Liberation Philosophy from the Praxis of the Oppressed
2
(17)
Demarcation of Liberation Philosophy: Beyond Eurocentric Developmentalism
3
(2)
Liberation Philosophy and Praxis: Categories and Method
5
(2)
Horizons and Debates of Liberation Philosophy
7
(5)
Pertinence of Economics
12
(2)
Paths Opening Up to the Future
14
(5)
The Reason of the Other: ``Interpellation'' as Speech-Act
19
(30)
Point of Departure
19
(2)
Interpellation
21
(6)
The Reason of the Other: Exteriority and the Community of Communication
27
(5)
From Pragmatics to Economics
32
(17)
Toward a North-South Dialogue
49
(15)
State of the Question
49
(2)
Toward the Origin of the ``Myth of Modernity''
51
(2)
Exteriority-Totality, ``Lebenswelt''-System
53
(1)
Communication Community and Life Community
54
(10)
From the Skeptic to the Cynic
64
(10)
The Skeptic and the Ultimate Grounding of Discourse Ethics
65
(2)
The Cynic and the Power of Strategic Rationality as Criticized by Liberation Philosophy
67
(3)
The Skeptic as a Functionary of Cynical Reason
70
(4)
Hermeneutics and Liberation
74
(29)
Following Ricoeur's Philosophical Project Step by Step
74
(3)
Toward a Latin-American Symbolics (up to 1969)
77
(2)
Origins of Liberation Philosophy (1969-76)
79
(4)
From Hermeneutical Pragmatics to Economics
83
(5)
A Philosophy of ``Poverty in Times of Cholera''
88
(15)
A ``Conversation'' with Richard Rorty
103
(26)
Different Original Situations
103
(3)
Rorty's Philosophical Project
106
(7)
Rorty's Pragmatism and Liberation Philosophy
113
(16)
Modernity, Eurocentrism, and Trans-Modernity: in Dialogue with Charles Taylor
129
(34)
The Project of the Historical Reconstruction of Modernity
129
(9)
Taylor's Ethics of the Good
138
(9)
Conclusions
147
(16)
PART TWO
Response by Karl-Otto Apel: Discourse Ethics Before the Challenge of Liberation Philosophy
163
(42)
The Prehistory of the Contemporary Discourse
163
(1)
The Themes of the Dusselian Challenge
164
(3)
European Perspectives on the Collapse of Marxism-Leninism
167
(5)
Methodological Gains of the Theory of Dependence
172
(5)
The Skeptical-Pragmatic Problematization of the Grand Theories of Political Development
177
(3)
The Ethically Relevant Facts of the Relationship between the First and Third World
180
(25)
Response by Paul Ricoeur: Philosophy and Liberation
205
(8)
Response by Enrique Dussel: World System, Politics, and the Economics of Liberation Philosophy
213
(27)
The World System as a Philosophical Problem
214
(3)
The Pretention to Globality and the Fundamental Insight into the Question of Dependence
217
(2)
Why Marx? Toward a Philosophical Economics
219
(8)
There Is No Economics without Politics nor Politics without Economics
227
(13)
Bibliography
240
(5)
Index
245
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