Jürgen Habermas (1929-2026) ranks as the leading German philosopher of the postwar period and the central figure of the Frankfurt School’s second generation. For more than seven decades he defended a single proposition: that free societies can govern themselves through reasoned public discussion rather than through tradition, ideology, nationalism, or force. His accounts of the public sphere, communicative action, discourse ethics, deliberative democracy, and constitutional patriotism became foundational across philosophy, political science, sociology, law, and communications.
He was born on June 18, 1929, in Düsseldorf and grew up in the nearby town of Gummersbach during the last years of the Weimar Republic and the rise of National Socialism. His father, Ernst Habermas, worked as an executive in the regional chamber of industry and commerce and joined the Nazi Party soon after Adolf Hitler (1889-1945) took power in 1933. Like most German boys of his generation, Habermas passed through the Nazi youth organizations. Near the end of the Second World War, at fifteen, the regime called him up to help man Germany’s western defenses.
These years marked him. The collapse of Nazi Germany in 1945 became, by his own account, a moral and political awakening. Habermas belonged to the first generation of German intellectuals who had to face the crimes of the Third Reich and the failures of their parents. Much of his later work answers a question that haunted postwar Germany. How can a modern society build legitimate political authority and still guard against the return of tyranny?
A second influence ran closer to the body. Habermas was born with a cleft palate and underwent several surgeries as a child. Trouble with speech left him alert to both the fragility and the worth of human contact. Many readers trace his lifelong attention to communication, dialogue, and mutual understanding to these early years.
Habermas studied philosophy, history, psychology, economics, and German literature at the universities of Göttingen, Zurich, and Bonn. He finished his doctoral dissertation in 1954 on the philosopher Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph Schelling (1775-1854). Two years later he joined the Institute for Social Research in Frankfurt as an assistant to Theodor W. Adorno (1903-1969).
His place in the Frankfurt School was never settled. He later became its most famous representative, yet he clashed early with the Institute’s director, Max Horkheimer (1895-1973). Horkheimer judged some of Habermas’s first work too political and too risky for the fragile setting of postwar West Germany. The friction grew sharp enough that Horkheimer blocked Habermas’s habilitation through the Institute. Habermas left Frankfurt and completed the habilitation at the University of Marburg under the socialist political scientist Wolfgang Abendroth (1906-1985).
That work appeared in 1962 as The Structural Transformation of the Public Sphere. It became a landmark of twentieth-century social science. Habermas traced the rise of a bourgeois public sphere in eighteenth-century Europe through coffeehouses, salons, newspapers, reading societies, and civic clubs. These places gave citizens room to discuss public affairs apart from both state power and private money.
The book argued that democratic legitimacy rests on a living public sphere where citizens debate in earnest. Habermas held that commercialization, mass media, and bureaucracy had weakened this sphere, and he held too that its democratic promise remained among modernity’s great achievements. The idea changed scholarship in communications, journalism, political theory, sociology, and history.
In 1964 Habermas returned to Frankfurt as professor of philosophy and sociology and took Horkheimer’s place as the most prominent thinker tied to the school. He parted ways with the first generation on a central point. Horkheimer and Adorno stressed domination, mass manipulation, and the failures of Enlightenment reason. Habermas looked instead for the means of democratic renewal inside modern institutions.
His public standing grew during the upheavals of the 1960s. He shared many aims of the student movement and rejected its revolutionary romance. During the protests of 1968 he warned against what he called left fascism and argued that democratic reform offered a more legitimate road than revolutionary confrontation. This loyalty to constitutional democracy set him apart from much of the European left.
From 1971 to 1981 Habermas served as co-director of the Max Planck Institute in Starnberg alongside the physicist and philosopher Carl Friedrich von Weizsäcker (1912-2007). In these years he produced the work that made his international name.
His most ambitious book appeared in 1981, the two-volume The Theory of Communicative Action. It sought to rescue the Enlightenment project from both conservative doubt and radical attack. Habermas argued that men do not interact through strategic calculation alone. They also act communicatively, in a manner aimed at reaching shared understanding.
On his account, every real act of communication raises claims to truth, sincerity, and rightness. People in a discussion assume that arguments can be weighed on their merits and that better reasons should win out over weaker ones. Reason therefore arises through ordinary speech, not only through science or technical expertise.
A central idea here is the ideal speech situation. Habermas never claimed such a state exists. It works as a critical standard. Anyone who enters an argument presupposes a setting free of coercion, manipulation, and domination, a setting where the only force at play is what he called “the unforced force of the better argument.” The idea gave him a benchmark for spotting distortions caused by power, wealth, propaganda, or ideology.
The book drew a further distinction between system and lifeworld. The system holds the large structures, markets, bureaucracies, and administrative bodies, that coordinate conduct through money and power. The lifeworld holds culture, family, community, and everyday talk. A modern society needs both. Habermas argued that pathologies set in when the system pushes past its proper bounds and colonizes the lifeworld, draining democratic life and human solidarity.
This argument set him against the German sociologist Niklas Luhmann (1927-1998). Luhmann’s systems theory pictured society as a web of self-steering subsystems, each running on its own code, largely apart from human intention. Habermas read this as technocratic and dangerous, since it seemed to dissolve democratic agency and moral responsibility into function. Their exchange became a defining quarrel of postwar European social theory and sharpened Habermas’s grasp of the tie between institutions and democratic legitimacy.
