Castelli Gattinara, Enrico (Author)
The article shows the strategic analogies, but also the differences between Bachelard and Canguilhem on the use of the history of science for epistemology. It emphasizes the importance of the ideology for Canguilhem, and the conceptual essence he recognizes in the history of science, which is read in its internal specific differences and in its complex articulations with life and reality. No concept, in fact, comes from nothing. The link between history and epistemology is not however of subjection, but of mutual influence. Canguilhem radicalizes the thought of Bachelard, and recognizes the historicity of every aspect of scientific knowledge, even of its less valued features and above all of errors. All aspects of Science are historical. The object of the history of science is not the object of the sciences, because it is always a discourse. This is why the history of science is inevitably linked to other forms of history. This opens up a pluralist conception of History and of Time, thinking of the sciences in their real body and no longer ideal or legal. Thus Canguilhem opens the way to the researches of Foucault and Serres.
...MoreArticle Fábio Ferreira Almeida (2018) Introduction: Dossier Georges Canguilhem. Transversal: International Journal for the Historiography of Science (pp. 3-7).
Article
François Delaporte;
(2018)
The Birth of the Clinic and the Sources of Archaeological History
(/isis/citation/CBB852374486/)
Article
David M. Peña-Guzmán;
(2020)
French historical epistemology: Discourse, concepts, and the norms of rationality
(/isis/citation/CBB928733497/)
Article
Line Joranger;
(2016)
Individual Perception and Cultural Development: Foucault’s 1954 Approach to Mental Illness and Its History
(/isis/citation/CBB050077916/)
Book
Onur Erdur;
(2018)
Die epistemologischen Jahre: Philosophie und Biologie in Frankreich, 1960-1980
(/isis/citation/CBB577433788/)
Article
Márcia H. M. Ferraz;
Ana M. Alfonso-Goldfarb;
Silvia Waisse;
(2018)
Science and History of Science: between Comte and Canguilhem
(/isis/citation/CBB631268004/)
Article
Océane Fiant;
(2018)
Canguilhem and the Machine Metaphor in Life Sciences: History of Science and Philosophy of Biology at the Service of Sciences
(/isis/citation/CBB877813949/)
Book
Rheinberger, Hans-Jörg;
(2010)
An Epistemology of the Concrete
(/isis/citation/CBB001023158/)
Article
Victor Petit;
(2019)
Jean Gayon (1949-2018): Itinéraire d’un darwinien
(/isis/citation/CBB150653875/)
Article
Roth Xavier;
(2018)
When the Content to Be Taught Is a Norm: Canguilhem-Inspired Contributions to Educational Practices
(/isis/citation/CBB543469377/)
Article
Laurent Loison;
(2018)
Un enthousiasme paradoxal? Georges Canguilhem et la biologie moléculaire (1966-1973)
(/isis/citation/CBB182581136/)
Article
Basaure, Mauro;
(2009)
Foucault and the “Anti-Oedipus Movement”: Psychoanalysis as Disciplinary Power
(/isis/citation/CBB000932524/)
Article
Malich, Lisa;
(2011)
Zeitpfeile, Zeitfaltungen und Diskursanalyse: zu Kontinuitäten der Imaginationslehre
(/isis/citation/CBB001220466/)
Article
Chimisso, Cristina;
(2003)
The Tribunal of Philosophy and Its Norms: History and Philosophy in Georges Canguilhem's Historical Epistemology
(/isis/citation/CBB000340812/)
Article
Rheinberger, Hans-Jörg;
(2012)
A Plea for a Historical Epistemology of Research
(/isis/citation/CBB001252365/)
Article
Raffaele Pisano;
Philippe Vincent;
(2018)
Introduction: Methods and Cognitive Modelling in the History and Philosophy of Science–&–Education
(/isis/citation/CBB426761731/)
Article
David Marcelo Peña-Guzmán;
(2018)
Canguilhem’s Concepts
(/isis/citation/CBB602159639/)
Book
David Z. Albert;
(2016)
After Physics
(/isis/citation/CBB562588057/)
Book
Stuart Elden;
(2021)
The Early Foucault
(/isis/citation/CBB949414543/)
Article
Diego Enrique Londoño;
Tom Dening;
(2016)
The Emergence of Psychiatric Semiology During the Age of Revolution: Evolving Concepts of ‘normal’ and ‘pathological’
(/isis/citation/CBB684273497/)
Article
Talcott, Samuel;
(2014)
Errant Life, Molecular Biology, and Biopower: Canguilhem, Jacob, and Foucault
(/isis/citation/CBB001510275/)
Be the first to comment!