The Flight to Objectivity: Essays on Cartesianism and Culture

The Flight to Objectivity: Essays on Cartesianism and Culture

  • Downloads:9161
  • Type:Epub+TxT+PDF+Mobi
  • Create Date:2021-08-31 09:54:08
  • Update Date:2025-09-06
  • Status:finish
  • Author:Susan Bordo
  • ISBN:0887064116
  • Environment:PC/Android/iPhone/iPad/Kindle

Summary

The Flight to Objectivity offers a new reading of Descartes' Meditations informed by cultural history, psychoanalytic and cognitive psychology, and feminist thought。 It focuses not on Descartes' arguments as timeless, culturally disembodied events, but on the psychological drama and imagery of the Meditations explored in the context of the historical instability of the seventeenth century and deep historical changes in the structure of human experience。

The study includes textual and cultural material that together comprise a gradually unfolding psychocultural reading of the Meditations。 Descartes' famous doubt, and the ideal of objectivity which conquered that doubt, are considered as philosophical expressions of a cultural drama of parturition from the medieval universe, a process that generated new forms of experience, new cultural anxieties, and ultimately, new strategies for control and mastery of an utterly changed and alien world。 Themes that figure prominently in recent literature on seventeenth-century philosophy and science--the birth of the mind as mirror of nature, and the masculine nature of modern science, the death of nature--are explored with reference to Descartes as a pivotal figure in the birth of modernity。

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Reviews

matt harding

I would agree with other reviewers that this small book is a great primer for anyone wishing to understand why the early modern period swung so heavily towards the Cartesian worldview and how that worldview and the modern scientific model is dominated by a masculine outlook。 It's also an interesting history on the Medieval mindset (I had just finished reading Hans Umbrecht's book on Presence cultures and Bordo's narrative dovetailed with Umbrecht's quite nicely, so there's that to read if you're I would agree with other reviewers that this small book is a great primer for anyone wishing to understand why the early modern period swung so heavily towards the Cartesian worldview and how that worldview and the modern scientific model is dominated by a masculine outlook。 It's also an interesting history on the Medieval mindset (I had just finished reading Hans Umbrecht's book on Presence cultures and Bordo's narrative dovetailed with Umbrecht's quite nicely, so there's that to read if you're interested) While Bordo's use of Piaget's developmental psychology was interesting, I'm not sure that it was a necessary device as she ends up critiquing Piaget's model as being thoroughly invested in a Western mindset。 I appreciated the recommendation for a dynamic objectivity that Bordo champions in the final chapter of her book。 。。。more

Jody

A must-read for anyone interested in philosophy, science, and psychology。 The author traces the evolution of our current emphasis on "objective" and "rational" thought as an attempt to control the "separation anxiety" caused by losing the sense of being connected to the world。 A must-read for anyone interested in philosophy, science, and psychology。 The author traces the evolution of our current emphasis on "objective" and "rational" thought as an attempt to control the "separation anxiety" caused by losing the sense of being connected to the world。 。。。more