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Volumn 36, Issue 112, 1998, Pages

The Habermasian public sphere and "Science in the enlightenment"

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EID: 33749466808     PISSN: 00732753     EISSN: None     Source Type: Journal    
DOI: None     Document Type: Article
Times cited : (25)

References (89)
  • 1
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    • The chemical revolution: Essays in reinterpretation
    • Arthur L. Donovan (ed.), 2nd ser.
    • For recent syntheses, see Arthur L. Donovan (ed.), "The chemical revolution: Essays in reinterpretation", Osiris, 2nd ser., iv (1988);
    • (1988) Osiris , vol.4
  • 4
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    • Science in the enlightenment
    • Jan V. Golinski, "Science in the enlightenment", History of science, xxiv (1986), 411-24.
    • (1986) History of Science , vol.24 , pp. 411-424
    • Golinski, J.V.1
  • 5
    • 0002012308 scopus 로고
    • Roy Porter and Mikuláš Teich (eds), Cambridge
    • For an excellent example of the sceptical attitude toward a trans-national European Enlightenment that developed in the 1980s, see Roy Porter and Mikuláš Teich (eds), The Enlightenment in national context (Cambridge, 1981).
    • (1981) The Enlightenment in National Context
  • 8
    • 0039033082 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • The mental landscape of the public sphere: A European perspective
    • For general commentaries on the public sphere, see Margaret C. Jacob, "The mental landscape of the public sphere: A European perspective", Eighteenth-century studies, xxviii (1994), 95-113;
    • (1994) Eighteenth-century Studies , vol.28 , pp. 95-113
    • Jacob, M.C.1
  • 9
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    • Conceiving a public: Ideas and society in eighteenth-century Europe
    • Anthony J. La Vopa, "Conceiving a public: Ideas and society in eighteenth-century Europe", The journal of modern history, lxiv (1992), 79-116;
    • (1992) The Journal of Modern History , vol.64 , pp. 79-116
    • La Vopa, A.J.1
  • 10
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    • Public sphere and private life: Toward a synthesis of current historiographical approaches to the Old Regime
    • Dena Goodman, "Public sphere and private life: Toward a synthesis of current historiographical approaches to the Old Regime", History and theory, xxxi (1992), 1-20;
    • (1992) History and Theory , vol.31 , pp. 1-20
    • Goodman, D.1
  • 12
    • 0347730739 scopus 로고
    • The public sphere and public opinion
    • idem, transl. by Lydia G. Cochrane Durham, N.C.
    • Roger Chartier, "The public sphere and public opinion", in idem, The cultural origins of the French Revolution, transl. by Lydia G. Cochrane (Durham, N.C., 1991), 20-37;
    • (1991) The Cultural Origins of the French Revolution , pp. 20-37
    • Chartier, R.1
  • 13
    • 23844500659 scopus 로고
    • Journals and public opinion: The politicization of the German enlightenment in the second half of the eighteenth century
    • Eckhart Hellmuth (ed.), Oxford
    • Hans Erich Bödeker, "Journals and public opinion: The politicization of the German enlightenment in the second half of the eighteenth century", in Eckhart Hellmuth (ed.), The transformation of political culture: England and Germany in the eighteenth century (Oxford, 1990), 423-45;
    • (1990) The Transformation of Political Culture: England and Germany in the Eighteenth Century , pp. 423-445
    • Bödeker, H.E.1
  • 14
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    • Craig Calhoun (ed.), Cambridge, Mass.
    • and the essays collected in Craig Calhoun (ed.), Habermas and the public sphere (Cambridge, Mass., 1992).
    • (1992) Habermas and the Public Sphere
  • 15
    • 0346469874 scopus 로고
    • The public and the nation
    • See "The public and the nation", Eighteenth-century studies, xxix, no. 1 (1995),
    • (1995) Eighteenth-century Studies , vol.29 , Issue.1
  • 17
    • 0030075064 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • The great chain of buying: Medical advertisement, the bourgeois public sphere, and the origins of the French Revolution
    • For a stimulating contribution to the discussion of the public sphere and the French Revolution, and one that touches on the history of medicine as well, see Colin Jones, "The great chain of buying: Medical advertisement, the bourgeois public sphere, and the origins of the French Revolution", American historical review, ci (1996), 13-40.
