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The first translation of the volumes in Michel Serres' classic
'Humanism' tetralogy, this ambitious philosophical narrative
explores what it means to be human. With his characteristic breadth
of references including art, poetry, science, philosophy and
literature, Serres paints a new picture of what it might mean to
live meaningfully in contemporary society. He tells the story of
humankind (from the beginning of time to the present moment) in an
attempt to affirm his overriding thesis that humans and nature have
always been part of the same ongoing and unfolding history. This
crucial piece of posthumanist philosophical writing has never
before been released in English. A masterful translation by
Randolph Burks ensures the poetry and wisdom of Serres writing is
preserved and his notion of what humanity is and might be is opened
up to new audiences.
Michel Serres first book in his 'foundations trilogy' is all about
beginnings. The beginning of Rome but also about the beginning of
society, knowledge and culture. Rome is an examination of the very
foundations upon which contemporary society has been built. With
characteristic breadth and lyricism, Serres leads the reader on a
journey from a meditation the roots of scientific knowledge to set
theory and aesthetics. He explores the themes of violence, murder,
sacrifice and hospitality in order to urge us to avoid the
repetitive violence of founding. Rome also provides an alternative
and creative reading of Livy's Ab urbe condita which sheds light on
the problems of history, repetition and imitation. First published
in English in 1991, re-translated and introduced in this new
edition, Michel Serres' Rome is a contemporary classic which shows
us how we came to live the way we do.
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Hermes I - Communication
Michel Serres; Translated by Louise Burchill
|
R729
R680
Discovery Miles 6 800
Save R49 (7%)
|
Ships in 12 - 17 working days
|
For the first time in English, the introductory volume in a major
French philosopher’s groundbreaking series of poetic
transdisciplinary works  Michel Serres is recognized as one
of the giants of postwar French philosophy of knowledge, along with
Gilles Deleuze, Jacques Derrida, Michel Foucault, and Gilbert
Simondon. His early five-volume series Hermes, which appeared in
the 1960s and 1970s, was an intellectual supernova in its
proposition that culture and science shared the same mythic and
narrative structures. Hermes I: Communication marks the start of a
major publishing endeavor to introduce this foundational series
into English.  Building on the figure of the Greek
god Hermes, who presides over the realms of communication and
interpretation, Hermes I embarks on a reflection concerning the
history of mathematics via Descartes and Leibniz and culminates by
way of a Bachelardian logoanalytic reading of Homer, Dumas,
Molière, Verne, and the story of Cinderella. We observe a singular
poetic philosopher seeking to bridge the gap between the liberal
arts and the sciences through a profound mathematical and poetic
fable regarding information theory, history, and art, establishing
a new way to think about the production of knowledge during the
late twentieth century. In these pages, students and scholars of
philosophy will discover an extraordinary project of thought as
vital to critical reflection today as it was fifty years ago.
With this profound final work, completed in the days leading up to
his death, Michel Serres presents a vivid picture of his thinking
about religion-a constant preoccupation since childhood-thereby
completing Le Grand Recit, the comprehensive explanation of the
world and of humanity to which he devoted the last twenty years of
his life. Themes from Serres's earlier writings-energy and
information, the role of the media in modern society, the
anthropological function of sacrifice, the role of scientific
knowledge, the problem of evil-are reinterpreted here in the light
of the Old Testament accounts of Isaac and Jonah and a variety of
Gospel episodes, including the Three Wise Men of the Epiphany, the
Transfiguration, Peter's denying Christ, the Crucifixion, Emmaus,
and the Pentecost. Monotheistic religion, Serres argues, resembles
mathematical abstraction in its dazzling power to bring together
the real and the virtual, the natural and the transcendent; but
only in its Christian embodiment is it capable of binding together
human beings in such a way that partisan attachments are dissolved
and a new era of history, free for once of the lethal repetition of
collective violence, can be entered into.
