Works by Horowitz, Asher (exact spelling)

9 found
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  1.  14
    ‘By a hair’s breadth’: Critique, transcendence and the ethical in Adorno and Levinas.Asher Horowitz - 2002 - Philosophy and Social Criticism 28 (2):213-248.
    The article stages the beginning of a virtual conversation between Levinas’s ‘ethics as first philosophy’ and Adorno’s negative dialectic. Part I frames the problem: for both thinkers the task of critique depends on some access to a ‘fixed point’ for transcendence (Levinas) or a ‘standpoint removed’ from the domain of existence (Adorno). Part II traces the deep, even essential, connection both perceive between knowledge and violence, a link which brings the possibility of critique even more stringently into question. A standpoint (...)
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  2.  6
    "How Can Anyone Be Called Guilty?": Speech, Responsibility, and the Social Relation in Habermas and Levinas.Asher Horowitz - 2000 - Philosophy Today 44 (3):295-317.
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  3.  56
    'Like a tangled mobile': Reason and reification in the quasi-dialectical theory of Jürgen Habermas.Asher Horowitz - 1998 - Philosophy and Social Criticism 24 (1):1-23.
    Habermas' claim to provide a critique of reification by means other than marxian ones requires him to transpose not only meaningful freedom, but also a dialectical view of social becoming, into terms com patible with linguistically mediated intersubjectivity. In order to remain critical of reification as colonization, he thus finds himself committed to the view that colonization is the outcome of the development of two perma nent and competing principles of sociation. Compelled to draw upon the resources both of the (...)
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  4. All that Is Holy Is Profaned" : Levinas and Marx on the Social Relation.Asher Horowitz - 2012 - In Scott Davidson & Diane Perpich (eds.), Totality and infinity at 50. Pittsburgh, Pa.: Duquesne University Press.
     
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  5.  6
    Barbarism of Reason.Asher Horowitz & Terry Maley (eds.) - 1994 - Buffalo: University of Toronto Press.
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  6.  60
    How Levinas Taught Me to Read Benjamin.Asher Horowitz - 2006 - PhaenEx 1 (1):140-174.
    Benjamin's "Theses on the Philosophy of History" have been interpreted almost exclusively in relation to Marxist historical materialism and, in that context, inevitably found wanting, misunderstood as the unwelcome intrusion of mystical and voluntarist notions into a rational method of historical explanation. Levinas, although he never mentions Benjamin, nonetheless affords a better clue as to what Benjamin might have been trying to accomplish. The major distinction animating and structuring Levinas's work is that between ethics, or the ethical relation, and ontology, (...)
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  7.  7
    8. Mystical Kernels? Rational Shells? Habermas and Adorno on Reification and Re-enchantment.Asher Horowitz - 2007 - In Donald Burke, Colin J. Campbell, Kathy Kiloh, Michael Palamarek & Jonathan Short (eds.), Adorno and the Need in Thinking: New Critical Essays. University of Toronto Press. pp. 203-217.
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  8.  8
    The barbarism of reason: Max Weber and the twilight of enlightenment.Asher Horowitz & Terry Maley (eds.) - 1994 - Buffalo: University of Toronto Press.
    A collection of essays that traces the contemporary significance of Weber's work for the tradition of Enlightenment political thought and its critiques. It takes up the problems Weber inherited from Enlightenment political discourse, his attempts to face the disintegration of the Enlightenment political project, and engages and advances the debates over Weber's ideas that have helped shape political thought up to the present debates over postmodernism. Paper edition (unseen), $24.95. Annotation copyright by Book News, Inc., Portland, OR.
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  9. The Comedy of Enlightenment: Weber, Habermas, and the Critique of Reification.Asher Horowitz - 1994 - In Asher Horowitz & Terry Maley (eds.), The Barbarism of Reason: Max Weber and the Twilight of Enlightenment. University of Toronto Press. pp. 195--222.