Modern societies, and the modern knowledge that was seen to be both an emblem and a precipitating cause of their modernity, have long been seen as marking a great historical advance. Modernity, we have been assured, by the social sciences in general and sociology in particular, is not only different from premodernity and contemporary nonmodern societies, these differences are also signs of intellectual, moral and material progress. In recent times, however, there have been a chorus of criticisms of the core presumptions that undergird modern knowledge. Such criticisms are sufficiently widespread and intellectually serious that the superiority and universality of modern western Reason, which could previously be taken for granted, now have to...
International audienceSince their formation, the Humanities and social sciences constantly refer to ...
Historical and systematic in its treatment, this work reviews the idea of progress in Western though...
In this article, the authors argue that there is no such thing as the knowledge society. Like many o...
The idea of modernity is inextricably tied up with the one of progress. One mainreason for this conn...
This article asks a series of very direct, if not simple, questions. How, and why, is it that we ass...
It is interesting to try to see the relationship between the concept of postmodernity (as used in t...
In the East, even in the most parts of the West, modernity has been an omnipresent phenomenon. It be...
Modernity is one of the central concepts of sociology, with sociology itself frequently understood ...
At a ‘conjuncture’ in pre-modern global history, labeled by previous generations of historians as th...
The article describes the evolution of the understanding and application of the concept of knowledge...
Some 20th-century philosophers emphasized “critique” as a key to understanding the practical and the...
The notion of “progress” is arguably the defining idea of modernity: a civilisational imagery of a b...
As a grand narrative of progress, the utopian project of modernity is primarily concerned with notio...
What might it take to learn to think and live after progress? The notion of “progress” is arguably t...
Broadly speaking, two views of modernity are prevalent in contemporary debates. According to the fir...
International audienceSince their formation, the Humanities and social sciences constantly refer to ...
Historical and systematic in its treatment, this work reviews the idea of progress in Western though...
In this article, the authors argue that there is no such thing as the knowledge society. Like many o...
The idea of modernity is inextricably tied up with the one of progress. One mainreason for this conn...
This article asks a series of very direct, if not simple, questions. How, and why, is it that we ass...
It is interesting to try to see the relationship between the concept of postmodernity (as used in t...
In the East, even in the most parts of the West, modernity has been an omnipresent phenomenon. It be...
Modernity is one of the central concepts of sociology, with sociology itself frequently understood ...
At a ‘conjuncture’ in pre-modern global history, labeled by previous generations of historians as th...
The article describes the evolution of the understanding and application of the concept of knowledge...
Some 20th-century philosophers emphasized “critique” as a key to understanding the practical and the...
The notion of “progress” is arguably the defining idea of modernity: a civilisational imagery of a b...
As a grand narrative of progress, the utopian project of modernity is primarily concerned with notio...
What might it take to learn to think and live after progress? The notion of “progress” is arguably t...
Broadly speaking, two views of modernity are prevalent in contemporary debates. According to the fir...
International audienceSince their formation, the Humanities and social sciences constantly refer to ...
Historical and systematic in its treatment, this work reviews the idea of progress in Western though...
In this article, the authors argue that there is no such thing as the knowledge society. Like many o...