Despite being one of France's most enduring and popular
philosophers, Branches is the first English translation of what has
been identified as Michel Serres' key text on humanism. In
attempting to reconcile humanity and nature, Serres examines how
human history 'branches' off from its origin story. Using the
metaphor of a branch springing from the stem and arguing that the
branch's originality derives its format, Serres identifies dogmatic
philosophy as the stem, while philosophy as the branch represents
its inventive, shape-shifting, or interdisciplinary elements. In
Branches, Serres provides a unique reading of the history of
thought and removes the barriers between science, culture, art and
religion. His fluency and this fluidity of subject matter combine
here to make a book suitable for students of Continental
philosophy, post-humanism, the medical humanities and philosophical
science, while providing any reader with a wider understanding of
the world in which they find themselves.
Available for the first time in English! Winner of the Prix Medicis
Essai! Marginalized by the scientific age with its metaphysical and
philosophical systems, the lessons of the senses have been
overtaken by the dominance of language and the information
revolution. Exploring the deleterious effects of the systematic
downgrading of the senses in Western philosophy, Michel Serres - a
member of the Academie Francaise and one of France's leading
philosophers - traces a topology of human perception. Writing
against the Cartesian tradition and in praise of empiricism, he
demonstrates repeatedly, and lyrically, the sterility of systems of
knowledge divorced from bodily experience. The fragile empirical
world, long resistant to our attempts to contain and catalog it, is
disappearing beneath the relentless accumulations of late
capitalist society and information technology. Data has replaced
sensory pleasure, we are less interested in the taste of a fine
wine than in the description on the bottle's label. What are we,
and what do we really know, when we have forgotten that our senses
can describe a taste more accurately than language ever could?
The Birth of Physics represents a foundational work in the
development of chaos theory from one of the world's most
influential living theorists, Michel Serres. Focussing on the
largest text still intact to reach us from the Atomists -
Lucretius' De Rerum Natura - Serres mobilises everything we know
about the related scientific work of the time (Archemides, Epicurus
et al) in order to demand a complete reappraisal of the legacy.
Crucial to his reconception of the Atomists' thought is a
recognition that their model of atomic matter is essentially a
fluid one - they are describing the actions of turbulence, which
impacts our understanding of the recent disciplines of chaos and
complexity. It explains the continuing presence of Lucretius in the
work of such scientific giants as Nobel Laureates Schroedinger and
Prigogine. This book is truly a landmark in the study of ancient
physics and has been enormously influential on work in the area,
amongst other things stimulating a more general rebirth of
philosophical interest in the ancients.
The title of this timely and thought-provoking book, a French
bestseller, refers to schoolgirls sending text messages to their
friends on their smart phones. Michel Serres, one of France's most
important living intellectuals, uses this image to get at something
far broader: that humans are formed and shaped by technologies, and
that with the advent of computers, smart phones, and the Internet,
a new human is being born. These new humans beings are our
children-thumbelina (petite poucette) and tom thumb (petit
poucet)-but technologies have been changing so fast that parents
scarcely know their children. Serres documents this cultural
revolution, arguing that there have been several similar
revolutions in the past: from oral cultures to cultures focused on
reading and writing; the advent of the printing press; and now the
complex changes brought about by the new information
technologies-changes that are taking place at an accelerated pace
and that affect us all.
The title of this timely and thought-provoking book, a French
bestseller, refers to schoolgirls sending text messages to their
friends on their smart phones. Michel Serres, one of France's most
important living intellectuals, uses this image to get at something
far broader: that humans are formed and shaped by technologies, and
that with the advent of computers, smart phones, and the Internet,
a new human is being born. These new humans beings are our
children-thumbelina (petite poucette) and tom thumb (petit
poucet)-but technologies have been changing so fast that parents
scarcely know their children. Serres documents this cultural
revolution, arguing that there have been several similar
revolutions in the past: from oral cultures to cultures focused on
reading and writing; the advent of the printing press; and now the
complex changes brought about by the new information
technologies-changes that are taking place at an accelerated pace
and that affect us all.