    • (1996) American Historical Review , vol.101 , pp. 13-40
    • Jones, C.1
  • 18
    • 84959651960 scopus 로고
    • The ideal and reality of the republic of letters in the Enlightenment
    • For this reason, my interpretation differs substantially from Lorraine Daston's use of the republic of letters as a regulative ideal that shaped the practice and discourse of science in eighteenth-century Europe. I do not dispute Daston's claim that such an ideal existed for intellectuals at that time, nor that in a general way the ideal may have guided the behaviour of those who considered themselves members of the republic. Yet there is little in Daston's presentation of the concept that tells what was distinctive about the republic of letters during the Enlightenment. Nor does the model of a republic of letters address what is of central concern for this essay, namely the public authority of science in Enlightenment culture. See Lorraine Daston, "The ideal and reality of the republic of letters in the Enlightenment", Science in context, iv (1991), 367-86.
    • (1991) Science in Context , vol.4 , pp. 367-386
    • Daston, L.1
  • 20
    • 0003808778 scopus 로고
    • Ithaca, N.Y.
    • Goldgar herself notes the differences between the republic of letters and a Habermasian "public sphere" on pp. 5-6. See also Dena Goodman, The republic of letters: A cultural history of the French Enlightenment (Ithaca, N.Y., 1994), for a comprehensive discussion of the normative codes underlying the eighteenth-century republic of letters.
    • (1994) The Republic of Letters: A Cultural History of the French Enlightenment
    • Goodman, D.1
  • 21
    • 0346469873 scopus 로고
    • Rethinking professionalization: Theory, practice, and professional ideology in eighteenth-century German medicine
    • Simply stated, what I am characterizing as a discourse of theory and practice is the distinctive claims made by physicians, economists, nuclear engineers, and other professionals that: (1) they possess a body of coherent and scientifically validated knowledge about some domain; and (2) this knowledge serves in a fairly direct way as the basis for the practices undertaken by professionals. Obviously not every occupation that we would call a "profession" fits this definition; for a variety of reasons, the law is an important exception. But insofar as I am describing the cultural authority of scientific knowledge here, I am most interested in those professions that claim to possess such knowledge and deploy it in practice. See Thomas Broman, "Rethinking professionalization: Theory, practice, and professional ideology in eighteenth-century German medicine", Journal of modern history, lxvii (1995), 835-72.
    • (1995) Journal of Modern History , vol.67 , pp. 835-872
    • Broman, T.1
  • 22
    • 0039033082 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • ref. 6
    • The timing of the emergence of the public sphere depends on the national setting. Habermas believed it developed first in England in the wake of the Glorious Revolution, and then later on in places like the Netherlands and France. Most historians have agreed with him; see, for example, Jacob, "The mental landscape of the public sphere" (ref. 6), 96;
    • The Mental Landscape of the Public Sphere , pp. 96
    • Jacob1
  • 23
    • 0010933083 scopus 로고
    • 'Coffee politicians does create': Coffeehouses and restoration political culture
    • Steve Pincus, "'Coffee politicians does create': Coffeehouses and restoration political culture", Journal of modern history, lxvii (1995), 807-34,
    • (1995) Journal of Modern History , vol.67 , pp. 807-834
    • Pincus, S.1
  • 24
    • 0345838980 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • ref. 8
    • on English coffee-house political culture after 1688; and Goodman, The republic of letters (ref. 8), 15-52, which discusses the migration of the French republic of letters from its seat in the learned academies founded during the reign of Louis XIV to institutions such as the Encyclopédie and the salons of Paris by the mid-eighteenth century. The public sphere in German-speaking Central Europe is routinely thought to have formed after the Seven Years War, during the 1760s and 1770s.
    • The Republic of Letters , pp. 15-52
    • Goodman1
  • 27
    • 0004260323 scopus 로고
    • transl. with notes by T. M. Knox Oxford
    • Georg W. F. Hegel, The philosophy of right, transl. with notes by T. M. Knox (Oxford, 1979), 123. I certainly do not want to be understood as claiming that Hegel and Smith held identical concepts of civil society, or that they used them in similar ways. I cite both merely to demonstrate a continuity between them that includes: (1) the primacy of production and exchange in constituting society; and (2) the role of individual actors (as opposed to guilds, corporations, or feudal orders) in the social order.
    • (1979) The Philosophy of Right , pp. 123
    • Hegel, G.W.F.1
  • 30
    • 0004342907 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • In places, Habermas himself seems to think that the absolutist state creates civil society. "Civil society", he writes at one point, "came into existence as the corollary of depersonalized state authority" (Habermas, Structural transformation (ibid., 19). But it might be pointed out that it also makes historical sense to suppose that "the State" is an ideological tool deployed by sovereigns and the commercial and professional middle classes in a struggle for political power against the hereditary aristocracy.