Across the 1970s and 1980s Habermas built discourse ethics, an effort to ground morality in the procedures of rational communication rather than in divine command, inherited custom, or private taste. A moral norm holds, he argued, only if every person affected might accept it under conditions of free and open discussion. The approach left a deep mark on ethics, legal theory, and democratic philosophy.
Habermas also became a prominent public voice in Germany. During the Historikerstreit, the historians’ dispute of the 1980s, he fought attempts to relativize or normalize Nazi crimes. He argued that a German democratic future required an honest reckoning with the Holocaust. His interventions helped shape the country’s culture of historical memory.
From these debates came an influential political idea, constitutional patriotism, *Verfassungspatriotismus*. A modern democratic society, he argued, can no longer rest political unity on ethnicity, blood, religion, or ancestral culture. Citizens should instead attach their loyalty to the universal principles set down in a democratic constitution, among them human rights, popular sovereignty, and the rule of law. The idea shaped arguments over German identity, immigration, European integration, and post-national citizenship.
In 1985 Habermas published The Philosophical Discourse of Modernity, a broad defense of the Enlightenment against postmodern and post-structuralist critics. Reading Michel Foucault (1926-1984), Jacques Derrida (1930-2004), and others, he argued that many radical critiques of reason lean on the very rational standards they claim to reject. He called this a performative contradiction. The Enlightenment, on his view, remains an unfinished project able to correct its own failures through self-criticism.
His mature political and legal theory found its fullest form in Between Facts and Norms (1992). The book took up a central problem of modern democracy. How can law wield coercive authority and still protect individual freedom?
Habermas argued that legitimate law arises when democratic institutions stay tied to public deliberation. Informal discussion within civil society generates what he called communicative power. Democratic institutions then convert that communicative power into administrative and legal power. Law works as a bridge between public discussion and state authority. The book became a major contribution to legal and constitutional theory.
Beyond Germany, Habermas argued for European integration. He held that globalization had sapped the capacity of nation-states to solve shared problems, and he argued that democratic governance might come to need supranational institutions. He stayed wary of purely technocratic integration and insisted that legitimacy must rest on public participation and democratic accountability.
His later writing turned to the relation between secularism and religion. Secular himself, Habermas came to argue that religious traditions still hold moral resources worth hearing. A democratic society, he held, should neither privilege nor silence religious voices, and believers and nonbelievers alike should join a shared work of public reasoning.
Habermas married Ute Wesselhoeft, a teacher, in 1955. The couple had three children, Tilmann, Rebekka, and Judith. Rebekka Habermas became a historian at the University of Göttingen and died in 2023. Ute Habermas died in 2025 after almost seventy years of marriage. Habermas stayed on in their home in Starnberg and remained at work despite his age.
Over his career he received many of the highest academic honors, among them the Hegel Prize, the Sigmund Freud Prize, the Adorno Award, the Leibniz Prize, the Kyoto Prize, the Erasmus Prize, the John W. Kluge Prize, and the Johan Skytte Prize in Political Science. In 2021 he declined the Sheikh Zayed Book Award after concerns rose over human rights and political freedoms in the United Arab Emirates, a choice that matched his public conduct to his philosophy.
Habermas retired from his Frankfurt chair in 1994 and stayed in intellectual and political debate for three more decades. He died on March 14, 2026, in Starnberg, at ninety-six. By then many regarded him as the leading democratic theorist of the modern age.
His admirers saw the philosopher who best defended the possibility of reason after the catastrophes of the twentieth century. His critics held that he overrated the power of rational discussion against power, identity, emotion, and conflict. Even many critics granted the scale of the achievement. Few thinkers have done more to explain why a deliberative democracy depends on more than elections and institutions. It depends on citizens willing to justify their beliefs, hear opposing arguments, and treat one another as political equals.
One question drove his whole career. How can free men govern themselves without domination? His answer was that legitimacy arises through communication. Democracy survives because citizens stay committed to settling their disagreements through public reasoning rather than force, even when agreement comes hard. In an age of polarization, technological disruption, and distrust, that conviction is the lasting legacy of Jürgen Habermas.
Stephen P. Turner is a nominalist about the social. He denies that shared things exist, shared practices, shared cultures, shared frameworks, shared competences, as real objects over and above separate persons with separate histories. When a theorist explains why people act alike by pointing to something they hold in common, Turner asks what that common thing is and where it sits. The usual answer names a practice, a culture, a rationality, a background. Turner reads each as a reification, an abstraction a writer first draws from surface similarity and then treats as the cause of the similarity. The move runs in a circle. The shared essence does the explaining, and the only evidence for the essence is the behavior it claims to explain. He set out the case at length in The Social Theory of Practices, where the target is the notion of a shared practice as a thing transmitted and held in common.
Habermas builds on shared essences from the first premise to the last.