In this first English translation of one of his most important
works, " Statues: The Second Book of Foundations, "Michel
Henry""presents a statue as more than a static entity. A statue for
Serres is the basis for knowledge, society, the subject and object,
the world and experience. Through his prescient analysis of statues
and how we create and respond to art, Henry demonstrates how
sacrificial art founded society and through this reflects on the
centrality of death and the dead body to the human
condition.Approaching the problem from multiple angles, Serres
comments on Verne's "Around the Moon," Rodin's "The Gates of Hell,"
the Eiffel Tower, cemeteries, short stories by Maupassant, fables
by La Fontaine, clothing and the paintings of Carpaccio, the
Challenger disaster and Baal. Each section covers a different time
period and statuary topic, ranging from four thousand years ago to
1986. Expository, lyrical, fictionalized and hallucinatory,
"Statues" does not follow a linear time sequence but rather plays
with time and place, history and story in order to provoke us into
thinking in entirely new ways.Through mythic and poetic meditations
on various kinds of descent into the underworld and new insights
into the relation of the subject and object and their foundation in
death, "Statues" contains great treasures and provocations for
philosophers, literary critics, art historians and sociologists.
With this profound final work, completed in the days leading up to
his death, Michel Serres presents a vivid picture of his thinking
about religion-a constant preoccupation since childhood-thereby
completing Le Grand Recit, the comprehensive explanation of the
world and of humanity to which he devoted the last twenty years of
his life. Themes from Serres's earlier writings-energy and
information, the role of the media in modern society, the
anthropological function of sacrifice, the role of scientific
knowledge, the problem of evil-are reinterpreted here in the light
of the Old Testament accounts of Isaac and Jonah and a variety of
Gospel episodes, including the Three Wise Men of the Epiphany, the
Transfiguration, Peter's denying Christ, the Crucifixion, Emmaus,
and the Pentecost. Monotheistic religion, Serres argues, resembles
mathematical abstraction in its dazzling power to bring together
the real and the virtual, the natural and the transcendent; but
only in its Christian embodiment is it capable of binding together
human beings in such a way that partisan attachments are dissolved
and a new era of history, free for once of the lethal repetition of
collective violence, can be entered into.
The Birth of Physics represents a foundational work in the
development of chaos theory from one of the world's most
influential living theorists, Michel Serres. Focussing on the
largest text still intact to reach us from the Atomists -
Lucretius' De Rerum Natura - Serres mobilises everything we know
about the related scientific work of the time (Archemides, Epicurus
et al) in order to demand a complete reappraisal of the legacy.
Crucial to his reconception of the Atomists' thought is a
recognition that their model of atomic matter is essentially a
fluid one - they are describing the actions of turbulence, which
impacts our understanding of the recent disciplines of chaos and
complexity. It explains the continuing presence of Lucretius in the
work of such scientific giants as Nobel Laureates Schroedinger and
Prigogine. This book is truly a landmark in the study of ancient
physics and has been enormously influential on work in the area,
amongst other things stimulating a more general rebirth of
philosophical interest in the ancients.
|
Hominescence (Hardcover)
Michel Serres; Translated by Randolph Burks
|
R2,719
Discovery Miles 27 190
|
Ships in 12 - 17 working days
|
According to Michel Serres, a process of 'hominescence' has taken
place throughout human history. Hominescence can be described as a
type of adolescence; humanity in a state of growing, a state of
constant change, on the threshold of something unpredictable. We
are destined never to be the same again but what does the future
hold? In this innovative and passionately original work of
philosophy, Serres describes the future of man as an adolescence,
transitioning from childhood to adulthood, or luminescence, when a
dark body becomes light. After considering the radical changes that
humanity has experienced over the last fifty years, Serres analyzes
the new relationship that man has with diverse concepts, like the
dead, his own body, agriculture, and new communication networks. He
alerts us to the consequences of these changes, particularly on the
danger of growing inequalities between rich and poor countries.
