AnyBook4Less.com
Find the Best Price on the Web
Order from a Major Online Bookstore
Developed by Fintix
Home  |  Store List  |  FAQ  |  Contact Us  |  
 
Ultimate Book Price Comparison Engine
Save Your Time And Money

The Order of Things : An Archaeology of Human Sciences

Please fill out form in order to compare prices
Title: The Order of Things : An Archaeology of Human Sciences
by Michel Foucault
ISBN: 0-679-75335-4
Publisher: Vintage
Pub. Date: 29 March, 1994
Format: Paperback
Volumes: 1
List Price(USD): $14.00
Your Country
Currency
Delivery
Include Used Books
Are you a club member of: Barnes and Noble
Books A Million Chapters.Indigo.ca

Average Customer Rating: 4.18 (11 reviews)

Customer Reviews

Rating: 4
Summary: Obtuse but Sharp
Comment: Foucault's stuff is hardly pleasure reading, but it rewards in other ways, more subtly. If you don't read Foucault without coming away with a deeper sense of the world around you, how power and knowledge is diffuse and not central, you would be a rare person. This book isn't so much concerned with power as it is the history of ideas, though.

Rating: 5
Summary: ardent Renaissance Man turns history of science on its side
Comment: This is my favorite book by Foucault. The book reads well, as a series of connected stories.

You will need to bring an interest in the history of economic thought, the history of linguistic thought, the history of thinking about art, the history of biological thought, and other such histories, though you don't need a college level background in each to be able to get full value from reading the book. He ranges both deep and wide in all these histories, and presents them in a completely new way - you'll feel as if your feet have been yanked from underneath you.

Imagine the normal way a history of a single science is presented: you see the progression of ideas, there is the old idea, the growing realisation of a problem inherent in the old idea, a key person grows up and comes up with a new idea, and we see how the new idea came about and how it gained support and took hold and how the old idea lost out, quickly or after a protracted struggle. This is such a familiar framework that we completely take it for granted. Maybe we shouldn't, says Foucault.

He claims to have found something remarkable when looking at all these different histories of thought side by side. He says major changes in the very way that economics was conceived had a counterpart in major changes in the way linguistics was conceived and biology and so on, in a very narrow span of years. This leads him to distinguish three eras such that within each era the thinking in economics, biology, linguistics, etc was more similar to each other than e.g. the thinking in economics from one era to the next. Each of these eras, which he calls "epistemes", comes to a fairly sudden end all across Europe.

In each episteme, there are certain ways of looking at knowledge, but also ways of looking at what is worth knowing and what is worth asking and what is taken for granted, that are typical of that episteme and are shared across the various subjects of study. Once in a new episteme, the questions and concerns of the previous episteme become exasperatingly quaint (like "how could they waste their time arguing about the number of angels who can dance on the head of a pin").

Foucault traces his three epistemes in great detail, doing a wonderful detective-novel job at bringing you along and keeping you interested in the essential weirdness of the previous epistemes, till he gets to the modern episteme, and then you slake a sigh of relief because everything suddenly sounds so eminently reasonable. But by now you can see the contingency of the modern way of thinking - why, for example, modern man would structure his history of sciences the way he does. In a sense, modern man, embedded like a tar baby in the current episteme could never have come up with Foucault's theory of epistemes. Fittingly, Foucault, at the end of the book, drops some tantalizing hints that the current episteme may be close to an end as well, and what might replace it.

Time to throw some of your favorite answers away and start asking some new questions!

Rating: 5
Summary: Difficult but worth it
Comment: This book is one of the most important philosophy texts of the 20th century, if for no other reason than as an eye-opener. The text is a difficult read (although nowhere near as opaque as Derrida). The section on how our culture and, hence, our world-view has been "set" by accepted taxonomies is worth the read all by itself. I have come back to these comments again and again. Taxonomies are useful, but we need to understand the constraints on understanding imposed by such

Similar Books:

Title: Archeology of Knowledge
by Michel Foucault
ISBN: 0394711068
Publisher: Pantheon Books
Pub. Date: 12 September, 1982
List Price(USD): $13.60
Title: Discipline & Punish : The Birth of the Prison
by Michel Foucault
ISBN: 0679752552
Publisher: Vintage
Pub. Date: 25 April, 1995
List Price(USD): $14.00
Title: Madness and Civilization : A History of Insanity in the Age of Reason
by Michel Foucault
ISBN: 067972110X
Publisher: Vintage
Pub. Date: 28 November, 1988
List Price(USD): $13.00
Title: Power/Knowledge : Selected Interviews and Other Writings, 1972-1977
by Michel Foucault
ISBN: 039473954X
Publisher: Pantheon Books
Pub. Date: 12 November, 1980
List Price(USD): $14.00
Title: The History of Sexuality : An Introduction
by Michel Foucault
ISBN: 0679724699
Publisher: Vintage
Pub. Date: 14 April, 1990
List Price(USD): $11.00

Thank you for visiting www.AnyBook4Less.com and enjoy your savings!

Copyright� 2001-2021 Send your comments

Powered by Apache