Politics of Nature: How to Bring the Sciences into Democracy
is finally bringing the intrinsically political quality of thenatural order into the foreground. We understand without difficult ...
as “nature in general.” When one appeals to the notion of nature,the assemblage that it authorizes counts for infinitely more th ...
the role of unifier of the respective ranks of all beings out of the dual arena of nature and politics and intothe single arenao ...
and politics. Thus they continue to be seen as two completely unre- lated sets, the first of which does not even warrant the nam ...
tation of ecology difficult: the emergence of nature as a new concern in politics, and the disappearance of nature as a mode of ...
there is nothing astonishing in that.” To take one example in a thou- sand, we are all familiar with the ravages of social Darwi ...
way, can disturb, transform, and perform it, the fact remains that there are two histories, or rather one history full of sound ...
from Science, by making visible once again the apparatuses that make it possible to say something about nature, apparatuses that ...
tions, when it is accurate, passes wholesale over to the side of nature. In other words, the fact of adding the history of the s ...
that political ecology, in combination with science studies, allows a movement that had always been forbidden before. By emphasi ...
to organize society according to the ideal models supplied by reason. The right-hand model differs from the left-hand one by vir ...
ternality of Science the right to continue to talk about any external reality at all: those who had doubts about Science were su ...
of the sciences visible, we can start from nature, not in order to move toward the human element, but—by making a ninety-degree ...
Have we pulled out the splinter that made walking painful? The wound is still there; it will still hurt for a while, but it is n ...
The Fragile Aid of Comparative Anthropology Political ecology has finally taken the drama out of the perennial con- flict betwee ...
equal footing with the planets.^50 Ah, those feathered savages, children of Mother Earth, how nice it would be to be like them! ...
outside politics. If they do not form the lovely unities imposed on them by exoticism, at least the other cultures are not blind ...
it was said, nothing happens to the order of the world that does not happen to humans, and vice versa. There is no classificatio ...
order not to fall into a perverse fascination with differences, it is nec- essary to move quickly to create a common ground that ...
Everything now thus depends on the way we are going to character- ize this work of collection. One of two things must be true: e ...
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