The first is communicative rationality. In The Theory of Communicative Action he argues that every competent speaker carries an implicit knowledge of the validity claims raised in speech, a single rational structure built into language as such, turned toward mutual understanding. He calls the reconstruction of this knowledge universal pragmatics. The word universal carries the essentialism. One reason, one structure, the same in every speaker in every tongue. Turner sees the classic hypostatization. Habermas observes that people sometimes reach agreement, infers a shared competence that makes agreement possible, then explains the agreement by the competence. No one observes the competence. He reads it off the result and then makes it the cause of the result.
Next comes the lifeworld. Habermas describes a shared background of taken-for-granted meaning held in common by a community, a reservoir a society draws on. Turner denies the reservoir. There are persons whose habituations overlap enough to coordinate. The word lifeworld names the overlap and then treats the overlap as a thing with contents and a boundary. The essentialism shows when Habermas speaks of the lifeworld as colonized, rationalized, drained, verbs that need an object to act on. To suffer colonization a thing must first stand as a thing.
The public sphere works the same way. The Structural Transformation of the Public Sphere narrates the rise and decay of a single entity. Heterogeneous coffeehouses, papers, salons, and clubs, with different members and different habits, gather under one noun and receive one structure and one biography, down to the refeudalization that marks the decay of the essence. The ideal type serves as a useful abstraction until the writer forgets it is one and lets it rise, transform, and fall like an organism. Turner reads the structural-transformation story as the giveaway. A thing has a structure, and the structure transforms. The narrative presupposes the thing.
The ideal speech situation is the hardest essentialism in the set. Habermas locates a single normative core inside the act of speaking as such, a counterfactual setting that every speaker presupposes the moment he opens his mouth. Turner denies there is a speaking as such with a built-in core. There are episodes of talk, each with its own setting and its own separate history, and the sameness across them is the thing a theorist has to earn rather than assume.
The essences carry the politics. Discourse ethics needs a universal reason so that critique rests on more than local custom. Constitutional patriotism needs a shared rational core so that loyalty to principle might replace loyalty to blood. Post-national legitimacy needs one reason for all men. The shared essences save Habermas from relativism. Strip them out and the critique loses its ground and the politics loses its warrant. The reification is no stray habit. The system needs it.
Habermas has a reply. Universal pragmatics, he might say, is a reconstructive and fallible hypothesis, not a metaphysical essence, an empirical reconstruction of competences that stays open to revision. Turner’s rejoinder holds the label does not change the shape of the argument. The reconstruction still posits a shared competence and still uses it to explain coordination, and it never hands over the shared object. It relabels the inference and leaves the circle intact.
Turner’s nominalism owes a debt. People do coordinate. They reach agreement. They treat the same arguments as the stronger ones often enough for institutions to run on the result. Habermas might press the point. Something shared seems to do the work, and an account built only on separate persons and lucky meshing has to explain the meshing without the sameness it denies. Turner’s answer, individuals tuned by feedback into good-enough coordination, sameness as appearance rather than substance, is thinner and harder to put to work than the essence it rejects.
Habermas and the Normative Surplus
Stephen P. Turner is a naturalist about the normative. He denies that the normative names a separate realm, a domain of validity, obligation, and the ought that stands above the natural facts and cannot reduce to them. In Explaining the Normative he tracks a family of thinkers who hold the opposite, who argue that rule-following, inference, language, and agreement each presuppose a standard of correctness that no description of behavior can supply. The argument runs as a transcendental. Normativity is presupposed by the activity, therefore normativity is real and binding. Turner’s complaint is that the presupposition lives in the theorist’s reconstruction and not in the agent. The agent has habits, expectations, trained responses, and feelings of obligation, all natural facts. The theorist adds validity on top and calls it a presupposition. The validity is an extra, hired to do the explaining and never located. Turner calls the whole approach a secular theology. It puts validity where God used to sit, a source of authority above all practice from which all practice can be judged.
Habermas is the type perfected. His apparatus runs on irreducible normativity from the ground up.
Start with the validity claims. Every speech act, Habermas argues, raises claims to truth, to normative rightness, and to sincerity, and a hearer can challenge any of them and demand reasons. The rightness claim carries the weight. It asserts that the speaker stands in the right, not merely that he speaks from habit or interest, and the claim binds whether or not the hearer grants it. Turner reads this as the extra in plain view. A man speaks. He expects uptake. He feels entitled. He sanctions the hearer who brushes him off. All natural. Habermas adds a claim to validity that floats above the expecting, the feeling, and the sanctioning, and gives the validity the explanatory job.
The validity has to rise above any actual agreement, so Habermas idealizes. A real consensus can be false. Validity is what an unlimited communication community might agree under conditions free of coercion, by the unforced force of the better argument. This is the transcendent standpoint Turner targets, authority lifted clear of every practice men actually run. The standard never touches the ground. No community is unlimited and no setting is free of coercion, so the valid norm is the one that might be agreed in a place that does not exist.
Discourse ethics states the rule. A norm holds if all affected might accept it in rational discourse. The phrase might accept does the work. Not what they accept, which is a fact, but what they might accept if rational, which is the surplus. Turner asks where the surplus sits. You can find the people, their interests, their arguments, their assents and refusals. You cannot find the might-accept. It gets read off the hope that reason converges and then used to certify the norms reason is supposed to deliver.
