Genesis
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Author
Publication
1995 - University of Michigan Press, Ann Arbor, Michigan
Language
English
Word Count
35,500 words, Guess
Page Count
142 pages
Identifiers
- Open LibraryOL1270378M
- ISBN-100472105922
- OCLC Control Number31937184
- OCLC Control Numbergenesis00serr
- Library of Congress Control Number95001555
and 2 more
- LibraryThing976086
- Goodreads2297328
Classifications
- DDC844/.914
- LCCPQ2679.E679 G413 1995
Description
Serres draws on a vast knowledge of anthropology, classical history, music, theology, art history, information theory, physics, biology, dance and athletics, and Western metaphysics and on a range of writers that includes Plato, Leibniz, Kant, August Comte, Georges Dumezil, Rene Girard, Racine, La Fontaine, Beaumarchais, Balzac, and Shakespeare. He argues that, although philosophy has been instrumental in the past in establishing laws of logic and rationality that have been crucial to our understanding of ourselves and our universe, one of the most pressing tasks of thought today is to recognize that such pockets of unity are islands of order in a sea of multiplicity - a sea that cannot really be conceived but that perhaps can still be sensed, felt, and heard raging in chaos beneath the momentary crests of order imposed by human civilization. Philosophy of science or prose poetry, a classical meditation on metaphysics or a stream-of-consciousness polemic and veiled invective - Genesis may be all of these and more. Serres mounts a polemical, quirky, at times rhapsodical, but above all "noisy," critique of traditional and current models in social theory, historiography, philosophy of science, aesthetics, and metaphysics. The result is a work that is at once provocative, poetic, deeply personal, and ultimately religious - an apocalyptic call for the rebirth of philosophy as the art of thinking the unthinkable.
Subjects
Series Statement
- Studies in literature and science
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