 2 RF Schritt vorwarts, LF neben RF absetzen, RF Schritt zuruck 3 + 4 LF Schritt zuruck, RF neben LF absetzen, LF Schritt vorwarts 5 + RF vor dem LF kreuzen und LF Schritt zuruck 6 + Rechte Ferse vorne auftippen und RF neben LF absetzen 7 + LF vor dem RF kreuzen und RF Schritt zuruck 8 + Linke Ferse vorne auftippen und LF neben RF absetzen

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