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Posthumanism in the Age of Humanism: Mind, Matter, and the Life Sciences after Kant [Kietas viršelis]

Edited by (University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, USA), Edited by (New York University, USA), Edited by (Bowling Green State University, USA)
  • Formatas: Hardback, 352 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 218x146x26 mm, weight: 560 g
  • Serija: New Directions in German Studies
  • Išleidimo metai: 04-Oct-2018
  • Leidėjas: Bloomsbury Academic USA
  • ISBN-10: 1501335677
  • ISBN-13: 9781501335679
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Hardback, 352 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 218x146x26 mm, weight: 560 g
  • Serija: New Directions in German Studies
  • Išleidimo metai: 04-Oct-2018
  • Leidėjas: Bloomsbury Academic USA
  • ISBN-10: 1501335677
  • ISBN-13: 9781501335679
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:

The literary and scientific renaissance that struck Germany around 1800 is usually taken to be the cradle of contemporary humanism. Posthumanism in the Age of Humanism shows how figures like Immanuel Kant and Johann Wolfgang Goethe as well as scientists specializing in the emerging modern life and cognitive sciences not only established but also transgressed the boundaries of the “human.”

This period so broadly painted as humanist by proponents and detractors alike also grappled with ways of challenging some of humanism's most cherished assumptions: the dualisms, for example, between freedom and nature, science and art, matter and spirit, mind and body, and thereby also between the human and the nonhuman. Posthumanism is older than we think, and the so-called “humanists” of the late Enlightenment have much to offer our contemporary re-thinking of the human.

Recenzijos

It is very reassuring to see that the emerging paradigm of posthumanism and the posthuman is beginning to receive some solid critical, historical and genealogical contextualisation. Posthumanism in the Age of Humanism: Mind, Matter, and Life Sciences after Kant is a very welcome extension of the idea of posthumanist prefiguration into the Enlightenment, German Idealism and Romanticism. The contributions to this important collection make an excellent case for locating the beginnings of a critique of anthropocentrism, human exceptionalism, mind-body dualism, unified self and free will within 18th- and 19th-century humanist thought. In doing so, they succeed in painting a more complex, less fashionable, more nuanced and thus more powerful picture of the posthumanist paradigm, while also providing an overdue critical reassessment of German Enlightenment and Romantic thought and their continued influence. The individual contributions take their readers on a fascinating journey through the beginnings of modern life and cognitive sciences, the aesthetic and politics of Romanticism and show how figures like Kant, Herder, Hegel, Humboldt, Kleist, Fichte, Goethe and many others already prepare the terrain for current revisions of materialism, the redefinition of the boundaries between human and nonhuman, the questioning of the role of agency and technology, as well as the rethinking of ecology. * Stefan Herbrechter, Research Fellow, Coventry University, UK * The essays collected in Posthumanism in the Age of Humanism fully realize this volume's aim to constitute posthumanism as a "transhistorical ethos" informing Western thought since antiquity, but especially in the era that extends from the German Enlightenment through 19th-century literature and philosophy, with particular reference to discourses on life and nature. The "classical humanism" of post-Kantian German thought proves to be fertile territory for posthumanist rethinkings of our species-specific privileges and prerogatives. Indeed, as the editors suggest, Hegel does have something in common with cybernetics, and Kant does have something to tell us about embodiment. Readers of Posthumanism in the Age of Humanism will have many of their intellectual stereotypes challenged if not overturned and replaced with more generous conceptions. * Bruce Clarke, Paul Whitfield Horn Professor of Literature and Science, Texas Tech University, USA * The essays in this volume make clear just how turbulent and varied the field of posthuman theory has become; new readers are not obliged to fall in line with a single dominant strand of argumentation but are free to sort through the many intriguing claims for themselves. The essays are tightly interlaced from start to finish. Goethe and Kant, along with a host of nineteenth-century descendants, are woven into the contemporary theory discussion as if those two figures were central to defining posthuman. The average German scholar will be grateful for such careful explanations of the links between the historical sources under investigation and their relevance for the new theory movements. I was impressed over and over again with the many new vantage points contributors offer on canonical texts. This volume could produce an entirely new line of critical interest in both nineteenth-century German science and the established culture around 1800. I read the essays with fervor and I cannot recommend this volume more highly. * Daniel Purdy, Professor of German Studies, Pennsylvania State University, USA, and author of On the Ruins of Babel: Architectural Metaphor in German Thought (2011) *

Daugiau informacijos

Brings historical perspective to the humanism/posthumanism debate, offering analyses of historical instances that complicate stereotypical assumptions about the humanist tradition and that point toward developments within this tradition that anticipate, accompany and even enable contemporary posthumanism.
Notes on Contributors ix
1 Introduction: Posthumanism after Kant
1(16)
Edgar Landgraf
Gabriel Trap
Leif Weatherby
PART I DISSECTING THE HUMAN BODY: EMBODIMENT, COGNITION, AND THE EARLY LIFE SCIENCES
2 Vertiginous Systems of the Soul
17(20)
Jeffrey West Kirkwood
3 Brain Matters in the German Enlightenment: Animal Cognition and Species Difference in Herder, Soemmerring, and Gall
37(16)
Patrick Fortmann
4 Agency without Humans: Normativity and Path Dependence in the Nineteenth-Century Life Sciences
53(26)
Christian J. Emden
5 Embodied Phantasy: Johannes Muller and the Nineteenth-Century Neurophysiological Foundations of Critical Posthumanism
79(26)
Edgar Landgraf
PART II WHO'S AFRAID OF IDEALISM? MATERIALISM, POSTHUMANISM, AND THE POST-KANTIAN LEGACY
6 Kant and Posthumanism
105(22)
Carsten Strathausen
7 Intimations of the Posthuman: Kant's Natural Beauty
127(18)
Peter Gilgen
8 Farewell to Ontology: Hegel after Humanism
145(20)
Leif Weatherby
9 Steps to an Ecology of Geist: Hegel, Bateson, and the Spirit of Posthumanism
165(18)
John H. Smith
10 Protecting Natural Beauty from Humanism's Violence: The Healing Effects of Alexander von Humboldt's Naturgemalde
183(20)
Elizabeth Millan
PART III CYBORG ENLIGHTENMENT: BOUNDARIES OF THE (POST-)HUMAN AROUND 1800
11 Posthumanist Thinking in the Work of Heinrich von Kleist
203(20)
Tim Mehigan
12 Positing the Robotic Self: From Fichte to Ex Machina
223(20)
Alex Hogue
13 In Defense of Humanism: Envisioning a Posthuman Future and Its Critique in Goethe's Faust
243(26)
Christian P. Weber
14 Beyond Death: Posthuman Perspectives in Christoph Wilhelm Hufeland's Macrobiotics
269(18)
Jocelyn Holland
15 The Indifference of the Inorganic
287(22)
Gabriel Trop
Bibliography 309(20)
Index 329
Edgar Landgraf is Professor of German at Bowling Green State University, USA. He is the author of Improvisation as Art: Conceptual Challenges, Historical Perspectives (Bloomsbury, 2011).

Gabriel Trop is Associate Professor in the Department of Germanic and Slavic Languages and Literatures at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, USA. He is the author of Poetry as a Way of Life: Aesthetics and Askesis in the German Eighteenth Century (2015).

Leif Weatherby is Assistant Professor of German at New York University, USA. He is the author of Transplanting the Metaphysical Organ: German Romanticism between Leibniz and Marx (2016).