Niklas Luhmann (1[zasłonięte]927-19) was a German sociologist
and system theorist who wrote on law, economics,
politics, art, religion, ecology, mass media, and love.
Luhmann advocated a radical constructivism and
antihumanism, or ''grand theory,'' to explain society
within a universal theoretical framework. Nevertheless,
despite being an iconoclast, Luhmann is viewed as a
political conservative. Hans-Georg Moeller challenges
this legacy, repositioning Luhmann as an explosive
thinker critical of Western humanism. Moeller focuses on
Luhmann's shift from philosophy to theory, which
introduced new perspectives on the contemporary world.
For centuries, the task of philosophy meant transforming
contingency into necessity, in the sense that philosophy
enabled an understanding of the necessity of everything
that appeared contingent. Luhmann pursued the opposite
-- the transformation of necessity into contingency.
Boldly breaking with the heritage of Western thought,
Luhmann denied the central role of humans in social
theory, particularly the possibility of autonomous
agency.In this way, after Copernicus's cosmological,
Darwin's biological, and Freud's psychological
deconstructions of anthropocentrism, he added a
sociological ''fourth insult'' to human vanity. A
theoretical shift toward complex system-environment
relations helped Luhmann ''accidentally'' solve one of
Western philosophy's primary problems: mind-body
dualism. By pulling communication into the mix, Luhmann
rendered the Platonic dualist heritage obsolete.
Moeller's clarity opens such formulations to general
understanding and directly relates Luhmannian theory to
contemporary social issues. He also captures for the
first time a Luhmannian attitude toward society and
life, defined through the cultivation of modesty, irony,
and equanimity. |
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