The Order of Things: An Archaeology of the Human Sciences
Michel Foucault
416 pages, Paperback
ISBN: 0679753354
ISBN13:
Language: English
Publish: March 29, 1994
AcademicAnthropologyFranceHistoryNonfictionPhilosophyPsychologyScienceSociologyTheory
Librarian note: an alternate cover for this edition can be found here.
With vast erudition, Foucault cuts across disciplines and reaches back into seventeenth century to show how classical systems of knowledge, which linked all of nature within a great chain of being and analogies between the stars in the heavens and the features in a human face, gave way to the modern sciences of biology, philology, and political economy. The result is nothing less than an archaeology of the sciences that unearths old patterns of meaning and reveals the shocking arbitrariness of our received truths.
In the work that established him as the most important French thinker since Sartre, Michel Foucault offers startling evidence that “man”—man as a subject of scientific knowledge—is at best a recent invention, the result of a fundamental mutation in our culture.