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E-raamat: The Philosophy of Simondon: Between Technology and Individuation

(Institute of Advanced Studies of Social Communications, Belgium), Translated by , Translated by (Manchester)
  • Formaat: 224 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 04-Jul-2013
  • Kirjastus: Bloomsbury Academic
  • ISBN-13: 9781780930985
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  • Formaat: 224 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 04-Jul-2013
  • Kirjastus: Bloomsbury Academic
  • ISBN-13: 9781780930985
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The last two decades have seen a massive increase in the scholarly interest in technology, and have provoked new lines of thought in philosophy, sociology and cultural studies. Gilbert Simondon (1924 - 1989) was one of Frances's most influential philosophers in this field, and an important influence on the work of Gilles Deleuze and Bernard Stiegler. His work is only now being translated into English. Chabot's introduction to Simondon's work was published in French in 2002 and is now available in English for the first time. It is the most accessible guide to Simondon's important but often opaque work. Chabot provides an excellent introduction to Simondon, positioning him as a philosopher of technology, and he describes his theory of individuation including his crystalline ontology. He goes on to offer a bridge between these two concerns, exploring how they are related.

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This book is available to an English-speaking audience for the first time, providing an accessible guide to students and scholars.
Foreword vii
Graeme Kirkpatrick
Introduction 1(8)
Part 1 Philosophy of Technology
1 The Object
9(14)
Genesis of the technical object: The process of concretization
9(6)
Mode of existence of the concrete object
15(3)
The inventor
18(5)
2 Technological Encyclopaedism
23(12)
Technology grows up
23(2)
Maturity
25(4)
An ambiguous optimism
29(6)
3 Marx and Simondon: Alienation
35(16)
The clamour of technologies
35(8)
Social utopia and economy
43(4)
Evolutionary logic
47(4)
4 Cybernetics
51(24)
Information: Relations between alter technos
51(3)
Encounters with signs, matter and memory
54(10)
By way of conclusion: Discussion of two ways of representing progress
64(11)
Part 2 Individuation
5 The Brick
75(4)
6 The Crystal
79(10)
7 Coral Colonies
89(6)
8 Psyche and Society
95(6)
9 Imagination
101(8)
Part 3 The Bridges
10 Simondon and Depth Psychology
109(18)
Individuation according to Jung
109(3)
Simondon's Nigredo
112(6)
The meaning of individuation: The relation to the object
118(4)
Rebirth of an archetype
122(5)
11 An Ideal World
127(18)
The superlative of progress
129(6)
Technologies, sacred and profane (Eliade and Simondon)
135(6)
The technoaesthetic
141(4)
12 Three Philosophers and The Matrix
145(10)
Index 155
Pascal Chabot has a doctorate in philosophy from the Free University of Brussels, Belgium. He is a researcher at the Belgian Fund for Scientific Research.

Graeme Kirkpatrick is Senior Lecturer in Sociology at the University of Manchester, UK. He is the author of Critical Technology (2004) which won the 2005 Philip Abrams Memorial Prize from the British Sociological Association; Technology and Social Power (2008) and the co-editor of Historical Materialism and Social Evolution (2002).

Aliza Krefetz