Theorising Noumenal Power
Theorising Noumenal Power is a critical engagement with Rainer Forsts theory of what he calls noumenal power. Forst is the most significant younger generation critical theorist of the Frankfurt School, and his critics include several of the most influential contemporary political power theorists.
The concept of noumenal power locates the sources of social and political power in the space of reasons or justifications using a normatively neutral account of justification. To exercise power, on that account, means to be able to determine, use, close, or open up the space of justifications for others. Going back to Kant, the social subject is theorized as a reasoning being who confers legitimacy upon political structures based upon the cognitive faculty of justification. As argued by Max Weber, authority is the foundation of political institutions and authority presupposes a belief in legitimacy. On the one hand, such beliefs can be distorted, as in ideology, or they can be based upon a process of reasoned justification relative to normatively desirable principles. Critiquing the former, while building upon the latter, serves as the foundation for theorizing just democratic politic institutions. For Forsts critics, a key theme is how to differentiate ideological (bad) justification, typically based upon emotion, from normatively right democratic reasoning. Other important themes are the analysis of structural domination or the use of threats or other means of exercising power.
The debate in this volume constitutes an exciting new way of re-thinking the foundations of ideology, political power, democracy, and justice. Providing a state-of-the-art discussion concerning the relationship between political power and justification, Theorising Noumenal Power is essential for students and scholars interested in the theoretical foundations of political power, democracy, and justice.
The chapters were originally published in the Journal of Political Power.
Mark Haugaard is a Professor of Political Science and Sociology at the National University of Ireland, Galway, Ireland. He is the Founder Editor of the Journal of Political Power and the book series, Social and Political Power. He has published extensively upon political power and his most recent publication is The Four Dimensions of Power, 2020.
Matthias Kettner is a Professor of Philosophy at Witten/Herdecke University, Germany. He has published widely on discourse ethics, applied ethics, and the philosophy of psychoanalysis.
Theorising Noumenal Power
Rainer Forst and his Critics
Edited by
Mark Haugaard and Matthias Kettner
First published 2020
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Contents
Mark Haugaard and Matthias Kettner
Simon Susen
Steven Lukes
Clarissa Rile Hayward
Albena Azmanova
Pablo Gilabert
Mark Haugaard
Matthias Kettner
Rainer Forst
The following chapters in this book were originally published in the Journal of Political Power, volume 11, issues 13 (2018). When citing this material, please use the original page numbering for each article, as follows:
The seductive force of noumenal power: a new path (or impasse) for critical theory?
Simon Susen
Journal of Political Power, volume 11, issue 1 (2018) pp. 445
Noumenal power: concept and explanation
Steven Lukes
Journal of Political Power, volume 11, issue 1 (2018) pp. 4655
On structural power
Clarissa Rile Hayward
Journal of Political Power, volume 11, issue 1 (2018) pp. 5667
Relational, structural and systemic forms of power: the right to justification confronting three types of domination
Albena Azmanova
Journal of Political Power, volume 11, issue 1 (2018) pp. 6878
A broad definition of agential power
Pablo Gilabert
Journal of Political Power, volume 11, issue 1 (2018) pp. 7992
Justification and the four dimensions of power
Mark Haugaard
Journal of Political Power, volume 11, issue 1 (2018) pp. 93114
The forstian bargain: overrationalizing the power of reasons
Matthias Kettner
Journal of Political Power, volume 11, issue 2 (2018) pp. 139150
Noumenal power revisited: reply to critics
Rainer Forst
Journal of Political Power, volume 11, issue 3 (2018) pp. 294321
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Albena Azmanova is a Reader in Social and Political Thought at the University of Kents Brussels School of International Studies, Belgium. Her work ranges from issues of justice and judgment to critique of the political economy of contemporary capitalism.
Rainer Forst is a Professor of Political Theory and Philosophy and the Co-Director of the Research Center Normative Orders at Goethe University Frankfurt, Germany. His major publications are Contexts of Justice (2002), Toleration in Conflict (2013), The Right to Justification (2012), Justification and Critique (2014), and Normativity and Power (2017).
Pablo Gilabert is an Associate Professor in the Department of Philosophy at Concordia University (Montreal, Canada). He is a native of Argentina. He has been an HLA Hart Visiting Fellow at the University of Oxford, UK; a DAAD Fellow at the University of Frankfurt, Germany; a Visiting Fellow at the Australian National University, Canberra, Australia; and a Laurance S. Rockefeller Visiting Faculty Fellow in the Center for Human Values at Princeton University, USA. His papers appeared in journals such as