Between Facts and Norms names the problem in its title. Habermas wants legitimate law to be both a coercive fact and a valid norm, and he wants the validity to be more than the coercion. Legitimacy is what parts law from naked force. Turner grants the parting as a fact of feeling. Men treat some commands as legitimate and others as mere force, and the feeling has natural sources, in habit, in consent, in the expectation of fair sanction. What he denies is the more than. Strip the surplus and you have power, habit, and the sense of legitimacy, each a natural fact, with nothing left over for validity to be.
Habermas resists the charge by calling his method reconstructive and fallible. Universal pragmatics, he says, reconstructs the unavoidable presuppositions of speech, and the idealizations are pragmatic, not Platonic, forced on anyone who argues at all. Turner’s reply holds that unavoidable presupposition restates the transcendental move rather than answering it. Calling the idealization pragmatic instead of metaphysical does not tell us where the validity lives or what natural fact it adds to the habits and feelings already on the table. The fallibilism cuts the other way too. If we can never identify the valid norm, the realm we cannot check earns its keep by faith.
Habermas needs the surplus, and the need is honorable. Without irreducible validity his critique loses its footing and democracy rests on custom and power alone. He spent a career fighting that conclusion, against the legal positivists who reduce law to whatever the sovereign commands, against Carl Schmitt (1888-1985) and the decision that grounds order in will, against the functionalism that dissolves legitimacy into system maintenance. The normative saves him from Schmitt. Turner’s point is that it saves him by positing a ghost, and a man who fears decisionism is not thereby owed a transcendent realm to fend it off.
Habermas is the great secular rationalist who turned in old age to the moral inheritance of religion. He kept the structure of faith while emptying its content. The unforced force of the better argument is a regulative absolute, a this-worldly seat for the view from nowhere. Where the believer trusts that God sees the truth of the matter, Habermas trusts that the unlimited communication community might reach it. The trust does the same work. It anchors judgment in a standpoint no man occupies.
David Pinsof has a single target, the belief that the world’s troubles come from misunderstanding. Intellectuals hold this belief because it flatters them. If misunderstanding causes the trouble, then the men whose trade is understanding are the ones who can fix it. Just by doing their work they save the world. Pinsof’s counterclaim is blunt. There is no misunderstanding. People understand what they have an incentive to understand. The cause of the trouble is bad motives, not bad beliefs, and the motives are the ordinary ones a hierarchical, coalitional, self-deceiving primate carries out of natural selection.
Habermas is the archpriest of the belief Pinsof attacks. His master word is Verständigung, reaching understanding. He splits human action in two. Strategic action aims at success, at getting your way. Communicative action aims at mutual understanding, and he treats the second as the deeper and more human of the two, the orientation that holds a society together. Pathology enters when communication is distorted, when power, money, or ideology bends speech away from understanding. The cure is speech freed of distortion. Name the master concept of a man’s life work and you have named the misunderstanding myth in its purest form.
Take the diagnosis first. Habermas reads the ills of modernity as failures of communication. Ideology is distorted communication run through a whole society. The lifeworld suffers colonization when the imperatives of money and administration crowd out shared meaning. Partisan rancor, manipulation, the decay of the public sphere into public relations, all of it reads as understanding gone wrong. Pinsof answers that the distortion is the function, not the failure. Partisans hate each other because they are locked in zero-sum competition over the coercive apparatus of the state, the thing that puts men in prison at gunpoint. They demonize the other side because demonizing works. They deny doing it and embellish the other side’s doing it because denial and embellishment serve as weapons. None of this is a breakdown of understanding. It is understanding put to use.
The ideal speech situation takes the hardest hit. Habermas pictures a setting cleared of coercion where the only force is the unforced force of the better argument. Pinsof denies men carry any such orientation. We argue to win. Confirmation bias helps us win arguments and justify what we have already done. The better argument wins when it serves the winning coalition, and the loser’s argument was never weighed on its merits. Habermas offers the counterfactual as a standard, not a description, and grants that no real setting reaches it. Pinsof’s reply cuts at the standard. A benchmark that nothing approaches, and that men have no motive to approach, measures nothing. It flatters the man who holds it up.
Underneath the quarrel sits the split between stated and actual motives. Habermas takes the stated orientation of a speaker, toward truth, toward sincerity, toward the better reason, as the real one. He builds a theory on the mission statement. Pinsof says read the deeds. Starbucks talks of nurturing the human spirit one cup at a time and works to maximize profit. Public discussion talks of reaching understanding and works to raise status, build coalitions, and run down rivals. Judge the discussion by its stated goal and it fails, and the failure looks like a great misunderstanding to clear up. Judge it by its working goal and it succeeds, and there is nothing to clear up.
Discourse ethics carries the same flaw. A norm holds, Habermas argues, if every affected person might accept it under free and open discussion. Pinsof answers that men accept the norms that serve their coalition and reject the ones that threaten it, then dress the verdict in the language of what all might accept. Open discussion does not strip the motives out. It gives them better cover.
The public sphere depends on a golden age that never ran. Habermas mourns the bourgeois coffeehouse, the salon, the reading club, sites of rational-critical debate later degraded into manipulation, a process he calls refeudalization. Pinsof’s frame denies the Eden. The coffeehouse was a status arena and a coalition floor from the start. The refeudalization Habermas grieves is no fall from disinterested reason. There was no disinterested reason to fall from.
