Continental Philosophy of Science 2005
DOI: 10.1002/9780470755501.ch23
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Knowledge and Human Interests : A General Perspective

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Cited by 387 publications
(523 citation statements)
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“…Both Dewey 9 and Habermas 10 could be referred to as the modern pioneers of reflection, they have both contributed greatly to Dewey's main concern was with the nature of reflection and how it occurs within an educational and psychological context. He uses many terms to describe reflection and its link to thinking, insisting that reflection is not just a procession of conscious thoughts, 7,13 but rather a process that leads to resolve a problem that initially posed perplexity and required a combination of evidence and rationality to reach an appropriate conclusion.…”
Section: Theory Of Reflectionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Both Dewey 9 and Habermas 10 could be referred to as the modern pioneers of reflection, they have both contributed greatly to Dewey's main concern was with the nature of reflection and how it occurs within an educational and psychological context. He uses many terms to describe reflection and its link to thinking, insisting that reflection is not just a procession of conscious thoughts, 7,13 but rather a process that leads to resolve a problem that initially posed perplexity and required a combination of evidence and rationality to reach an appropriate conclusion.…”
Section: Theory Of Reflectionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…10 He posed the question 'how do humans validate their knowledge?' for example, how do they know that they know something?…”
Section: Theory Of Reflectionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Indeed, there has been a long tradition of scholarship that has focused on this practical/political dimension to Marx's theory, one that cannot be adequately captured within the confines of positivist conceptions. In the diverse work of Jürgen Habermas (1971), Alvin Gouldner (1980), and Brian Fay (1987, we are treated to a more judicious discussion of Marx's methodological position. While none of these authors are particularly enamored by classical Marxism, they at least realize that Marx's theory was intimately empirical as well as critical and practical.…”
Section: Reviewsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The resources of critique mobilised by subjects capable of speech and action can challenge the resources of control imposed upon them by systems capable of steering and action. The 'legitimations that a society accepts or criticizes' (Habermas [1965, 313) need to reach a reasonable level of justification -b, 183, italics in original) in order to ensure their own validation: political orders incapable of legitimation are essentially rational orders incapable of justification. A central function of critique consists in questioning the rational validity of political legitimacy either to reinforce or to undermine the relative stability of a given society.…”
Section: Critique and Legitimationmentioning
confidence: 99%