Habermas argues that all meaningful conversations require claims to truth, truthfulness, and normative rightness simultaneously.
The article discusses how Jürgen Habermas believes that when we communicate, we make claims about truth, truthfulness, and what is right. The author argues that Habermas gives three separate reasons for why these claims happen at the same time. The strongest reason is that when we understand each other, we also agree. This means that for communication to work, we need to reach agreements. The article also mentions that there is more work needed to connect the theoretical foundations of Habermas's ideas with their practical implications.