The misunderstanding myth makes the intellectual the most important man alive, the one who diagnoses the distortion and reconstructs the conditions of clean speech and so rescues democracy from within. Seventy years of work raise the critical theorist to the man who can heal a sick modernity. Pinsof’s closing image fits Habermas without alteration. A man finds himself in a hole and studies the dirt to the last molecule, and no study of the hole lifts him out of it. The hole is human nature. We have no deep wish to climb out. The world does not want to be saved.
In his 2018 book, The Great Delusion: Liberal Dreams and International Realities, John J. Mearsheimer wrote:
My view is that we are profoundly social beings from the start to the finish of our lives and that individualism is of secondary importance… Liberalism downplays the social nature of human beings to the point of almost ignoring it, instead treating people largely as atomistic actors… Political liberalism… is an ideology that is individualistic at its core and assigns great importance to the concept of inalienable rights. This concern for rights is the basis of its universalism—everyone on the planet has the same inherent set of rights—and this is what motivates liberal states to pursue ambitious foreign policies. The public and scholarly discourse about liberalism since World War II has placed enormous emphasis on what are commonly called human rights. This is true all around the world, not just in the West. “Human rights,” Samuel Moyn notes, “have come to define the most elevated aspirations of both social movements and political entities—state and interstate. They evoke hope and provoke action.”
[Humans] do not operate as lone wolves but are born into social groups or societies that shape their identities well before they can assert their individualism. Moreover, individuals usually develop strong attachments to their group and are sometimes willing to make great sacrifices for their fellow members. Humans are often said to be tribal at their core. The main reason for our social nature is that the best way for a person to survive is to be embedded in a society and to cooperate with fellow members rather than act alone… Despite its elevated ranking, reason is the least important of the three ways we determine our preferences. It certainly is less important than socialization. The main reason socialization matters so much is that humans have a long childhood in which they are protected and nurtured by their families and the surrounding society, and meanwhile exposed to intense socialization. At the same time, they are only beginning to develop their critical faculties, so they are not equipped to think for themselves. By the time an individual reaches the point where his reasoning skills are well developed, his family and society have already imposed an enormous value infusion on him. Moreover, that individual is born with innate sentiments that also strongly influence how he thinks about the world around him. All of this means that people have limited choice in formulating a moral code, because so much of their thinking about right and wrong comes from inborn attitudes and socialization.
Mearsheimer’s broad target is the liberal who treats man as a rights-bearing atom prior to society, the line that runs from John Locke (1632-1704) through John Rawls (1921-2002). Habermas does not stand in that line. He spent a career attacking possessive individualism and built his account of the self on the opposite premise. The self forms through communication with others, after George Herbert Mead (1863-1931), not before. Habermas agrees with Mearsheimer on the first point. We are social from the start. The atomism charge glances off him.
Both men grant that society makes the man. They split on what follows. Mearsheimer ranks reason last and treats the value infusion as close to fixed. Habermas makes reason the medium of legitimacy and treats the infusion as open to revision through discussion. He asks the citizen to step back from his inherited loyalties, bring his norms into discourse, and accept only what all affected might agree to. Mearsheimer answers that the stepping back barely happens. The loyalties were laid down before reason woke, they sit deeper than reason reaches, and a faculty ranked third behind socialization and sentiment cannot reweight what the other two have set. The Habermasian citizen who brackets his tribe and weighs the better argument is a rare creature, and a weak one.
Constitutional patriotism is where the collision shows plainest. Habermas asks modern men to anchor their loyalty in universal principles, human rights, popular sovereignty, the rule of law, and to loosen their grip on blood, ethnicity, and nation. He asks for love of an abstraction in place of love of one’s own. Mearsheimer’s anthropology says the request runs against the grain of the animal. Men attach to thick groups and make sacrifices for them. A constitution is thin. When the thin principle and the thick group pull apart, the group wins, because the group reaches the sentiments and the principle reaches only the late and weakest faculty. Constitutional patriotism might hold a cosmopolitan stratum, the readers of Habermas, the educated and the mobile. It will not hold the mass, and it will not survive a crisis, when the social nature reasserts and men remember whose they are.
After 1945 Habermas wanted Germans to ground their identity in constitutional principle rather than ethnic nationhood, because German ethnic nationalism had produced the catastrophe. The whole postwar bet was that reason and the right socialization could override the tribal infusion that fed the Third Reich. Mearsheimer doubts the bet. The attachment can be suppressed, redirected, shamed into silence, yet the social nature remains, and what remains can return.
Discourse ethics meets the same wall. A norm holds, Habermas argues, if all affected might accept it in free discussion. Mearsheimer answers that men do not build their moral codes in discussion. They receive them, through socialization and through inborn attitude, with little room to choose. The discourse-ethical citizen who reasons his way to a universal code is not how a moral code forms in a real man.
So if Mearsheimer is right, what then for Habermas? The architecture stands, but it floats. Communicative reason is real and it does real work in courts, in parliaments, in the slow construction of law, yet it works on the surface and among the few, an elite overlay on a tribal base. The public sphere is the room where a thin stratum performs reason. It does not set what most men believe or whom they will fight. Constitutional patriotism is a delusion in the sense Mearsheimer’s title intends, a liberal dream that mistakes the wish for the animal. The post-national order Habermas hoped Europe might become is that dream colliding with the nation, and the nation does not yield.