Should we rejoice in the future, ignore it, or even dread it?
Unlike other philosophies that preach doom and gloom, Hominescence
calls for us to anticipate the uncertain light of the future.
In this highly original and provocative book, Michel Serres
reflects on the relation between nature and culture and analyzes
the origins of the world's contemporary environmental problems. He
does so through the surprising proposition that our cleanliness is
our dirt. While all living beings pollute to lay claim to their
habitat, humans have multiplied pollution's effects
catastrophically since the Industrial Revolution through the
economic system's mode of appropriation and its emphasis on
mindless growth. He warns that while we can measure what he calls
"hard pollution"--the poisoning of the Earth--we ignore at our
peril the disastrous impact of the "soft pollution" created by
sound and images on our psyches. Sounding the alarm that the planet
is heading for disaster, Serres proposes that humanity should stop
trying to "own" the world and become "renters." Building on his
earlier work, especially that on hominization, he urges us to
establish a "natural contract" with nature.
Published with the assistance of the Edgar M. Kahn Memorial Fund.
Marginalized by the scientific age the lessons of the senses have
been overtaken by the dominance of language and the information
revolution. With The Five Senses Serres traces a topology of human
perception, writing against the Cartesian tradition and in praise
of empiricism, he demonstrates repeatedly, and lyrically, the
sterility of systems of knowledge divorced from bodily experience.
The fragile empirical world, long resistant to our attempts to
contain and catalog it, is disappearing beneath the relentless
accumulations of late capitalist society and information
technology. Data has replaced sensory pleasure, we are less
interested in the taste of a fine wine than in the description on
the bottle's label. What are we, and what do we really know, when
we have forgotten that our senses can describe a taste more
accurately than language ever could? The book won the inaugural
Prix Medicis Essai in 1985. The Revelations edition includes an
introduction by Steven Connor.
Influential philosopher Michel Serres's foundational work uses
fable to explore how human relations are identical to that of the
parasite to the host body. Among Serres's arguments is that by
being pests, minor groups can become major players in public
dialogue--creating diversity and complexity vital to human life and
thought. Michel Serres is professor in history of science at the
Sorbonne, professor of Romance languages at Stanford University,
and author of several books, including "Genesis." Lawrence R.
Schehr is professor of French at the University of Illinois,
Urbana-Champaign. Cary Wolfe is Bruce and Elizabeth Dunlevie
Professor of English at Rice University. His books include
"Zoontologies: The Question of the Animal "(Minnesota, 2003).
|
Hermes I - Communication
Michel Serres; Translated by Louise Burchill
|
R2,724
R2,506
Discovery Miles 25 060
Save R218 (8%)
|
Ships in 12 - 17 working days
|
For the first time in English, the introductory volume in a major
French philosopher’s groundbreaking series of poetic
transdisciplinary works  Michel Serres is recognized as one
of the giants of postwar French philosophy of knowledge, along with
Gilles Deleuze, Jacques Derrida, Michel Foucault, and Gilbert
Simondon. His early five-volume series Hermes, which appeared in
the 1960s and 1970s, was an intellectual supernova in its
proposition that culture and science shared the same mythic and
narrative structures. Hermes I: Communication marks the start of a
major publishing endeavor to introduce this foundational series
into English.  Building on the figure of the Greek
god Hermes, who presides over the realms of communication and
interpretation, Hermes I embarks on a reflection concerning the
history of mathematics via Descartes and Leibniz and culminates by
way of a Bachelardian logoanalytic reading of Homer, Dumas,
Molière, Verne, and the story of Cinderella. We observe a singular
poetic philosopher seeking to bridge the gap between the liberal
arts and the sciences through a profound mathematical and poetic
fable regarding information theory, history, and art, establishing
a new way to think about the production of knowledge during the
late twentieth century. In these pages, students and scholars of
philosophy will discover an extraordinary project of thought as
vital to critical reflection today as it was fifty years ago.
