Making Sense in Common: A Reading of Whitehead in Times of Collapse


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Description

A leading philosopher seeks to recover "common sense" as a meeting place to reconcile science and philosophy

With her previous books on Alfred North Whitehead, Isabelle Stengers not only secured a reputation as one of the premier philosophers of our times but also inspired a rethinking of critical theory, political thought, and radical philosophy across a range of disciplines. Here, Stengers unveils what might well be seen as her definitive reading of Whitehead.

Making Sense in Common will be greeted eagerly by the growing group of scholars who use Stengers's work on Whitehead as a model for how to think with conceptual precision through diverse domains of inquiry: environmentalism and ecology, animal studies, media and technology studies, the history and philosophy of science, feminism, and capitalism. On the other hand, the significance of this new book extends beyond Whitehead. Instead, it lies in Stengers's recovery of the idea of "common sense" as a meeting place--a commons--where opposed ideas of science and humanistic inquiry can engage one another and help to move society forward. Her reconciliation of science and philosophy is especially urgent today--when climate disaster looms all around us, when the values of what we thought of as civilization and modernity are discredited, and when expertise of any kind is under attack.



Author: Isabelle Stengers
Publisher: University of Minnesota Press
Published: 03/28/2023
Pages: 224
Binding Type: Paperback
Weight: 1.35lbs
Size: 8.43h x 5.51w x 0.47d
ISBN13: 9781517911430
ISBN10: 1517911435
BISAC Categories:
- Philosophy | Individual Philosophers
- Science | Philosophy & Social Aspects
- Philosophy | History & Surveys | Modern

About the Author

Isabelle Stengers, professor of the philosophy of science at the Université libre de Bruxelles, has authored or coauthored more than twenty-five books, many of them published by University of Minnesota Press. She received the grand prize for philosophy from the Académie Française in 1993.

Thomas Lamarre is Gordon J. Laing Distinguished Service Professor of Cinema and Media Studies and East Asian Languages and Civilizations at the University of Chicago.