After gaining his Ph.D. at Toronto's
York University, Kompridis worked with the influential philosopher and Frankfurt School social theorist
Jürgen Habermas while a post-doctoral fellow at
Goethe University. Following his time with Habermas he wrote a book responding to what he saw as serious shortcomings and inconsistencies in his mentor's work. In
Critique and Disclosure: Critical Theory between Past and Future (2006), Kompridis argues that Habermasian critical theory, which has in recent decades become the main paradigm of that tradition, has largely severed its own roots in
German idealism, while neglecting
modernity's distinctive relationship to time and the
utopian potential of critique. While drawing on many of Habermas' own insights (along with the philosophical traditions of German idealism,
American pragmatism, and the work of many others), Kompridis proposes an alternative approach to social criticism and what he sees as its role in facilitating social change. This interpretation is guided by an engagement with Martin Heidegger's concept of
world disclosure, as well as alternative conceptions of key philosophical categories, like
critique,
agency,
reason, and
normativity. Arguing against Habermas'
procedural conception of reason and in favour of a new paradigm Kompridis calls
reflective disclosure, the book suggests that critical theory should become a "possibility-disclosing" practice of social criticism "if it is to have a future worthy of its past."
Critical reception and engagement In a largely favourable review of the book,
Fred R. Dallmayr writes: This is an important and timely (or time-sensitive) book, both in philosophical and in practical-political terms. Today its plea for a recovery of trust in the future has gained unexpectedly broad resonance… the book in a way signals the end of a period marked by divergent, even opposite tendencies: on the one hand, the "postmodern" fascination with "extraordinary" rupture (or rapture), and on the other, the streamlining of critical theory in the mold of a rule-governed, rationalist normalcy. James Swindal suggests that Kompridis has not taken more recent work of Habermas' fully into account, but that nonetheless, "this is a book that needed to be written" because "Habermas’s critique of disclosure was at times narrow and short-sighted. But as Habermas is now rethinking some of these shortcomings, Kompridis gives him – and indeed all critical theorists – ample resources" for a better balance between disclosure and procedural thinking. Similarly, Dana Villa writes that "Kompridis argues—persuasively, I think— that contemporary critical theory would do well to abandon its insistence that communicative rationality is the quasi-transcendental core of democratic legitimacy" and rethink its suspicion of world disclosure. In November 2011, the journal
Philosophy and Social Criticism published a number of responses to the book from other critical theorists, along with a reply from Kompridis. Kompridis has also published a number of essays arguing for his own conceptions of cultural change, receptivity, critique, recognition and
reason, and has engaged in written debates about these and other issues with critical theorists including
Amy Allen,
Axel Honneth,
Nancy Fraser and
Seyla Benhabib. ==Romanticism==