The purely philosophical concerns of Theodor W. Adorno's negative dialectic would seem to be far removed from the concreteness of critical theory; Adorno's philosophy considers perhaps the most traditional subject of "pure" philosophy, the structure of experience, whereas critical theory examines specific aspects of society. But, as Brian O'Connor demonstrates in this highly original interpretation of Adorno's philosophy, the negative dialectic can be seen as the theoretical foundation of the reflexivity or critical rationality required by critical theory. Adorno, O'Connor argues, is committed to the "concretion" of philosophy: his thesis of nonidentity attempts to show that reality is not reducible to appearances. This lays the foundation for the applied "concrete" critique of appearances that is essential to the possibility of critical theory.
To explicate the context in which Adorno's philosophy operates—the tradition of modern German philosophy, from Kant to Heidegger—O'Connor examines in detail the ideas of these philosophers as well as Adorno's self-defining differences with them. O'Connor discusses Georg Lukács and the influence of his "protocritical theory" on Adorno's thought; the elements of Kant's and Hegel's German idealism appropriated by Adorno for his theory of subject-object mediation; the priority of the object and the agency of the subject in Adorno's epistemology; and Adorno's important critiques of Kant and the phenomenology of Heidegger and Husserl, critiques that both illuminate Adorno's key concepts and reveal his construction of critical theory through an engagement with the problems of philosophy.
Author(s): Brian O'Connor
Series: Studies in Contemporary German Social Thought
Publisher: The MIT Press
Year: 2004
Language: English
Pages: 224
Contents......Page 8
Preface......Page 10
Acknowledgments......Page 16
Abbreviations Used in the Text......Page 18
Introduction......Page 20
1 The Role of German Idealism in the Negative Dialectic......Page 34
2 The Structure of Adorno’s Epistemology: The Priority of the Object......Page 64
3 The Structure of Adorno’s Epistemology: The Role of Subjectivity......Page 90
4 The Critique of Kant......Page 118
5 Adorno on Husserl and Heidegger......Page 146
Conclusion......Page 184
Notes......Page 194
References......Page 212
Index......Page 220