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Critique of Dialectical Reason
Author: Jean-paul Sartre
Publisher: Schocken Books
Category: Book

Buy Used: £61.18



Avg. Customer Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars 1 reviews

Media: Hardcover

ISBN: 0805270132
Dewey Decimal Number: 142.7
EAN: 9780805270136
ASIN: 0805270132

Publication Date: January 1983
Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days
Condition: Ships from USA. Delivered in 10-12 business days. Money back guarantee!

Also Available In:

  • Paperback - Critique of Dialectical Reason
  • Hardcover - Critique of Dialectical Reason: v. 2 (Sartre, Jean Paul//Critique of Dialectical Reason)
  • Paperback - Critique of Dialectical Reason: v. 1 (Critique of Dialectical Reason)
  • Unknown Binding - Critique of Dialectical Reason - I, Theory of Practical Ensembles
  • Paperback - Critique of Dialectical Reason: v. 2 (Critique of Dialectical Reason)
  • Paperback - Critique of Dialectical Reason: Theory of Practical Ensembles v. 1 (Verso Classics)
  • Paperback - Critique of Dialectical Reason: v. 1 (Critique of Dialectical Reason)
  • Hardcover - Critique of Dialectical Reason

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  • Existentialism and Humanism
  • The Age of Reason (Penguin Modern Classics)

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Important philosophical intervention, but unduly pro-Stalin   January 22, 2007
 2 out of 2 found this review helpful

Sartre's Critique volume 2 follows up many of the issues raised in volume 1, exploring the dialectical intelligibility of history and the relationship between praxis, inertia and group-formation. Whereas volume 1 concentrates mainly on the different kinds of groups which can emerge from praxis, volume 2 concentrates mainly on the history of the USSR, treated as an example of the interaction of praxis and matter (inertia). Through this example, and broader discussions of the philosophy of history and the relation of agencies in conflict, Sartre develops a dualistic philosophy where historical outcomes rely on the interaction of two distinct fields, the field of agency associated with phenomenological meaning-construction and subjectivity, and the field of inertia associated with the deviation or alienation of praxis by matter.

This is an important work for students of critical theory and philosophy, including those interested in the development of western Marxism, people exploring the possibilities for Marxist theory, students of phenomenology and meaning-formation, and scholars interested in debates between poststructuralism and Marxism about meaning and discourse. Important and interesting, though not necessarily adequate; the methodological dualism leaves the application of the method dependent on intuitive judgements, and the application to the USSR in particular is weakened by a persistent bias towards the Bolshevik and later Stalinist way of viewing the situation. As a result, the account is open to objections that anti-regime agency is downplayed or dehumanized and that Sartre wrongly assumes a continuity between his own humanistic Marxism and the official ideology of Stalinism. Since Sartre is also not saying anything very original about the USSR, I'd say the book is of more interest as a text in philosophy than a text in Soviet studies.


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