In this third installment of his classic 'Foundations' trilogy,
Michel Serres takes on the history of geometry and mathematics.
Even more broadly, Geometry is the beginnings of things and also
how these beginnings have shaped how we continue to think
philosophically and critically. Serres rejects a traditional
history of mathematics which unfolds in a linear manner, and argues
for the need to delve into the past of maths and identify a series
of ruptures which can help shed light on how this discipline has
developed and how, in turn, the way we think has been shaped and
formed. This meticulous and lyrical translation marks the first
ever English translation of this key text in the history of ideas.
|
Hominescence (Paperback)
Michel Serres; Translated by Randolph Burks
|
R724
Discovery Miles 7 240
|
Ships in 9 - 15 working days
|
According to Michel Serres, a process of 'hominescence' has taken
place throughout human history. Hominescence can be described as a
type of adolescence; humanity in a state of growing, a state of
constant change, on the threshold of something unpredictable. We
are destined never to be the same again but what does the future
hold? In this innovative and passionately original work of
philosophy, Serres describes the future of man as an adolescence,
transitioning from childhood to adulthood, or luminescence, when a
dark body becomes light. After considering the radical changes that
humanity has experienced over the last fifty years, Serres analyzes
the new relationship that man has with diverse concepts, like the
dead, his own body, agriculture, and new communication networks. He
alerts us to the consequences of these changes, particularly on the
danger of growing inequalities between rich and poor countries.
Should we rejoice in the future, ignore it, or even dread it?
Unlike other philosophies that preach doom and gloom, Hominescence
calls for us to anticipate the uncertain light of the future.
For Michel Serres, economic crises are earthquakes caused by
societal tectonic plates. The current crisis erupted because of the
widening discrepancy between major social changes and institutions
that have remained the same since WWII. Serres, one of the first to
bring nature into the political, writes, "To destroy, kill, exploit
is worthless. In the long run, it means destroying ourselves." At a
time when the world population has grown so much that it is
exhausting natural resources and the environment, we need to
rethink cultural, social, and political dynamics. Serres argues
that geopolitics and economics will no longer be a two-player game,
between West and East, for example, but a three-player one, in
which is Earth will be the third partner. This book is one of hope
as it calls for a new world and extols the importance of science
for our future and political institutions. Here, Serres
demonstrates an optimistic outlook in a clear and luminous language
that offers new paths for reflection and, ultimately, a better life
for Earth and its inhabitants.
World-renowned philosopher, Michel Serres writes a text in praise
of the body and movement, in praise of teachers of physical
education, coaches, mountain guides, athletes, dancers, mimes,
clowns, artisans, and artists. This work describes the variations,
the admirable metamorphoses that the body can accomplish. While
animals lack such a variety of gestures, postures, and movements,
the fluidity of the human body mimics the leisure of living beings
and things; what's more, it creates signs. Already here, within its
movements and metamorphoses, the mind is born. The five senses are
not the only source of knowledge: it emerges, in large part, from
the imitations the plasticity of the body allows. In it, with it,
by it knowledge begins.
The first translation of the volumes in Michel Serres' classic
'Humanism' tetralogy, this ambitious philosophical narrative
explores what it means to be human. With his characteristic breadth
of references including art, poetry, science, philosophy and
literature, Serres paints a new picture of what it might mean to
live meaningfully in contemporary society. He tells the story of
humankind (from the beginning of time to the present moment) in an
attempt to affirm his overriding thesis that humans and nature have
always been part of the same ongoing and unfolding history. This
crucial piece of posthumanist philosophical writing has never
before been released in English. A masterful translation by
Randolph Burks ensures the poetry and wisdom of Serres writing is
preserved and his notion of what humanity is and might be is opened
up to new audiences.
|
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