    • Structural Transformation , pp. 19
    • Habermas1
  • 36
    • 0008311592 scopus 로고
    • Science, the universities, and the public sphere in eighteenth-century Scotland
    • As Paul Wood has acutely pointed out, it is a conspicuous absence in Habermas's account that he makes no room in his model for scientific discourse in the genesis of the public sphere, even though scientific knowledge was undoubtedly central to the culture of the Enlightenment. Paul Wood, "Science, the universities, and the public sphere in eighteenth-century Scotland", History of universities, xiv (1994), 99-135, p. 120.
    • (1994) History of Universities , vol.14 , pp. 99-135
    • Wood, P.1
  • 41
    • 84987279361 scopus 로고
    • Science, provincial culture and public opinion in Enlightenment England
    • The relevance of science for the new commercial and industrial élites in Britain is discussed in Roy Porter, "Science, provincial culture and public opinion in Enlightenment England", British journal for eighteenth-century studies, iii (1980), 20-46.
    • (1980) British Journal for Eighteenth-century Studies , vol.3 , pp. 20-46
    • Porter, R.1
  • 44
    • 0016067586 scopus 로고
    • The audience for science in eighteenth-century Edinburgh
    • The same goes for two other treatments of the public for science in the eighteenth century, Steven Shapin's discussion of the audience for science in eighteenth-century Edinburgh and Simon Schaffer's influential essay on natural philosophy as public spectacle. See Shapin, "The audience for science in eighteenth-century Edinburgh", History of science, xii (1974), 95-121;
    • (1974) History of Science , vol.12 , pp. 95-121
    • Shapin1
  • 45
    • 0020727581 scopus 로고
    • Natural philosophy and public spectacle in the eighteenth century
    • and Schaffer, "Natural philosophy and public spectacle in the eighteenth century", History of science, xxi (1983), 1-43.
    • (1983) History of Science , vol.21 , pp. 1-43
    • Schaffer1
  • 47
    • 0345838985 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • ref. 6
    • This point demands a bit of elaboration. For reasons based on the political project implied in Structural transformation and elaborated in his later work, Habermas presented the British public sphere as the "model" European public sphere and the French and German versions as variants. He did this despite the fact that his understanding of the public sphere owed a considerable debt to Kant. See La Vopa, "Conceiving a public" (ref. 6), 101-2. From our perspective, it makes little sense to elect one or another candidate as the "real" public sphere. Rather, there is good work to be done by paying attention to the significant differences that characterized the public sphere in different national contexts - the position of London and especially Paris as dominant cultural centres in their countries, for example, and the complete lack of an equivalent in Germany - while not ignoring the commonalities between them.
    • Conceiving a Public , pp. 101-102
    • La Vopa1
  • 48
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    • transl. by Norman Kemp Smith New York
    • Immanuel Kant, Critique of pure reason, transl. by Norman Kemp Smith (New York, 1965), 9.
    • (1965) Critique of Pure Reason , pp. 9
    • Kant, I.1
  • 49
    • 33749498012 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Kant's distinction between public and private in ref. 6
    • See Roger Chartier's comments on Kant's distinction between public and private in "The public sphere and public opinion" (ref. 6), 24-26.
    • The Public Sphere and Public Opinion , pp. 24-26
    • Chartier, R.1
  • 50
    • 0011674860 scopus 로고
    • What is enlightenment?
    • Lewis White Beck (ed.), Indianapolis
    • Immanuel Kant, "What is enlightenment?", in Lewis White Beck (ed.), Kant on history (Indianapolis, 1963), 5-6. The reference to scholars in the quote displays Kant's belief that in a society undergoing enlightenment (as opposed to a fully enlightened society), certain individuals would serve as an intellectual vanguard by providing the example of how others can eventually free themselves from their "self-imposed tutelage". I will return to the role of scholars in the public sphere toward the end of the essay.
    • (1963) Kant on History , pp. 5-6
    • Kant, I.1
  • 51
    • 0347100243 scopus 로고
    • Literary criticism and the public sphere
    • idem, Ithaca, N.Y., esp.
    • On the emergence of literary criticism in the eighteenth century, see Peter Uwe Hohendahl, "Literary criticism and the public sphere", in idem, The institution of criticism (Ithaca, N.Y., 1982), 44-82, esp. pp. 47-58;
    • (1982) The Institution of Criticism , pp. 44-82
    • Hohendahl, P.U.1
  • 52
    • 0346469837 scopus 로고
    • From classicist to classical literary criticism, 1730-1806
    • Peter Uwe Hohendahl (ed.), Lincoln, Neb.