The Ritual Beneath the Argument
In Interaction Ritual Chains, sociologist Randall Collins takes up Durkheim and Goffman and argues that solidarity and conviction come from the body before they come from the mind. An interaction ritual needs four things, bodily co-presence, a shared focus of attention, a common mood, and rhythmic entrainment, the falling into step that happens when people attend to the same thing together. When the four combine, the participants feel collective effervescence, they generate emotional energy, and they treat the focus of attention as a sacred symbol. The belief that follows feels binding because the ritual charged it, not because anyone reasoned to it. Émile Durkheim (1858-1917) saw this in religion. Erving Goffman (1922-1982) saw it in the small encounters of daily life. Collins makes it the engine of all solidarity. Reason rides on top. The conviction comes first, from the room, and the reasons arrive after to dress it.
Set this against Habermas and the collision runs the whole length of his thought.
Habermas grounds social integration in reasoned agreement. Men reach understanding by raising and redeeming validity claims, and the agreement binds because it is rationally motivated, carried by the unforced force of the better argument and nothing else. Collins answers that the force is never nothing else. The force is the ritual. The felt rightness of a conclusion comes from the effervescence of the gathering that produced it, and the argument takes the credit the room has earned.
The ideal speech situation makes the quarrel sharp. Habermas wants speech cleared of everything but the proposition and the reason, no coercion, no rhetoric, no pull of personality, no weight of numbers. Collins reads the cleared room as an empty one. Strip out the co-presence, the shared mood, and the rhythm, and you have removed the source of agreement, not the impurities around it. What stays, bare propositional exchange between disengaged minds, generates little solidarity and little conviction. The unforced force of the better argument is the force of the ritual that frames the argument, and Habermas has mistaken the frame for the content.
The order runs backward in Habermas. He has men reason their way to agreement, then feel bound by what they agreed. Collins has men bound by the ritual, then reason their way to a justification for the bond. The seminar feels the truth of a position when the discussion catches fire and the energy rises, and the participants walk out persuaded and call it the better argument. The persuasion is real. Its source is the fire, not the syllogism.
The public sphere looks different through this lens. Habermas prizes the coffeehouse, the salon, the reading club as engines of rational-critical debate. Collins sees interaction-ritual sites, rooms full of co-present men focused on the same pamphlet or quarrel, entrained, charged, minting shared symbols and emotional energy. The power of those rooms was the gathering, the attention, the heat. The reasoning was real and was also the byproduct, or the cover. What bound the early public was the effervescence of assembly more than the quality of its arguments.
Discourse ethics inherits the problem. A norm holds, Habermas argues, if all affected might accept it under ideal discussion. Collins answers that a norm holds when ritual has made it sacred and charged it with the energy of the gatherings that affirm it. Men feel the wrongness of breaking a sacred norm as a bodily recoil, the recoil Durkheim found at the edge of the sacred. No tally of who might accept the norm in reasoned discussion captures that. The norm binds because the ritual loaded it.
Habermas has a name for the modern transition. He calls it the linguistification of the sacred. The old binding powers, religion, sacred authority, the holy, dissolve into communicatively achieved agreement, and reason inherits what ritual once held. Collins denies the dissolution. The sacred never linguistifies. It relocates. The modern world still runs on interaction rituals, the rally, the courtroom, the inauguration, the funeral, the lecture hall, the demonstration, and the energy and the sacred symbols come off those gatherings as they always did. Habermas saw ritual fade and called it the rise of reason. Collins says ritual only changed address, and reason still rides where it always rode, on top of the charge the room provides.
The frame meets its limit at scale. Collins is strong on the small group, the gathering, the room where bodies share a focus. Habermas is after something the room cannot hold, legitimacy among strangers who never gather, the coordination of millions through law and right who will never share a ritual or a mood. Modern law governs people who never enter a common room, and there the thick charge of co-presence runs thin and procedure does the work that ritual cannot reach. Collins explains the wider bond by aggregation, ritual chains linking encounter to encounter until the energy spreads, but the account of how local effervescence becomes society-wide legitimacy is the soft part of the theory, and it is the exact ground Habermas claims. Habermas might press the point. Show me the ritual that binds a citizen to a stranger he will never meet under a constitution he never debated, and if you cannot, reason and procedure are doing the binding after all.
The two theories agree that the lone reasoner is a fiction and that integration is social work. They split on the work. For Habermas the work is reasoning together toward agreement. For Collins the work is gathering together until the body believes. Where men are present to one another, Collins has the better of it, and the unforced force of the better argument looks like the afterglow of the ritual that made the conviction. Where men are absent from one another, strangers bound across a continent by law, Habermas holds the ground Collins struggles to reach. Modern life runs on both, the charged room and the cold procedure, and Habermas built his system on the second while underrating how much of the first still carries the weight.
