Available Formats
Philosophies of Nature after Schelling
By (Author) Iain Hamilton Grant
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Continuum International Publishing Group Ltd.
18th June 2006
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
113
Hardback
246
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
300g
In 1799, F.W.J. Schelling claimed that 'To philosophize about nature is to produce it'. Two centuries later Gilles Deleuze called for a philosophy of nature - Deleuze did so at a time when concerns with and concepts of artificial life and intelligence were already developing rapidly. How would such a philosophy of nature differ from our extant philosophies and sciences of nature Working against current representationalist analyses of nature, On an Artificial Earth constructs a contemporary philosophy of nature such as Deleuze was working on before his death, based on its most extravagant exponent, F.W.J. Schelling. As well as providing a lucid account of the major works in the philosophy of nature by Schelling and those of his scientific contemporaries who pursued and furthered that project, the book reconstructs Schelling's speculative physics in order to examine the most widely contested of today's scientific and cultural problems, from intelligence and material architecture to artificial life, technological evolution and genomics.
"Philosophies of Nature after Schelling is an important, indeed a groundbreaking work." - Joseph P. Lawrence, College of the Holy Cross, Notre Dame Philosophy Review, May 10, 2007
"Iain Hamilton Grant's book Philosophies of Nature after Schelling proposes that we think about nature as irreducible to the entire dichotomous game of self and world, idealism and realism. Indeed, Grant argues for a reconsideration of "nature" in terms of the classical notion of phusisthis is a physics' that is less concerned with quasi-verifiable, smallest units of matter and more a physics in the sense of a dynamical and ideational flux that pervades the very correlation of self and world, idea and thing." -Eugene Thacker, Leonardo/ISAST, 2009
"Iain Hamilton Grant's book Philosophies of Nature after Schelling proposes that we think about nature as irreducible to the entire dichotomous game of self and world, idealism and realism. Indeed, Grant argues for a reconsideration of "nature" in terms of the classical notion of phusisthis is a physics' that is less concerned with quasi-verifiable, smallest units of matter and more a physics in the sense of a dynamical and ideational flux that pervades the very correlation of self and world, idea and thing." -Eugene Thacker, Leonardo/ISAST, 2009
"Intriguing and ambitious ... Philosophies of Nature After Schelling sets a new standard for Schelling scholarship. More than this, it is an important work of philosophy in its own right." - Radical Philosophy 144 (July/August 2007) * Radical Philosophy *
Iain Hamilton Grant is Senior Lecturer in Philosophy at the University of the West of England. He has written widely on post-Kantian European philosophy and is translator of Lyotard's Libidinal Economy and Baudrillard's Symbolic Exchange and Death.