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Paolo Palladino

    Biopolitics and the Philosophy of Death
    Plants, Patients and the Historian
    • Plants, Patients and the Historian

      (Re)Membering in the Age of Genetic Engineering

      • 264 páginas
      • 10 horas de lectura

      The book delves into the history of genetics in Britain, tracing its evolution since the early 20th century and the implications of decoding the human genome. It juxtaposes the pride in human self-knowledge with warnings from genetic pioneers about the consequences of this knowledge. By examining historiography, critical theory, and science and technology studies, the work seeks to highlight the ongoing relevance of the 'Absolute' in understanding the complexities and paradoxes of genetic science.

      Plants, Patients and the Historian
    • Biopolitics and the Philosophy of Death

      • 288 páginas
      • 11 horas de lectura

      While the governance of human existence is organised ever-increasingly around life and its potential to proliferate beyond all limits, much critical reflection on the phenomenon is underpinned by considerations about the very negation of life, death. The challenge is to construct an alternative understanding of human existence that is truer to the complexity of the present, biopolitical moment. Palladino responds to the challenge by drawing upon philosophical, historical and sociological modes of inquiry to examine key developments in the history of biomedical understanding of ageing and death. He combines this genealogy with close reflection upon its implications for a critical and effective reading of Foucault's and Deleuze's foundational work on the relationship between life, death and embodied existence. Biopolitics and the Philosophy of Death proposes that the central task of contemporary critical thought is to find ways of coordinating different ways of thinking about molecules, populations and the mortality of the human organism without transforming the notion of life itself into the new transcendent truth that would take the place once occupied by God and Man.

      Biopolitics and the Philosophy of Death