Nikolas Kompridis
Nikolas Kompridis | |
|---|---|
Kompridis in Auckland, 2008 | |
| Born | 1953 (age 71–72) |
| Education | |
| Alma mater | York University |
| Philosophical work | |
| Era | Contemporary philosophy |
| Region | Western philosophy |
| School | Continental philosophy Critical theory |
| Institutions | Australian Catholic University |
| Main interests | Aesthetics Democratic theory Political theory |
| Notable ideas | Reflective disclosure, receptivity |
Nikolas Kompridis (/kəmˈpriːdiːz/; born 1953) is a Canadian philosopher and political theorist. His major published work addresses the direction and orientation of Frankfurt School critical theory; the legacy of philosophical romanticism; and the aesthetic dimension(s) of politics. His writing touches on a variety of issues in social and political thought, aesthetics, and the philosophy of culture, often in terms of re-worked concepts of receptivity and world disclosure—a paradigm he calls "reflective disclosure".