    • Klaus Berghahn, "From classicist to classical literary criticism, 1730-1806", in Peter Uwe Hohendahl (ed.), A history of German literary criticism (Lincoln, Neb., 1988), 13-98;
    • (1988) A History of German Literary Criticism , pp. 13-98
    • Berghahn, K.1
  • 53
    • 0347100240 scopus 로고
    • A new history of the Enlightenment?
    • and John Bender, "A new history of the Enlightenment?", Eighteenth-century life, xvi (1992), 1-20.
    • (1992) Eighteenth-century Life , vol.16 , pp. 1-20
    • Bender, J.1
  • 56
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    • note
    • With respect to the continual cycle of exchange between readers and writers manifested in the Archiv, it might be noted that Reil published in the early volumes a scattering of letters from readers, commenting on topics Reil had raised in his own writings. Reil meanwhile became a reader himself in his capacity as book reviewer. Most issues contained a section of reviews, in which Reil offered a synopsis of a book's contents interspersed with his own critical appraisals.
  • 59
    • 0042605453 scopus 로고
    • Deutsche Presse bis 1815
    • Berlin
    • The ALZ's Intelligenzblatt was a brilliant innovation because it deflected away from the publisher some of the normal costs of producing a periodical. Whereas typically a publisher paid contributors to a periodical on the basis of the length of the contribution, the items appearing in the Intelligenzblatt were essentially advertisements paid for by the people who posted them. Therefore, the publishers of the ALZ made money twice from the publication of the Intelligenzblatt: once from the original submissions, and again from the sale of copies of the ALZ to the public, copies made all the more saleable by the spicy news one could expect to find in the Intelligenzblatt. For an early history of such publications, see Margot Lindemann, Geschichte der deutschen Presse, Teil I, "Deutsche Presse bis 1815" (Berlin, 1969), 248-55. I am currently conducting research on this and other aspects of the economics of the public sphere in eighteenth-century Germany.
    • (1969) Geschichte der Deutschen Presse , Issue.1 TEIL , pp. 248-255
    • Lindemann, M.1
  • 60
    • 0003326313 scopus 로고
    • What's critical about critical theory? The case of Habermas and gender
    • idem, Minneapolis
    • For a perceptive critique of the gender implications in Habermas's concept of the public sphere see Nancy Fraser, "What's critical about critical theory? The case of Habermas and gender", in idem, Unruly practices: Power, discourse, and gender in contemporary social theory (Minneapolis, 1989), 113-43.
    • (1989) Unruly Practices: Power, Discourse, and Gender in Contemporary Social Theory , pp. 113-143
    • Fraser, N.1
  • 62
    • 0028313435 scopus 로고
    • Good advice and little medicine: The professional authority of early modern English physicians
    • See also Harold J. Cook, "Good advice and little medicine: The professional authority of early modern English physicians", Journal of British studies, xxxiii (1994), 1-31.
    • (1994) Journal of British Studies , vol.33 , pp. 1-31
    • Cook, H.J.1
  • 63
    • 0346469838 scopus 로고
    • Das schwierige Geschäft der Aufklärung: Zur Bedeutung der Zeitschriften im literarischen Leben des 18. Jahrhunderts
    • Hans-Friedrich Wessels (ed.), Königstein
    • Klaus L. Berghahn, "Das schwierige Geschäft der Aufklärung: Zur Bedeutung der Zeitschriften im literarischen Leben des 18. Jahrhunderts", in Hans-Friedrich Wessels (ed.), Aufklärung: Ein literaturwissenschaftliches Studienbuch (Königstein, 1984), 32-65.
    • (1984) Aufklärung: Ein Literaturwissenschaftliches Studienbuch , pp. 32-65
    • Berghahn, K.L.1
  • 64
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    • Ueber die Medicin: Arkesilas an Ekdemus
    • August
    • "Ueber die Medicin: Arkesilas an Ekdemus", Der neue teutsche Merkur, August 1795, 337-78, p. 338.
    • (1795) Der Neue Teutsche Merkur , pp. 337-378
  • 69
    • 0346469839 scopus 로고
    • Ein Wort über den Angriff der razionellen Medicin im N. T. Merkur. August 1795
    • October
    • Christoph Wilhelm Hufeland, "Ein Wort über den Angriff der razionellen Medicin im N. T. Merkur. August 1795", Der neue teutsche Merkur, October 1795, 138-53, pp. 138-9.
