Abstract
Labour and interaction: innocuous-sounding terms, but ones around which Habermas has consolidated some of the main themes in his work. It makes sense to see most of Habermas’s work as concerned with what he has come to call the ‘reconstruction of historical materialism’ — a critical reformulation of the dominant concerns of Marx’s writings, both on the level of philosophy or ‘meta-theory’ and on the level of the development of industrial capitalism since Marx’s day. Habermas uses ‘reconstruction’ in a very deliberate way, as he makes clear. He is not interested, as he says, in reviving or ‘restoring’ traditional Marxist ideas: his preoccupation with Marx is not a scholastic or dogmatic one. As a tradition of thought which is very much alive, Marxism has no need for renewal. Rather, it is in need of a wholesale overhaul. ‘Reconstruction’, Habermas argues, ‘signifies taking a theory apart and putting it back together again in a new form in order to attain more fully the goal it has set for itself.’1
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Notes and References
See J. Habermas, ‘Remarks on Hegel’s Jena Philosophy of Mind’, in TP, p. 168; Karl Löwith, From Hegel to Nietzsche, trans. D. E. Green ( New York: Anchor Press, 1967 ).
Thomas McCarthy, The Critical Theory of Jürgen Habermas ( London: Hutchinson, 1978 ) pp. 24–6.
J. Habermas, ‘A Postscript to Knowledge and Human Interests’, trans. C. Lenhardt, Philosophy of the Social Sciences, 3 (1973).
J. Habermas, Zur Logik der Sozialwissenschaften (Frankfurt: Suhrkamp, 1970) pp. 170ff.
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© 1982 Macmillan Publishers Limited
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Giddens, A. (1982). Labour and Interaction. In: Thompson, J.B., Held, D. (eds) Habermas. Contemporary Social Theory. Palgrave, London. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-16763-0_9
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