François Laruelle's <i>The Last Humanity </i>is a unique, ambitious, and provocative adventure in ecological thinking. It offers one of the most original, realist, and dare I say deconstructive ecological encounters to date.

Rick Elmore, Associate Professor of Philosophy, Appalachian State University, USA

Laruelle’s non-philosophical ecology represents an uncompromising challenge to existing ecological thought and, in this brilliantly accomplished translation, makes a provocative and landmark contribution to contemporary eco-critical debate. Laruelle aims at nothing less than a total reconfiguration of the ethical relations between the human, the animal, and biological life more generally and he succeeds in ways that we have hitherto been unable to imagine.

Ian James, Reader in Modern French Literature and Thought, University of Cambridge, UK

In the course of more than twenty works François Laruelle has developed one of the most singular and unique ways of thinking within contemporary philosophy. This volume develops the style of his late work, which has sought to combine the idioms of diverse areas (from the language of quantum mechanics to theology, messianism and Gnosticism) to create non-standard philosophical fictions which further articulate his thinking of radical immanence in relation to wide-ranging themes and concerns.

The focus here is a reassessment of his attempt to rethink what it means to be human. Much of that work has taken place through an engagement with science, politics and religion, but now we see Laruelle confronting the challenge of ecology for his kind of humanism (which he would call a 'non-humanism', meaning a non-standard humanism). This challenge is one of thinking of the ethical demands of other entities within a general ecology. Namely the lives of plants and other vegetation alongside that of animals.

Dealing with the intersections between science and philosophy in current French thought, this book is of particular interest to those concerned with the philosophical innovation and renewal of ecological thought that have influenced ecological theory. The first English translation of a key work from this highly original experimental philosopher, it will surely help cement his place in the firmament of avant-garde French thinkers, from Derrida and Deleuze to Badiou.

Les mer

Foreword

Introduction

Chapter 1: In Search of a Messianic Ecology

Chapter 2: Philosophy’s Degrowth for a Generic Ecology

Chapter 3: The House of Philosophy Is in Ruins

Chapter 4: The Antinomy of Ecology and Philosophy

Chapter 5: The Unification of the Lived-without-Life and Being-in-the-Last-Humanity

Chapter 6: Ecology as Quantum of the Messianic Lived

Conclusion: Ethics Between Ecology and Messianity

Les mer
A internationally renowned philosopher - Francois Laruelle - takes on the perennially important topic of what is means to be human and the place of humanity within ecological and post-humanism concerns.
Les mer
Francois Laruelle is one of the most prominent living French philosophers of the 20th and 21st centuries

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781350008229
Publisert
2020-11-12
Utgiver
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Vekt
313 gr
Høyde
198 mm
Bredde
129 mm
Aldersnivå
U, 05
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
184

Forfatter
Oversetter

Biografisk notat

François Laruelle is a French philosopher, formerly of the Collège international de philosophie and the University of Paris X: Nanterre, France.