    • (1795) Der Neue Teutsche Merkur , pp. 138-153
    • Hufeland, C.W.1
  • 76
    • 0345839013 scopus 로고
    • An Hrn. Rath D. Hufeland in Jena, über dessen Wort im N.T. Merkur 1795. 10. St. S. 168. Vom Verf. des Arkesilas
    • January
    • "An Hrn. Rath D. Hufeland in Jena, über dessen Wort im N.T. Merkur 1795. 10. St. S. 168. Vom Verf. des Arkesilas", Der neue teutsche Merkur, January 1796, 76-92, p. 76.
    • (1796) Der Neue Teutsche Merkur , pp. 76-92
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    • ref. 27
    • Kant, "What is enlightenment?" (ref. 27), 4. Kant in fact does not explicitly assign the vanguard position to the individuals he labels "scholars". But I think the overall thrust of his discussion makes this equation a reasonable one.
    • What Is Enlightenment? , pp. 4
    • Kant1
  • 80
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    • Über den Gemeinspruch: Das mag in der Theorie richtig seyn, taugt aber nicht für die Praxis
    • Berlin
    • Quite by coincidence, Kant had written a short essay on the relationship between theory and practice only a couple of years previously. However, Kant had addressed the issue in terms of the application of his categorical imperative (a general moral principle given by the faculty of reason) to practical situations in ethics, politics, and the law. Thus he framed the issue in terms of the traditional meaning of praxis. Aside from a few passing remarks, Kant did not address theory and practice in medicine. More's the pity, for undoubtedly he would have had interesting things to say about it. See "Über den Gemeinspruch: Das mag in der Theorie richtig seyn, taugt aber nicht für die Praxis", in Kant's gesammelte Schriften, viii (Berlin, 1912), 273-313.
    • (1912) Kant's Gesammelte Schriften , vol.8 , pp. 273-313
  • 81
    • 0000473649 scopus 로고
    • Rolf Torstendahl and Michael Burrage (eds), London
    • On the monopolization of professional discourse by university-based departments, see Magali Sarfatti Larson, "In the matter of experts and professionals, or How impossible it is to leave nothing unsaid", in Rolf Torstendahl and Michael Burrage (eds), The formation of professions: Knowledge, state and strategy (London, 1990), 24-50.
    • (1990) The Formation of Professions: Knowledge, State and Strategy , pp. 24-50
  • 82
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    • note
    • Of course, one might ask whether the public sphere in the eighteenth century was not already subject to the same "corrupting influences". As indicated by my remarks about the Allgemeine Literatur-Zeitung above (ref. 34), I suspect it was, and indeed ineluctably so. Along the same lines, Colin Jones (ref. 7) has recently reminded historians of the public sphere that they have too readily divorced the public sphere from the history of capitalism, in spite of the prominence given by Habermas to the role of capitalism in its emergence.
  • 84
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    • J. C. Reil and the 'journalization' of physiology
    • Peter Dear (ed.), Philadelphia
    • I have elaborated on this subject in Thomas H. Broman, "J. C. Reil and the 'journalization' of physiology", in Peter Dear (ed.), The literary structure of scientific argument (Philadelphia, 1991), 13-42.
    • (1991) The Literary Structure of Scientific Argument , pp. 13-42
    • Broman, T.H.1
  • 88
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    • Michael Kelly (ed.), Cambridge, Mass.
    • Some readers may bridle at the admixture of Foucault in an article about Habermas's public sphere, recalling a famous "debate" they began to have in the 1980s about the public sphere, before Foucault's death cut it short. Let me point out here that their disagreement was over Habermas's conviction that a communicative space like the eighteenth-century public sphere could serve as the basis for an authentic form of liberal democracy in the modern world. Foucault, who zealously criticized any such forms of philosophical foundationalism, refused to believe that critical theory, as represented by Habermas, could find an Archimedean fulcrum for mounting its liberal-democratic critique of power. Therefore, their disagreement had nothing to do with whether the public sphere might exist as a discursive structure, just over its ultimate foundations. See the numerous contributions by the two principals, along with commentaries, in Michael Kelly (ed.), Critique and power: Recasting the Foucault/Habermas debate (Cambridge, Mass., 1994).
    • (1994) Critique and Power: Recasting the Foucault/Habermas Debate
  • 89
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    • transl. by A. M. Sheridan Smith New York
    • Michel Foucault, The archaeology of knowledge, transl. by A. M. Sheridan Smith (New York, 1982), 31-76.
    • (1982) The Archaeology of Knowledge , pp. 31-76
    • Foucault, M.1


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