Explore the latest books of this year!
Bookbot

Georges Canguilhem

    June 4, 1904 – September 11, 1995

    Georges Canguilhem was a French philosopher and physician whose work delved into epistemology and the philosophy of science. His writings explored the nature of scientific knowledge and the evolution of scientific concepts. He investigated the relationship between science, history, and philosophy, examining how scientific ideas develop and transform over time. Canguilhem's approach emphasized the historical and contextual nature of scientific thought.

    Über Maurice Halbwachs
    Das Normale und das Pathologische
    Wissenschaft, Technik, Leben
    Writings on Medicine
    The Normal and the Pathological
    Knowledge of Life
    • 2012

      At the time of his death in 1995, Georges Canguilhem was a highly respected historian of science and medicine, whose engagement with questions of normality, the ideologization of scientific thought, and the conceptual history of biology had marked the thought of philosophers such as Michel Foucault, Louis Althusser, Pierre Bourdieu, and Gilles Deleuze. This collection of short, incisive, and highly accessible essays on the major concepts of modern medicine shows Canguilhem at the peak of his use of historical practice for philosophical engagement. In order to elaborate a philosophy of medicine, Canguilhem examines paramount problems such as the definition and uses of health, the decline of the Hippocratic understanding of nature, the experience of disease, the limits of psychology in medicine, myths and realities of therapeutic practices, the difference between cure and healing, the organism's self-regulation, and medical metaphors linking the organism to society. Writings on Medicine is at once an excellent introduction to Canguilhem's work and a forceful, insightful, and accessible engagement with elemental concepts in medicine. The book is certain to leave its imprint on anthropology, history, philosophy, bioethics, and the social studies of medicine.

      Writings on Medicine
    • 2008

      Offers a series of epistemological histories that seek to establish and clarify the stakes, ambiguities, and emergence of philosophical and biological concepts that defined the rise of modern biology. This title explains how the movements of knowledge and life come to rest upon each other.

      Knowledge of Life
    • 1991