Fr. 66.00

Organism and Environment - Inheritance and Subjectivity in the Life Sciences

English · Paperback / Softback

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Description

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Organism and Environment performs an examination into the way the contemporary life sciences are heralding a revolution of the most basic philosophical concepts of the Western world. Analyzing recent research in microbiology and evolution theory, the present book argues that these discourses are adding their voices to a growing chorus which is announcing a disruption, if not an end, to the understanding of the order of the world articulated in humanism. What does it mean to be a living substance? Are there such things as living individuals? How are living beings free? The discourses of microbiology, the medical sciences and evolution theory are revealing a living organism that escapes the limited frame that Enlightenment humanism has traditionally used to answer these (and other) ontological questions. Appealing to the theoretical lenses provided by Michel Foucault, Hans Georg Gadamer and Gilles Deleuze, Organism and Environment offers an interpretation of the way the contemporary life sciences are giving articulation to a posthuman ontological order.

List of contents










Introduction: on Inheritance and Subjectivity
Part I: Theoretical Inheritances
Chapter 1: Toward a Hermeneutic Approach to Biological Discourses
Chapter 2: The Structure of Sight: Foucault's Early Analysis of the Life Sciences
Part II: Ecological Inheritances
Chapter 3: Subjectivity in the Extended Inheritance Theory of Evolution
Chapter 4: Genetic Transformation into Structure
Chapter 5: The Space of Life: Reflections on the Ontological Consequences of the Secondary Inheritance Theory of Evolution
Part III: Microbial Inheritances
Chapter 6: Microbes Colonizing Humanism
Chapter 7: Horizontal Gene Transfer: On the Ontological Consequences of the Horizontal Inheritance of DNA
Chapter 8: Being One and Many: Microbial Symbiosis and Inheritance
Chapter 9: A Concrescence of Inheritances Vs. the Metaphysically-Present Individual
Bibliography

About the author










Russell Winslow teaches philosophy at St. John's College, Santa Fe.

Summary

In this book, Russell Winslow examines contemporary discourses in microbiology and evolutionary inheritance theory to center the metaphysical prejudices that unreflectively subtend these discourses, highlight and illuminate an emergent prejudice of an ecological ontology in microbiology, and determine what interpretive possibilities it affords.

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