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Reviews for Polish Essays in the Philosophy of the Natural Sciences

 Polish Essays in the Philosophy of the Natural Sciences magazine reviews

The average rating for Polish Essays in the Philosophy of the Natural Sciences based on 2 reviews is 2.5 stars.has a rating of 2.5 stars

Review # 1 was written on 2014-05-03 00:00:00
1982was given a rating of 4 stars Larry Denton
Simply amazing. Bernstein is the best anglophone Adorno scholar out there, period. This book is overwhelmingly ambitious and exceeds it's stated purpose of interpreting Adorno's work vis a vis contemporary ethical theory. Bernstein gives us a version of Adorno that opens up entirely new avenues of ethical exploration, whether or not you agree that the man himself would sign on to Bernstein's reading.
Review # 2 was written on 2014-09-27 00:00:00
1982was given a rating of 1 stars Julie Young
This was a weird one. Bernstein wants to put Adorno into dialogue with contemporary meta-ethics. He argues that, once upon a time, human beings' practical reason was identical with our theoretical reason: there was a form of moral knowledge. We knew what we ought to do. Thanks to disenchantment and rationalization, as analyzed by Weber, this has ceased to be the case. We are no longer motivated by reason to perform ethical actions. Adorno picks up on the German Idealist theses that: i) conceptuality is subjectivity; and that ii) conceptuality is normative. The problem we have is that our concept of the concept is inadequate, overly rationalized, no longer capable of motivating us normatively. Bernstein calls this the 'simple concept.' In its place, we have to start thinking in accordance with the 'complex concept,' which will motivate ethical action, because it will take into account the materiality of our world and the fact that we're animals. As a work of ethical philosophy, Bernstein's book is remarkable, but it also ends up making claims which completely contradict Adorno's own arguments. For Bernstein, the problem is a non-identity of general and particular (our general concept does not motivate our particular actions); for Adorno, the problem is the identity of them. For Bernstein, we need to 're-enchant' our world; for Adorno, the problem is that our world remains too enchanted. For Bernstein, bad reason is negative and critical; for Adorno, good reason is negative and critical. For Bernstein, reason is insufficiently authoritative; for Adorno, it is overly authoritative; and most importantly, for Bernstein "It is our reasoning that disenchants nature and creates the iron cage of modernity," 138, while for Adorno - following Marx, rather than Weber - it is material social processes which lead to reification, fetishisation and alienation. In short, the danger of a Hegelian reading of Adorno is that it makes him into an idealist in the bad sense: it looks, on Bernstein's reading, like the problem is with individual human beings, who have just made some intellectual mistakes. Bernstein was trying to get philosophers to pay attention to Adorno; but the Adorno they're paying attention to is just a slightly more stylish version of themselves.


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