If art and science have one thing in common, it’s a hunger for the
new—new ideas and innovations, new ways of seeing and depicting the
world. But that desire for novelty carries with it a fundamental
philosophical problem: If everything has to come from something, how
can anything truly new emerge? Is novelty even possible? In Novelty,
Michael North takes us on a dazzling tour of more than two millennia
of thinking about the problem of the new, from the puzzles of the
pre-Socratics all the way up to the art world of the 1960s and ’70s.
The terms of the debate, North shows, were established before Plato,
and have changed very little since: novelty, philosophers argued,
could only arise from either recurrence or recombination. The former,
found in nature’s cycles of renewal, and the latter, seen most
clearly in the workings of language, between them have accounted for
nearly all the ways in which novelty has been conceived in Western
history, taking in reformation, renaissance, invention, revolution,
and even evolution. As he pursues this idea through centuries and
across disciplines, North exhibits astonishing range, drawing on
figures as diverse as Charles Darwin and Robert Smithson, Thomas Kuhn
and Ezra Pound, Norbert Wiener and Andy Warhol, all of whom offer
different ways of grappling with the idea of originality. Novelty,
North demonstrates, remains a central problem of contemporary science
and literature—an ever-receding target that, in its complexity and
evasiveness, continues to inspire and propel the modern. A heady,
ambitious intellectual feast, Novelty is rich with insight, a
masterpiece of perceptive synthesis.
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A History of the New
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780226077901
Publisert
2018
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
University of Chicago Press
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter