Artifacts for Diderot's Elements of Physiology is a translation of Denis Diderot's rare 18th Century work, Éléments de physiologie, situating it in light of New Materialism and other current debates in continental philosophy. It takes one of many possible theoretical tours through this oeuvre of Diderot, as well as incorporates other supplementary artifacts, including translations of sections of the Latin of Albrecht von Haller on which Diderot's text is partially based.


With its critical footnotes and supplementary material, Artifacts addresses old and new materialism in Diderot as a work of theory. Its introductory discussion of animal organs, technical evolution and Diderot's relation to Ernst Kapp, Georges Canguilhem, and Gilbert Simondon is a new, contemporary critical framing for Éléments. While the focus of the critical French editions has been on an inescapable determinism of Diderot (Mayer), a lay anthropology rooted in Diderot's atheist conclusion to Éléments (Quintili), and an extensive presentation of Diderot's sources (Terada), Artifacts emphasizes the importance of Part I of the work. In Beings, Diderot most convincingly stakes out a radical transformist philosophical position appropriate to many issues currently at the forefront of philosophical discourse, demonstrating once more the inexhaustible ways Diderot's work can be fruitfully applied after the age of Lumières.



Autorentext

Gregory Bringman is an independent scholar and theorist with dual careers in the humanities and technology. He's been a contributor/editor-at-large for the University of Michigan Collaborative Encyclopedia Translation Project and has translated La Font de Saint Yenne's Réflexions. His interests range from 18th Century philosophy to contemporary French thought, science studies and software studies.

Titel
Artifacts for Diderot's Elements of Physiology
Untertitel
An Expanded, Hybrid Translation and Commentary
EAN
9798986035826
Format
E-Book (epub)
Hersteller
Veröffentlichung
15.05.2023
Digitaler Kopierschutz
Wasserzeichen
Anzahl Seiten
474