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CRITICAL THEORY AND HABERMAS

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Title: CRITICAL THEORY AND HABERMAS


1
CRITICAL THEORY AND HABERMAS
Rauno Huttunen Joensuu University
2
CRITICAL THEORY
  • Critical theory was that defined by Max
    Horkheimer of the Frankfurt School of social
    science in his 1937 essay Traditional and
    Critical Theory Critical theory is social theory
    oriented toward critiquing and changing society
    as a whole, in contrast to traditional theory
    oriented only to understanding or explaining it.
    Horkheimer wanted to distinguish critical theory
    as a radical, emancipatory form of Marxian
    theory. This kind of CR is called as the
    Frankfurt School.

3
CRITICAL THEORY
  • In the late 1960s Jürgen Habermas of the
    Frankfurt School, redefined critical theory in a
    way that freed it from a direct tie to Marxism or
    the prior work of the Frankfurt School. In
    Habermas's epistemology, critical knowledge was
    conceptualized as knowledge that enabled human
    beings to emancipate themselves from forms of
    domination through self-reflection and took
    psychoanalysis as the paradigm of critical
    knowledge. This expanded considerably the scope
    of what counted as critical theory within the
    social sciences, which would include such
    approaches as world systems theory, feminist
    theory, postcolonial theory, critical race
    theory, performance studies, transversal poetics,
    queer theory, social ecology, and the theory of
    communicative action.

4
Habermass communicative theory of action and
education
5
Strategic versus communicative action
  • Communicative action means interpersonal
    communication which is oriented towards mutual
    understanding and in which other participants are
    treated as genuine persons, not as objects of
    manipulation. Actors do not primarily aim at
    their own success but want to harmonize their
    action plans with the other participants.
    Opposite to communicative action is the concept
    of strategic action, which means calculative
    exploitation, or manipulation, of others. An
    actor who acts strategically seeks primarily his
    or her own ends and manipulates other people
    either openly or tacitly.

6
(No Transcript)
7
  • Social action
  • ? \
  • communivative strategic action
  • toiminta
  • ? \
  • conceived open strategic
  • strateginen action action
  • ? \
  • unconsciouss intentional
  • deceiving deceiving (systematically (manip
    ulation)
  • disturbed
  • communication)

8
Communivative teaching
  • Pedagogical communication is kind of simulated
    communicative action and it is more simulated in
    early stage of education. When a teacher teaches
    seven years old pupils, the words "to the best of
    her ability" have different practical consequence
    than in the case of a teacher teaches twenty
    years old students. The value orientation is the
    same, but the practise or application of
    presuppositions of argumentation is different.
    When we understand communicative teaching in this
    way, as an exceptional form of communicative
    action, the concept of communicative teaching is
    looser than the concept of communicative action
    itself. I would like to think that communicative
    teaching - as an exceptional application of
    communicative action - still remains within the
    realm of communicative action.

9
  • This strategic teaching is a form of
    indoctrination (strategic teaching is not same as
    indoctrination), when a teacher tries to transfer
    teaching content to the students minds, treating
    them merely as passive objects, not as active
    co-subjects of the learning process. Then the
    teaching is in no sense the simulation of the
    communicative action but the pure strategic
    action

10
  • The aim is a communicatively competent student
    who does not need to rely on the teacher, or any
    other authority for that matter. In the
    communicative teaching, students are not treated
    as passive objects but as active learners. In the
    communicative teaching, a teacher and her
    students co-operatively participate in the
    formation of meanings and new perspectives. In
    the communicative teaching, the teacher does not
    impose her ideas on the students but rather they
    make a joint effort to find a meaningful insight
    regarding the issues at hand.

11
  • However, even my revised version of the method
    and intention criterion does not recognize the
    unintentionally or structurally caused
    indoctrination. Let us take example the Hitler
    Jugend assembly Germany in the 1930's. No matter
    how communicatively orientated the teacher or the
    Gruppenlieder was, elements of indoctrination
    were strongly present. The Hitler Jugend was a
    very effective training institution, and we
    cannot gain a comprehensive picture of its
    operations if we restrict our examination to the
    teachers intentions and methods. In some
    teaching situations, no matter what a teachers
    intentions and methods were, the outcome was
    still an uneducated (indoctrinated) person.
    Thus, it is clear that we need aspects of the
    content and the consequence of teaching.

12
  • The teaching content should not provide any easy
    answers but rather should improve students own
    power of judgement and capacity for mature
    deliberation. I consider content that limits
    students meaning perspectives and minimizes as
    opposed to increases students own power of
    judgement as indoctrinative. In the case of
    indoctrination, the teaching content tends to
    keep students at an immature stage. The
    non-indoctrinative teaching content gives
    students both the freedom and faculty to
    determine their own differentiated identity,
    worldview and conduct of life.

13
  • The modern individual is conscious of her
    capacity to change her own identity, and she
    possesses the perspective of many possible
    identities. This relatively open form of identity
    produce the pluralisation of life worlds and
    meaning perspectives.  People tend to grow up
    differently in modern societies. This corresponds
    with the situation that Emile Durkheim called
    organic solidarity (Durkheim 1984). In the stage
    of organic solidarity society need autonomous,
    independent, critical and professional individual
    personalities. My claim is that if educational
    institutions tend to systematically produce
    closed identities (which are necessary in a
    traditional society during the stage of
    mechanical solidarity), we can presume that these
    institutions impose some form of indoctrination.
    In modern or post-modern society, educational
    institutions should encourage a reflective
    attitude toward ones own identity.
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