This link has been bookmarked by 34 people . It was first bookmarked on 11 Nov 2007, by Jenny Ryan.
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20 Apr 12
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19 Apr 12
Stephanie DreyfuerstAbstruse philosophical and obscure academic feuds are more important than the future of democracy? He proved to me by his actions that philosophy is rendering itself irrelevant. He was the last bastion for those who feel that philosophy speaks to the real problems of the modern world.
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Abstruse philosophical and obscure academic feuds are more important than the future of democracy? He proved to me by his actions that philosophy is rendering itself irrelevant. He was the last bastion for those who feel that philosophy speaks to the real problems of the modern world.
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02 Feb 11
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01 Feb 11
Neil DevoeShift from broadcast era to infosphere
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Citizens act as a public when they deal with matters of general interest without being subject to coercion; thus with the guarantee that they may assemble and unite freely, and express and publicize their opinions freely
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he term “public opinion” refers to the functions of criticism and control or organized state authority that the public exercises informally, as well as formally during periodic elections.
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He blew me off!
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To me I’ve always seen his work as establishing a normative position describing the way humans should be, not the way we are.
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The question of how the Internet transforms Habermas’s understanding of the public sphere is a critical one, and one that Habermas certainly hasn’t integrated into his theory. But your post doesn’t really give your readers an idea of why this may be so. Further, it portrays Habermas as somewhat rude and obtuse. He is neither
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24 Apr 10
Alexander SemenovAnnotated link http://www.diigo.com/bookmark/http%3A%2F%2Fwww.smartmobs.com%2F2007%2F11%2F05%2Fhabermas-blows-off-question-about-the-internet-and-the-public-sphere
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bourgeois public sphere dominated by broadcast media
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whether or not the advent of many-to-many communication via the Internet would lead to stronger or weaker democracies, more or less personal liberty, which led me to the work of Jurgen Habermas on what he called “the public sphere.”
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Without those rights, there is no public sphere. Ask any citizen of Prague, Budapest, or Moscow.
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When the public is large, this kind of communication requires certain means of dissemination and influence; today, newspapers and periodicals, radio and television are the media of the public sphere. .
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does Internet communication improve the public sphere, and therefore, democracy, or does it not?
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He was the last bastion for those who feel that philosophy speaks to the real problems of the modern world.
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the rise of millions of fragmented chat rooms across the world tend instead to lead to the fragmentation of large but politically focused mass audiences into a huge number of isolated issue publics
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how much of the blogosphere consists of critiques that link directly to the sources that the blogger disagrees with?
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08 May 09
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26 Jun 08
Julian Ausserhofer"I recently asked Habermas in a public forum what his current opinion is about the state of the public sphere, now that the broadcast era has been supplanted by the many-to-many media that enable so many people to use the Internet as a means of political
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25 May 08
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19 Feb 08
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18 Feb 08
Erhardt GraeffRheingold on Habermas' misunderstanding the Internet transforming his public sphere
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09 Jan 08
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28 Dec 07
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27 Dec 07
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Neil HSome stuff on Habermas and the public sphere and the Internet. Some useful links possibly
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19 Dec 07
Michel Bauwensa little further investigation into the very sparse pronouncements he has made in this regard has led me to understand that he simply does not understand the Internet.
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11 Dec 07
I have to question the social, political and intellectual value of intelligentsia who refuse to engage the most profound information (and social) shift in human history. Head, meet sand.
blogs communication democracy education lifehack philosophy Rheingold academic 2.0
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Todd SuomelaHe did his part in his time, but the ideal public sphere he described — a bourgeois public sphere dominated by broadcast media — should not be taken as the model for the formation of public opinion in 21st century democracies.
philosophy online criticism behavior public public-sphere import-delicious people:JurgenHabermas
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08 Dec 07
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18 Nov 07
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12 Nov 07
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11 Nov 07
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Because the public sphere depends on free communication and discussion of ideas, as soon as your political entity grows larger than the number of citizens you can fit into a modest town hall, this vital marketplace for political ideas can be powerfully influenced by changes in communications technology.
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He proved to me by his actions that philosophy is rendering itself irrelevant. He was the last bastion for those who feel that philosophy speaks to the real problems of the modern world.
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It can undermine the censorship of authoritarian regimes that try to control and repress public opinion. In the context of liberal regimes, the rise of millions of fragmented chat rooms across the world tend instead to lead to the fragmentation of large but politically focused mass audiences into a huge number of isolated issue publics. Within established national public spheres, the online debates of web users only promote political communication, when news groups crystallize around the focal points of the quality press, for example, national newspapers and political magazines.
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fear of fragmentation
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everyone only pays attention to like-minded thinkers
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unless we know, and know soon, whether or not the web as it is developing can revitalize the public sphere, all other philosophical conversations may be mooted by the rise of disinfotainment, disinformocracy, and the actual emergence of the simulation that we don’t recognize as a simulation described by Baudrillard.
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08 Nov 07
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07 Nov 07
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06 Nov 07
Christiane SHHabermas macht sich in Stanford unmöglich - Rheingold: "a little further investigation into the very sparse pronouncements he has made in this regard has led me to understand that he simply does not understand the Internet."
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