Recovering the Body

A Philosophical Story

By Carol Collier
Categories: Gender & Sexuality Studies, Women’s Studies
Publisher: University of Ottawa Press
Paperback : 9780776607993, 380 pages, June 2013
Ebook (PDF) : 9780776620800, 380 pages, June 2013
Ebook (EPUB) : 9780776620817, 380 pages, June 2013
Ebook (MobiPocket) : 9780776620824, 380 pages, June 2013

Table of contents

FOREWORD

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

INTRODUCTION

PART I The Road to Mechanism: Ancient Greece to the Scientific Revolution

Chapter 1 Body and Soul at War: Plato

Chapter 2 Body and Nature: Aristotle and the Stoics

Chapter 3 The Resurrection of the Body: Christianity

Chapter 4 From Naturalism to Mechanism: The Renaissance

Chapter 5 The Body-Machine: Descartes

Chapter 6 The Road Not Followed: Spinoza

PART II The Limits of Mechanism: contemporary Problems and Solutions

Chapter 7 The Legacy of Mechanism: The Fragmented and Disappearing Body

Chapter 8 Recovering the Body: Yoga

Chapter 9 Recovering the Body: Alternative Medicine

CONCLUSION

BIBLIOGRAPHY

Description

ollowing the metaphysical and epistemological threads that have led to our modern conception of the body as a machine, the book explores views of the body in the history of philosophy. Its central thesis is that the Cartesian paradigm, which has dominated the modern conception of the body (including the development and practice of medicine), offers an incomplete and even inaccurate picture. This picture has become a reductio ad absurdum, which, through such current trends as the practice of extreme body modification, and futuristic visions of downloading consciousness into machines, could lead to the disappearance of the biological body. Presenting Spinoza’s philosophy of the body as the road not followed, the author asks what Spinoza would think of some of our contemporary body visions. It also looks to two more holistic approaches to the body that offer hope of recovering its true meaning: the practice of yoga and alternative medicine. The metaphysical analysis is accompanied throughout by a tripartite historical and epistemological analysis: the body as an obstacle to knowledge (exemplified by Plato and our modern-day futurists), the body as an object of knowledge (exemplified by Descartes and modern scientific medicine); and the body as a source of knowledge (exemplified by the Stoics, and the philosophy of yoga).

- Ce livre est publié en anglais.