In this Book

Foucault's Archaeology: Science and Transformation

Book
2012
summary
This book provides a new perspective on Foucault’s The Archaeology of Knowledge by revealing the extent to which its approach to language was influenced by the mathematical sciences. Setting out this background to Foucault’s analysis makes The Archaeology of Knowledge both accessible in a new way, and relevant to issues that are at the heart of much contemporary debate over the nature of critical thought and the relation between philosophy and the sciences. This book sheds new light on a crucial period of Foucault’s work by highlighting his relation to thinkers such as Cavaillès and Serres. It aims to provide a reading of The Archaeology of Knowledge that puts it at the heart Foucault’s thought. Rather than attempting a scientific study of language as such, Foucault is shown to have adopted a mode of thought indebted to thinkers in the scientific and epistemological tradition.

Table of Contents

Cover

Half Title, Title Page, Copyright

Contents

pp. v-vi

Abbreviations

pp. viii

Acknowledgements

pp. ix

Introduction

pp. 1-4

Background

pp. 5-40

PAart I: Introduction

pp. 41-47

Part II: The Discursive Regularities

pp. 48-84

Part III: The Statement and the Archive

pp. 85-119

Part IV: Archaeological Description

pp. 120-151

Part V: Conclusion

pp. 152-158

Closing Remarks

pp. 159-165

Notes

pp. 166-173

Selected Bibliography

pp. 174-177

Index

pp. 178-181
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