Available Formats
Paperback
Published: 16th February 2021
Hardback
Published: 18th January 2021
Paperback
Published: 16th February 2021
Hardback
Published: 18th January 2021
Individuation in Light of Notions of Form and Information
By (Author) Gilbert Simondon
Translated by Taylor Adkins
University of Minnesota Press
University of Minnesota Press
16th February 2021
United States
General
Non Fiction
111
Paperback
440
Width 156mm, Height 235mm, Spine 38mm
A long-awaited translation on the philosophical relation between technology, the individual, and milieu of the living
From Democrituss atomism to Heisenbergs uncertainty principle, from Aristotles reflections on the individual to Husserls call for a focused return to things, from the philosophical advent of the Cartesian ego and the Leibnizian monad to Heideggers notion of Dasein, the question concerning the constitution of the individual has continued to loom large over the preoccupations of philosophers and scholars of scientific disciplines for thousands of years.
Through conceptions in modern scientific areas of research such as thermodynamics, the fabrication of technical objects, gestalt theory, cybernetics, and the dynamic formation at work in the creation of crystals, Gilbert Simondons unique multifaceted philosophical and scholarly research will eventually lead to an astounding reevaluation and questioning of the historical methods for posing the very question and notion of the individual. More than fifty years after its original publication in French, this groundbreaking work of philosophical theory is now available in its first complete English language translation.
Gilbert Simondon (19241989) was a philosopher of technology whose principal publications have inspired several generations of thinkers, including Gilles Deleuze.
Taylor Adkins is an independent scholar and translator.