Textes Cles de Philosophie de la Biologie


Book Description

La philosophie de la biologie, tout en reconsiderant les principes de la tradition philosophique (l'essence, l'individualite, la nature humaine), s'interroge sur les fondements conceptuels, theoriques et methodologiques des sciences du vivant contemporaines. Parmi les questions les plus discutees, il y va aussi bien de la definition du gene que de l'interpretation des notions de selection naturelle et d'adaptation, ou encore de la question des unites de selection. Les textes proposes dans ce premier volume sont a l'image des problematiques diverses et fecondes qui se sont developpees ces cinquante dernieres annees. Ils traitent de l'explication biologique, de l'heredite, et du developpement. Dans leur dimension epistemologique ils considerent les notions de causalite, de loi, de theorie et de mecanisme. Dans leur dimension plus appliquee, ils s'efforcent de comprendre l'attribution de fonctions a certains traits du vivant ou le comment du fonctionnement des organismes (la transmission d'une information genetique, la neurotransmission, ou encore le developpement embryonnaire).




Textes Cles de Philosophie de la Biologie


Book Description

Faisant suite au premier volume concerne principalement par les questions de l'explication biologique, de l'heredite et du developpement, ce second volume de philosophie de la biologie traite de l'evolution, de l'environnement et de la diversite biologique. La theorie de l'evolution constitue la principale theorie unificatrice touchant les etres vivants. Eclairant d'un jour nouveau des questions philosophiques majeures, tels que le finalisme ou la definition des especes naturelles, elle conduit a l'examen plus particulier des concepts d'adaptation, d'espece et d'unite de selection. Les textes ici reunis permettent d'explorer aussi bien les enjeux proprement scientifiques que leur impact sur les dimensions epistemologiques et ontologiques des sciences du vivant contemporaines.




A Vital Rationalist


Book Description

Georges Canguilhem is one of France's foremost historians of science. Trained as a medical doctor as well as a philosopher, he combined these practices to demonstrate to philosophers that there could be no epistemology without concrete study of the actual development of the sciences and to historians that there could be no worthwhile history of science without a philosophical understanding of the conceptual basis of all knowledge. A Vital Rationalist brings together for the first time a selection of Canguilhem's most important writings, including excerpts from previously unpublished manuscripts and a critical bibliography by Camille Limoges. Organized around the major themes and problems that have preoccupied Canguilhem throughout his intellectual career, the collection allows readers, whether familiar or unfamiliar with Canguilhem's work, access to a vast array of conceptual and concrete meditations on epistemology, methodology, science, and history. Canguilhem is a demanding writer, but Delaporte succeeds in marking out the main lines of his thought with unrivaled clarity; readers will come away with a heightened understanding of the complex and crucial place he holds in French intellectual history.







Français Interactif


Book Description

This textbook includes all 13 chapters of Français interactif. It accompanies www.laits.utexas.edu/fi, the web-based French program developed and in use at the University of Texas since 2004, and its companion site, Tex's French Grammar (2000) www.laits.utexas.edu/tex/ Français interactif is an open acess site, a free and open multimedia resources, which requires neither password nor fees. Français interactif has been funded and created by Liberal Arts Instructional Technology Services at the University of Texas, and is currently supported by COERLL, the Center for Open Educational Resources and Language Learning UT-Austin, and the U.S. Department of Education Fund for the Improvement of Post-Secondary Education (FIPSE Grant P116B070251) as an example of the open access initiative.







Philosophy of Natural Science


Book Description

This volume explores the logic and methodology of scientific inquiry rather than its substantive results.




Who Wrote the Book of Life?


Book Description

This is a detailed history of one of the most important and dramatic episodes in modern science, recounted from the novel vantage point of the dawn of the information age and its impact on representations of nature, heredity, and society. Drawing on archives, published sources, and interviews, the author situates work on the genetic code (1953-70) within the history of life science, the rise of communication technosciences (cybernetics, information theory, and computers), the intersection of molecular biology with cryptanalysis and linguistics, and the social history of postwar Europe and the United States. Kay draws out the historical specificity in the process by which the central biological problem of DNA-based protein synthesis came to be metaphorically represented as an information code and a writing technology—and consequently as a “book of life.” This molecular writing and reading is part of the cultural production of the Nuclear Age, its power amplified by the centuries-old theistic resonance of the “book of life” metaphor. Yet, as the author points out, these are just metaphors: analogies, not ontologies. Necessary and productive as they have been, they have their epistemological limitations. Deploying analyses of language, cryptology, and information theory, the author persuasively argues that, technically speaking, the genetic code is not a code, DNA is not a language, and the genome is not an information system (objections voiced by experts as early as the 1950s). Thus her historical reconstruction and analyses also serve as a critique of the new genomic biopower. Genomic textuality has become a fact of life, a metaphor literalized, she claims, as human genome projects promise new levels of control over life through the meta-level of information: control of the word (the DNA sequences) and its editing and rewriting. But the author shows how the humbling limits of these scriptural metaphors also pose a challenge to the textual and material mastery of the genomic “book of life.”







Corpus


Book Description

How have we thought “the body”? How can we think it anew? The body of mortal creatures, the body politic, the body of letters and of laws, the “mystical body of Christ”—all these (and others) are incorporated in the word Corpus, the title and topic of Jean-Luc Nancy’s masterwork. Corpus is a work of literary force at once phenomenological, sociological, theological, and philosophical in its multiple orientations and approaches. In thirty-six brief sections, Nancy offers us at once an encyclopedia and a polemical program—reviewing classical takes on the “corpus” from Plato, Aristotle, and Saint Paul to Descartes, Hegel, Husserl, and Freud, while demonstrating that the mutations (technological, biological, and political) of our own culture have given rise to the need for a new understanding of the body. He not only tells the story of this cultural change but also explores the promise and responsibilities that such a new understanding entails. The long-awaited English translation is a bold, bravura rendering. To the title essay are added five closely related recent pieces—including a commentary by Antonia Birnbaum—dedicated in large part to the legacy of the “mind-body problem” formulated by Descartes and the challenge it poses to rethinking the ancient problems of the corpus. The last and most poignant of these essays is “The Intruder,” Nancy’s philosophical meditation on his heart transplant. The book also serves as the opening move in Nancy’s larger project called “The deconstruction of Christianity.”