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Jurgen Habermas, influential German philosopher, dies at 96

  • Jurgen Habermas shaped modern ideas on democracy, communication and public debate
Update : 15 Mar 2026, 02:11 PM

Jurgen Habermas, one of Germany’s most influential post-war philosophers and public intellectuals, has passed away at the age of 96, his publisher Suhrkamp announced Saturday.

Born in June 1929 in Düsseldorf, Habermas grew up under Nazi rule and was briefly enrolled in the Hitler Youth. After World War II, he studied philosophy at Marburg University and later joined the University of Frankfurt’s Institute of Social Research, becoming a leading figure of the “Frankfurt School.”

Habermas, known for critical theory, argued that capitalist society turns active citizens into passive consumers, and he critiqued the commodification of mass media for undermining public debate. His seminal work, The Theory of Communicative Action (1981), emphasized that rational dialogue, rather than political or economic power, sustains human societies, reports UNB citing BBC. 

A vocal supporter of student revolts in 1960s West Germany, Habermas also engaged in debates over the Holocaust’s historical interpretation and expressed caution over Germany’s rapid reunification in 1989–90. In the 1990s, he championed a united Europe as a bulwark against nationalist rivalries.

Habermas’s early life experiences, including growing up with a cleft palate that required multiple surgeries, influenced his lifelong interest in language and communication.

He leaves behind a legacy as a philosopher who shaped modern thought on democracy, public discourse, and social critique.

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