ISBN:
9781317614456
Language:
English
Pages:
1 online resource (319 pages)
Parallel Title:
Erscheint auch als
DDC:
302.231
Keywords:
Electronic books
;
Communication-Political aspects..
;
Justice
;
Communication-Social aspects..
Abstract:
Cover -- Half Title -- Endorsement -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Table of contents -- Illustrations -- Analysis Boxes -- Preface -- Note on the text -- 1 The end of communication -- What is, what ought to be, and what could be -- Turns of philosophy -- Theories of communication -- Justice - an essentially contested concept -- Communication as action -- The chapters of the volume -- 2 A brief history of justice -- Between chance and necessity -- The prehistory of justice -- Three traditions of justice -- Do good - virtue ethics -- Do the right thing - deontology -- Do the math - consequentialism -- The global futures of justice -- Migration as communication -- Communication as migration -- Does the world still need a theory of justice? -- 3 The structural transformation of Jürgen Habermas -- From the coffeehouse to the internet -- The rise and fall of the bourgeois public sphere -- Historical norms -- Retrospective systematics -- Reconstructed interests -- Interested knowledge -- Disinterested communication -- From the categorical imperative to communicative action -- "A third, somewhat less demanding way" -- How to do things with other people's words -- Laws of communication -- The power of communication -- Speaking of ideals -- Communicative action in the public sphere -- Religious communication -- Global communication -- Remember Habermas! -- 4 John Rawls behind the veil of communication -- Habermas vs. Rawls -- Justice as fairness -- Principles and consequences -- Procedures and communications -- An overlapping consensus -- The rational and the reasonable -- The public uses of reason -- The laws of the lands -- The veil of communication -- 5 The long legacy of pragmatism -- Erro, ergo sum -- Theoretical, practical, and productive sciences -- The modern inversion of theory and practice -- The American revival of pragmatism.
Note:
Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources
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