Professor Marsh, a self-styled 'disillusioned Habermasian,' offers a careful, somber 'reality check' to the comparatively favorable vision of contemporary society that Habermas presents in his significant work, Between Facts and Norms. At the sametime, the ultimate, and in fact quite successful, aim of Marsh's analysis is the positive one of reworking Habermas' own best insights back in the direction of a genuinely critical theory of modern society... -- William L. McBride, Purdue University Marsh has produced an outstanding and accessible text that provides a badly needed left critique of Habermas' philosophy of law. Science and Society Marsh displays an impressive mastery of Habermas's texts that few others have attained. His commentary on Between Facts and Norms is exceptionally clear and jargon-free, not to mention chock full of illuminating examples and references to the real world. Above all, its sympathetic treatment of the basic project of Habermas's masterpiece is judiciously balanced by a critique of Habermas's failure to consistently carry that project through to the end... -- David Ingram, Loyola University Chicago Marsh displays an impressive mastery of Habermas's texts that few others have attained. His commentary on Between Facts and Norms is exceptionally clear and jargon-free, not to mention chock full of illuminating examples and references to the real world. Above all, its sympathetic treatment of the basic project of Habermas's masterpiece is judiciously balanced by a critique of Habermas's failure to consistently carry that project through to the end. -- David Ingram, Loyola University Chicago Professor Marsh, a self-styled 'disillusioned Habermasian,' offers a careful, somber 'reality check' to the comparatively favorable vision of contemporary society that Habermas presents in his significant work, Between Facts and Norms. At the same time, the ultimate, and in fact quite successful, aim of Marsh's analysis is the positive one of reworking Habermas' own best insights back in the direction of a genuinely critical theory of modern society. -- William L. McBride, Purdue University