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Beyond Objectivism and Relativism
Bernstein's 1983 landmark diagnosing the Cartesian Anxiety and arguing for engaged fallibilism—the book synthesizing American pragmatism, Continental hermeneutics, and critical theory into a practice of responsible inquiry.
Published in 1983 by University of Pennsylvania Press, Beyond Objectivism and Relativism is Richard Bernstein's most influential work—a systematic dismantling of the Either/Or between absolute foundations and intellectual chaos. Bernstein demonstrated that objectivism (the search for ahistorical certainty) and relativism (the denial that rational adjudication is possible) are mirror-image expressions of the same underlying Cartesian Anxiety. The book's four parts trace the anxiety through philosophy of science (Kuhn, Feyerabend, Rorty), hermeneutics (Gadamer), critical social theory (Habermas, Arendt), and practical philosophy (Aristotle's phronesis), showing these traditions converge on an alternative: fallible knowledge pursued through communal inquiry with genuine commitment and genuine openness. The work established Bernstein as American philosophy's most important bridge-builder between pragmatism and Continental thought.
In The You On AI Field Guide
Bernstein opened with a diagnostic question: why has the debate between objectivists and relativists persisted with such intensity across disciplines and centuries? His answer: because both sides are gripped by the Cartesian Anxiety that manufactures the binary. Objectivists seek escape from the anxiety through foundations—neutral
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