Critical Review

Papers
(The median citation count of Critical Review is 0. The table below lists those papers that are above that threshold based on CrossRef citation counts [max. 250 papers]. The publications cover those that have been published in the past four years, i.e., from 2021-04-01 to 2025-04-01.)
ArticleCitations
How Political Psychologists Think24
Homo Theoreticus9
Hegel’s Alternative to Nationalism9
Early Modern Epistemologies and Religious Intolerance5
How Foucault Got Rid of (Bossy) Marxism5
Post-Truth Politics and the Competition of Ideas3
Philosophical Foundations of Contemporary Intolerance: Why We No Longer Take Martin Luther King, Jr. Seriously2
Markets and Medical Decisions2
The Euro’s Taxing Path to Political Legitimacy2
Education and the Epistemological Crisis in the Age of ChatGPT2
Realism and Rational Choice1
Post-Truth and the Epistemological Crisis1
Laclau’s New Postmodern Radicalism: Politics, Democracy, and the Epistemology of Certainty1
The Hegelian Structure of Marx’s Thought1
Power to the (Right) People: Reply to Critics1
Three Pictures of Hegel’s Holism: Mystical, Instrumentalist, Intrinsicist1
Taking Freedom Seriously: Kantian Ethics versus the Ethics of Kant1
Index to Vol. 33 (2021)1
Jeffrey Friedman: In Memoriam1
People Are Not Points in Space: Network Models of Beliefs and Discussions1
The Counter-Majoritarian Referendum: Popular Voting Processes and Constitutional Change1
Constitutional Fallacies1
In the Long Run: The Future as a Political Idea1
Living in the Shadows: Debating Meaning in a Post-Religious World1
Hegel, Weber, and Bureaucracy1
Revisiting The Longing for Total Revolution1
The Politics of Post-Truth1
Trust in the Constitution: Some Preliminary Thoughts on Civic Trust as a Constitutional Good1
Truth, the People, and Climate Change: Toward a Non-Ideal Approach to Democratic Legitimacy1
Left is Not Woke1
The Life and Death of States: Central Europe and the Transformation of Modern Sovereignty1
Hegel’s Own Time Grasped in Our Thoughts after Two Hundred Years1
Marx’s Democratization of Hegel’s Philosophy of Right0
The Longing for Total Revolution as Critical But Ideational Genealogy0
Post-Truth and the Rhetoric of “Following the Science”0
Embracing Liberalism’s Complexity0
Foucault and Power: A Critique and Retheorization0
Post-Trust, Not Post-Truth0
Introduction: Rationality and the State in International Relations0
Rediscovering Homo Sapiens in International Politics: Evolution and Rationality’s Missing Link0
Re-Engaging Normative and Empirical Democratic Theory: Or, Why Normative Democratic Theory Is Empirical All the Way Down0
Democracy, Bargaining, and Education0
Shaken Not Stirred: The Name of the Game in the Post-Truth Condition0
Consequences, Conscience, and Fallibility: Early Modern Roots of Toleration0
How Realistic Is the Modeling of Epistemic Democracy?0
Index to Vol. 35 (2023)0
Depolarization Without Reconciliation0
Realism and Rationality0
Left-Kantian Perfectionism0
Hegel on “the Living Good”0
What Is a Conspiracy Theory and Why Does It Matter?0
Are We All Foucauldians Now? “Culture Wars” and the Poststructuralist Legacy0
Democracy Between Form and Content0
Longing for Total Dichotomies0
Origins of the “Deep State” Trope0
A Case for the Young Foucault0
Radical Democracy, Critical Theory, and the Conditions of Popular Self-expression0
Are Leaders Rational?0
Marx and Romanticism0
The Technopolitics of Wicked Problems: Reconstructing Democracy in an Age of Complexity0
Positivism or Understanding? The Complexity of Analyzing the Objectives of Armed Opposition Groups0
Reading Yack While Pondering the Origins of Totalitarianism0
A Mayfly for Prof. Hegel: Herbart’s Forgotten Review of Hegel’s Rechtsphilosophie0
Tracking Forecasting Accuracy of Geopolitical Schools of Thought—and Causes of Their Predictive Successes and Failures0
The Epistemology of Democracy and the Market: Rejoinder to Elliott0
Republicanizing Leviathan: Kant's Cosmopolitan Synthesis of Hobbes and Rousseau0
Searching for the Arc of History: The Secularization of American Politics0
Democracy, Undeluded?0
Introduction: Intolerance, Power, and Epistemology0
The Imaginary Force of History: On Images, the Imaginary, and Myths in Foucault’s Early Works0
Hegel’s Philosophy of Right and the Idea of the World: Dialectic’s “Political Cosmology”0
Why to be a Civic Constitutionalist0
The Theological Origins and Underpinning of the Longing for Total Revolution0
Six Variations on Michael Rosen's The Shadow of God0
It’s Our Epistemic Environment, Not Our Attitude Toward Truth, That Matters0
Kenneth Waltz: An Intellectual Biography0
Defining Rationality in Security Studies: Expected Utility, Theory-Driven Reasoning, and the Vietnam War0
Popular Understandings and the Limits of Popular Democracy0
Is Marx's Thought on Freedom Contradictory?0
Who Is Intolerant? The Clash Between LGBTQ+ Rights and Religious Free Exercise0
Repoliticizing Environmentalism: Beyond Technocracy and Populism0
Hegel’s Political Philosophy0
Citizens as Militant Democrats, Or: Just How Intolerant Should the People Be?0
Who is Haunted by the Shadow of God? Dialectical Notes on Michael Rosen's Narrative of (Failed) Secularization0
Markets and Metis : Reading Hayek with Scott0
Folk Constitutionalism, or Why it Matters How Ordinary People Think about the Constitution0
Index to Vol. 34 (2022)0
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