ABSTRACT

Grandeur and Twilight of Radical Universalism provides a theoretical construction to the extraordinary events of the past several years in Europe and the Soviet Union, and China. These masterful essays attribute much of the problem of totalitarianism to its blind acceptance of a Marxist philosophy of practice. With the failure of communist practice, the collapse of the Marxian paradigm was quick to follow.At its roots this volume is a critique of the idea that we can have "scientific knowledge" of the social and political future. Totalitarian Marxism combined statements of history and claims of omniscience. Free choice was surrendered to history, and when the predicted outcomes fail to materialize, when communism came closer to being buried than capitalism, and western ideals of democracy proved far more compelling than inherited doctrines of authoritarianism, the outcome proved monumental and disastrous.The authors position themselves as evolving from critical Marxism to post-Marxism, and then post modernism. By this, they mean a modest view of life, one that moves beyond radical universalism and grand narrative, into a realization of individualism and equity concerns are central to the end of the twentieth century. The volume proceeds historically: from studies of the classic Marxian legacy; to the early twentieth century efforts of Lukacs, Weber and Adorno; proceeding to the disintegration of the Marxian paradigm in both its pure and revisionist forms. It ends with a study of options posed by this paradigmatic collapse - to consideration of the status of postmodernity and the choices between pure relativism and a theological fundamentalism. ,This is a work of absolute importance for political philosophy, the sociology of knowledge, and the history of ideas. In raising recent events to a theoretically meaningful framework, it represents a refreshing as well as remarkable step toward understanding Revolutions from 1789 to 1989.

chapter |8 pages

Introduction

part I|200 pages

The Classic Paradigm

chapter 1|89 pages

The Theory of Need in Marx

chapter 2|17 pages

Marx and Modernity

chapter 3|24 pages

The Legacy of Marxian Ethics

chapter 5|13 pages

Marx and the Permanent French Revolutions

chapter 6|17 pages

Marx and Justice

chapter 7|14 pages

Marx and the “Liberation of Humankind”

part II|193 pages

Orthodoxy and Negativity

chapter 8|35 pages

The Unknown Masterpiece

chapter 9|27 pages

Lukács in Weimar

chapter 10|15 pages

Historical Novel and History in Lukács

chapter 12|14 pages

Lukács, Benjamin, Theater

chapter 13|11 pages

Lukács and the Holy Family

chapter 15|15 pages

Weber and the Rationalization of Music

chapter 18|9 pages

Can Poetry Be Written After the Holocaust?

part III|166 pages

The Disintegration of the Paradigm

chapter 19|10 pages

Decision as Will or as Choice

chapter 20|11 pages

Beyond Political Theology?

chapter 23|23 pages

Habermas and Marxism

chapter 28|8 pages

On “Strong Coding” in Philosophy

chapter 29|13 pages

The Status of Postmodernity