Originally published in French in seven volumes,
''Cosmopolitics'' investigates the role and authority of
the sciences in modern societies and challenges their
claims to objectivity, rationality, and truth.
''Cosmopolitics II'' includes the first English-language
translations of the last four books: ''Quantum
Mechanics: The End of the Dream, In the Name of the
Arrow of Time: Prigogine's Challenge, Life and Artifice:
The Faces of Emergence, ''and'' The Curse of Tolerance.
''Arguing for an ''ecology of practices'' in the
sciences, Isabelle Stengers explores the discordant
landscape of knowledge derived from modern science,
seeking intellectual consistency among contradictory,
confrontational, and mutually exclusive philosophical
ambitions and approaches. For Stengers, science is a
constructive enterprise, a diverse, interdependent, and
highly contingent system that does not simply discover
preexisting truths but, through specific practices and
processes, helps shape them.Stengers concludes this
philosophical inquiry with a forceful critique of
tolerance; it is a fundamentally condescending attitude,
she contends, that prevents those worldviews that
challenge dominant explanatory systems from being taken
seriously. Instead of tolerance, she proposes a
''cosmopolitics'' that rejects politics as a universal
category and allows modern scientific practices to
peacefully coexist with other forms of knowledge. |
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