Habermas and the Interest in Disinterestedness
Pierre Bourdieu built his sociology around a single suspicion, that the scholar misreads the world by the light of his own position in it. He named the error the scholastic fallacy and worked it out at length in Pascalian Meditations. The scholar enjoys skholē, the leisure of the school, time off from necessity, and from that leisure he takes up a contemplative stance toward practices he never has to perform under pressure. Then he projects the stance onto the men he studies. He pictures the practical actor as a small theorist weighing options, when the actor moves in the flow of need, guided by a practical sense lodged in the body, the habitus, below the reach of deliberation. The scholastic fallacy is the unnoticed projection of the thinker’s free relation to the world onto everyone, most of whom are not free.
Hold the ideal speech situation up to this and it shivers.
Habermas reconstructs what every competent speaker supposedly presupposes, an orientation to mutual understanding, the suspension of strategic interest, the readiness to bow to the better argument. Bourdieu reads the list and recognizes the seminar. These are the conditions of the lecture hall, not of speech. A man can suspend his interest when he can afford to, and the affording is the whole point. The leisure buys the disinterested posture. Most men speak under stakes they cannot set aside, for a raise, for standing, for the room’s regard, and the contemplative ease that treats talk as the joint pursuit of truth is the privilege of the few excused from the fight. Habermas took the phenomenology of the tenured and called it the structure of language.
The unforced force of the better argument fares no better. In Language and Symbolic Power Bourdieu argues that no utterance carries its force from its content alone. Every utterance enters a market that prices it by the authority of the speaker, his titles, his accent, his recognized right to be heard. The professor’s sentence outweighs the student’s before either is examined. What Habermas calls the force of the argument is, in the room, the force of the speaker’s symbolic capital, and the listeners credit the argument and overlook the capital. That overlooking has a name. Misrecognition. The power passes for reason because no one sees the power.
Habermas treats agreement as the goal and the test, the free assent of all to what all find rational. Bourdieu asks whose categories framed the question and whose language set the terms before the first word was spoken. The dominated reach agreement in the dominant’s tongue, with the dominant’s distinctions, by the dominant’s measure of what counts as a good reason. The smoother the consensus, the deeper the imposition, because the imposed categories no longer feel imposed. They feel like one’s own mind. This is symbolic violence, the softest and strongest form of domination, the kind the dominated help to work on themselves. Where Habermas hears free men converging on the truth, Bourdieu sees men agreeing in a language not their own and mistaking the surrender for consent.
Habermas needs a subject who deliberates, who raises claims and answers them with reasons. Bourdieu’s agent acts from habitus, from dispositions laid down by a life in a position, and he produces his conduct without consulting the rules a theorist later writes for it. The reasons come after, to justify what the body already chose. A theory built on the redemption of validity claims presupposes a reasoning subject that practice rarely puts on display.
Bourdieu’s reflexive sociology holds that the thinker must objectify his own position in the field before he trusts his own thought. Apply it to Habermas. The man stands in the intellectual field, and a theory of disinterested communication is a move in that field, a position-taking with a payoff. The field reserves its highest prize, recognition, for the player who appears to want only truth, and the appearance of wanting nothing is the surest way to win the thing. Bourdieu called this the interest in disinterestedness. The philosopher who proclaims the unforced force of the better argument secures the field’s esteem by the very disavowal of the wish for esteem. The theory of pure communication, read this way, is the perfected strategy of the intellectual, profit drawn from the show of seeking no profit.
Pressed to the end, Bourdieu’s suspicion turns on Bourdieu. If every agreement is misrecognized domination and every reason a position in a field, then his own sociology is one more position, and his claim to have seen through domination leans on the disinterested orientation to truth he spends his work denying to others. He knew the danger and answered it with reflexivity, the demand that the sociologist objectify himself, yet the regress does not fully close. Habermas can press the point. You could not tell me that my consensus is domination, and expect me to take it, unless you trusted me to yield to the better argument against my interest in staying comfortable. The critique of reason borrows reason to do its work, the charge Habermas laid on every unmasker before Bourdieu.
The frame also reads too much defeat into agreement. Men do sometimes change their minds because the case against them is strong, and the dominated do sometimes win the argument outright. A lens that sees every consensus as the surrender of the weak loses the difference between persuasion and submission, and the difference is real even if it runs rarer than Habermas hoped. Habermas has his reply ready in his own terms. The ideal speech situation was never a snapshot of how men talk. It is the standard that lets you see symbolic violence as violence, the benchmark against which the distortion shows. Bourdieu answers that the benchmark is the scholar’s dream, and that measuring the world against a dream is the scholastic fallacy once more, now wearing the mask of critique. There the two men stand, closer than the heat suggests, both enemies of the lone liberal individual, both wanting men freed, split on the one question that decides the rest. Is reason a tool the dominated can take up against their masters, or the finest of the masters’ tools, handed down so the dominated will do the work on themselves. Habermas bet his life on the first. Bourdieu spent his showing the second.
Habermas and the Discussing Class
Carl Schmitt drew one line and built a politics on it. The political lives in the distinction between friend and enemy. In The Concept of the Political he argues that this distinction stands on its own, apart from good and evil, apart from profit and loss, apart from the beautiful and the ugly. A people is political when it can name an enemy, a public enemy, the stranger it might have to fight, and the possibility of the fight to the death is what gives the political its weight. Liberalism cannot abide the line. It dissolves the enemy into a competitor to bargain with and an interlocutor to persuade, and it turns the decision into a discussion. Schmitt held that the line returns whatever liberalism does, because the enemy is a fact of collective life and not a misunderstanding to clear up.
