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Publication details

Publisher: Springer

Place: Berlin

Year: 1999

Pages: 265-272

Series: Boston Studies in the Philosophy of Science

ISBN (Hardback): 9789048152339

Full citation:

Max Pensky, "Truth and interest", in: Nietzsche, theories of knowledge, and critical theory I, Berlin, Springer, 1999

Truth and interest

on Habermas's postscript to Nietzsche's theory of knowledge

Max Pensky

pp. 265-272

in: Babette Babich (ed), Nietzsche, theories of knowledge, and critical theory I, Berlin, Springer, 1999

Abstract

For anyone familiar with Jürgen Habermas's views on Nietzsche only through the scathing, global critique of Nietzsche's irrationalism and its consequences in the Philosophical Discourse of Modernity,1 the reading of Nietzsche on offer in Habermas's earlier "Postscript"2 to Nietzsche's theory of knowledge will come as a surprise. While certainly no less critical of Nietzsche's rejection of epistemology in favor of perspectivalism, Habermas's reading of the second Untimely Meditation and the essay "On Truth and Lies in a Nonmoral Sense" exhibits an intense interest in, and indeed a proximity to his subject that is virtually absent in the later work: in 1968, Habermas clearly recognizes something important at stake in one moment of the inner development of Nietzsche's post-epistemological thinking, rather than merely the philosophical-political consequences of Nietzsche" s thought taken as a totality.

Cited authors

Publication details

Publisher: Springer

Place: Berlin

Year: 1999

Pages: 265-272

Series: Boston Studies in the Philosophy of Science

ISBN (Hardback): 9789048152339

Full citation:

Max Pensky, "Truth and interest", in: Nietzsche, theories of knowledge, and critical theory I, Berlin, Springer, 1999