A Commentary on Jean-Paul Sartre's Critique of Dialectical Reason

A Commentary on Jean-Paul Sartre's Critique of Dialectical Reason

by Joseph S. Catalano
A Commentary on Jean-Paul Sartre's Critique of Dialectical Reason

A Commentary on Jean-Paul Sartre's Critique of Dialectical Reason

by Joseph S. Catalano

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Overview

Sartre’s Critique of Dialectical Reason ranks with Being and Nothingness as a work of major philosophical significance, but it has been largely neglected. The first volume, published in 1960, was dismissed as a Marxist work at a time when structuralism was coming into vogue; the incomplete second volume has only recently been published in France. In this commentary on the first volume, Joseph S. Catalano restores the Critique to its deserved place among Sartre’s works and within philosophical discourse as a whole. Sartre attempts one of the most needed tasks of our times, Catalano asserts—the delivery of history into the hands of the average person. Sartre’s concern in the Critique is with the historical significance of everyday life. Can we, he asks, as individuals or even collectively, direct the course of our history? A historical context for our lives is given to us at birth, but we sustain that context with even our most mundane actions—buying a newspaper, waiting in line, eating a meal. In looking at history, Sartre argues, reason can never separate the historical situation of the investigator from the investigation. Thus reason falls into a dialectic, always depending upon the past for guidance but always being reshaped by the present. Clearly showing the influence of Marx on Sartre’s thought, the Critique adds the historical dimension lacking in Being and Nothingness. In placing the Critique within the corpus of Sartre’s philosophical writings, Catalano argues that it represents a development rather than a break from Sartre’s existentialist phase. Catalano has organized his commentary to follow the Critique and has supplied clear examples and concrete expositions of the most difficult ideas. He explicates the dialogue between Marx and Sartre that is internal to the text, and he also discusses Sartre’s Search for Method, which is published separately from the Critique in English editions. 

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780226097022
Publisher: University of Chicago Press
Publication date: 01/17/2013
Series: Theory of Practical Ensembles
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 296
File size: 1 MB

About the Author

Joseph S. Catalano is professor emeritus of philosophy at Kean University of New Jersey and a former adjunct professor at the New School for Social Research

Table of Contents

Contents Acknowledgments Prefatory Remarks Background: Search for a Method 1. Marxism and Existentialism 2. The Problem of Mediations and Auxiliary Disciplines 3. The Progressive-Regressive Method Critique of Dialectical Reason, Volume I Introduction 1. The Dogmatic Dialectic and the Critical Dialectic 2. Critique of Critical Investigation Book I: From Individual Praxis to the Practico-Inert 1. Individual Praxis as Totalization 2. Human Relations as a Mediation between Different Sectors of Materiality 3. Matter as Totalized Totality: A First Encounter with Necessity 4. Collectives Book II: From Groups to History Part 1. The group—the equivalence of freedom as necessity (1. The Group-in-Fusion) (2. The Statutory Group) (3. The Organization) (4. The Constituted Dialectic) (5. The Unity of the Group as Other: The Militant) (6. The Institution) Part 2. Dialectical investigation as totalization: The levelof the concrete, the place of history (7. The Place of History) (8. Class Struggle and Dialectical Reason) Bibliography Index
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