Communication,Modernity, and Democracy in Habermas and Dewey |
| |
Authors: | Robert J Antonio Douglas Kellner |
| |
Abstract: | The political culture of the Federal Republic of Germany] would be worse today if it had not adopted impulses from American political culture during the first postwar decades. The Federal Republic opened itself for the first time to the West without reservations: we adopted the political theory of the Enlightenment, we grasped the pluralism which, first carried by religious sects, molded the political mentality, and we became acquainted with the radical democratic spirit of the American pragmatism of Peirce, Mead, and Dewey. (Jiirgen Habermas 1985a, p. 93) |
| |
Keywords: | |
|
|