He had a name for the men who could not face the line. The discussing class.
In The Crisis of Parliamentary Democracy Schmitt pronounced the founding faith of parliament dead. Parliament rested on two beliefs, openness and government by discussion, the faith that truth comes from the clash of opinions if only men talk freely and long enough. By the 1920s, he wrote, the faith had become a ritual, the real decisions made in party rooms and interest coalitions while the chamber performed debate for the public. Government by discussion presumes that the men in the room came to be persuaded rather than to win, and that presumption belonged to a vanished bourgeois moment. Schmitt buried the principle. Habermas dug it up and gave it the most complete philosophical body it ever had. Where Schmitt saw a dead ritual, Habermas saw the unfinished promise of modernity, and he spent his life supplying the foundations the principle had always lacked, the theory of communicative reason, the validity claims, the unforced force of the better argument. He answered Schmitt’s death notice with a system.
Habermas builds the political we out of shared reason, the orientation to mutual understanding, the agreement all might reach under free discussion. Schmitt answers that a people is not the set of those who share reasons. It is the set of those who share an enemy. Unity comes from the line drawn against the outsider, not from the consensus reached among insiders, and a community with no enemy is no political community at all. Constitutional patriotism, post-national citizenship, the unlimited communication community, each tries to raise a we with no they. Schmitt reads the attempt as the liberal dream of a world with the politics taken out. And he adds the barb that cuts deepest. Whoever invokes humanity means to cheat. The appeal to a universal human community does not end enmity. It strips the enemy of the honor of a foe and recasts him as a criminal against mankind, and the wars fought in the name of all humanity are the most pitiless of all.
Political Theology opens with the line that organizes everything Schmitt thought. Sovereign is he who decides on the exception. The legal order runs on norms until the moment it cannot, and in that moment someone suspends the norm and decides, and the decision rests on no rule because the rules have stopped. Between Facts and Norms wants law without remainder, communicative power converted into legitimate law with nothing left over, no founding that procedure did not authorize. Schmitt asks the question the theory cannot hear. Who decides when the talking stops? Every order rests on a founding decision that no procedure licensed, and on a power that holds the normal situation open so the discussion can go on inside it. Habermas describes the house and forgets to ask who built it and who stands at the door.
The call for more discussion, freer discussion, one more round of reasons, is the discussing class fleeing the decision and naming the flight reason. Juan Donoso Cortés (1809-1853), whom Schmitt loved to quote, called the bourgeoisie the class that answers every question with on the one hand and on the other, that meets every either with a maybe. When the enemy stands at the gate, the man who asks for another exchange of validity claims is not the most rational man present. He is the man who will not see that the hour for talk has passed. Read through Schmitt, seventy years of Habermasian theory is the grandest monument ever raised to the evasion of the political.
That Habermas spent a career fending Schmitt off measures the force of the threat. He fought the Schmittian right in the constitutional debates of the Federal Republic, warned against the decisionism that grounds order in will, and built the whole apparatus of communicative legitimacy as the answer to the claim that legitimacy rests on the decision. A man does not spend fifty years answering an argument he finds weak. The energy of the defense is the confession of the danger.
The decisionism that mocks discussion as evasion is the same doctrine that supplied the legal cover for the state Schmitt served, and the exception he theorized became the emergency decree, the enabling act, and the camps. The doctrine that dissolves Habermas is the doctrine that helped dissolve the Weimar constitution into the Third Reich. This is no change of subject. It is evidence about what the theory does when a man acts on it. Schmitt says the institutions of discussion are always a mask. The century says those institutions sometimes hold the violence that the decision, unbound, lets loose.
Schmitt also overreaches. Not every conflict is the existential fight to the death. Most political disagreement is bargainable, and the machinery of procedure and discussion settles it without anyone reaching for a weapon. Habermas can grant the exception, the rare moment when the norm fails and someone must decide, while denying that the exception is the essence of all politics. Most of political life is the normal situation, and in the normal situation the account of legitimacy through reasoned agreement does real work. Schmitt mistakes the limit case for the rule and calls the mistake realism.
And Habermas has the reply that goes to the root. The friend and enemy distinction tells you how power operates. It does not tell you which order deserves to stand. A doctrine that blesses any decision because it is a decision has given up the question of legitimacy and called the surrender courage. Might is not right, and the sovereign who decides still owes an account of why his decision binds the men it binds.
Schmitt has one move left. The demand for justification is the evasion, because someone decided the terms of the justification before the first reason was given. Someone drew the boundary of the communication community, ruled who counts as a participant and what counts as a reason, and named the hour the talking begins and ends. The unlimited communication community has a limit, and a limit is a line between those inside and those outside, the friend and enemy distinction wearing the robe of inclusion. The sovereign Habermas evicted from the order returns at the threshold, in the decision that constitutes the conversation he calls free. There the two men reach the bone. Habermas says the decision can be bound by reason, talked down, hedged with procedure until the will gives way to the argument. Schmitt says the decision is first and last, that reason runs only inside the space some prior decision cleared, and that the man who forgets this will be reminded by an enemy who never agreed to the rules.
