City Intelligible: A Philosophical and Historical Anthropology of Global Commoditisation before Industrialisation: Studies in Global Social History, cartea 38
Autor Frank Perlinen Limba Engleză Hardback – 4 mar 2020
It treats the factors of economic history as forms of cultural expression, but determined, in their turn, by a continuum of complex societal formation from the very beginnings of intensive agricultural and social settlement. It seeks to derive evidence for the universal foundations of human reasoning through analysis of the culture of commoditisation in marrying a thoroughgoing Kantian analysis with the historical evidence, an approach aspiring to ground the very concept and possibility of a universal human cultural nature underlying all human differentiation.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9789004414914
ISBN-10: 9004414916
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Greutate: 1.18 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill
Seria Studies in Global Social History
ISBN-10: 9004414916
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Greutate: 1.18 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill
Seria Studies in Global Social History
Cuprins
Foreword by Ravi Ahuja
Acknowledgements
Notice to the Reader
List of Illustrations
More than a Preface or Introduction!: The Transcendental Constitution of the Cultural, Historical and Empirical Object: The Problem and Task of the Two Anthropologies
1Initial Notice—an Order of Reading
2The Subject Matter and the Project
3To Constitute History and Society … the Two Taxonomies
4The Three Criticisms
5A Critical and Transcendental Anthropology of Intercultural Translatability—the Question of Method
6Final Resolution of a Dilemma: The A-Priori, at Once Universal and Empirical
7The Composition of the Book
1 From the Closed World to the Open Continuum
1Complexity, Language & Uncertainty
2Order, Unit & Convenience in Economic History. Language-Use as Problem
3Production and Marketing as an Issue of Complexity
4Alternative Principles of Order & Method
iThe Propositions
iiSampling as Method
iiiResources for Sampling, and a Hypothesis
ATextile Market-Censuses
BRaw Cottons
CPre-Spun Wools & Woollen Yarns
DThe Knowledge Problem
ELists of Coinages Brought to Particular Markets
2 Unpacking, Disengaging and Linking
1The Production and Marketing of Type: Phases, Extensions, Disengagements and Articulations
iThe « Raw Materials » of Production
AEmpirical Linkage
BInitial Implications
iiCloth Typologies
iiiSpeciation in Field & Market (Autonomy for Connection)
2Quality and Number
3A Second Object World
1The Continuum
iA Problem of Method
iiCommodity Nature
AAn Artificial Object World, & Its Taxonomy
BMarketisation as Communication
aMarkets & Complexity
bThe Issue of Translatability—Markets & Frontiers
cMarkets & Information
2Kant’s Tower of Babel & the Cultural Universal
iMetaphor & Construction
iiA Kantian Approach to Commoditisation & Translatability
iiiThe Universal and Cultural Difference
AThe Problem of the Very Idea of a Universal Culture and Mind
BFirst Invalid—the Biological A-Priori
CSecond Invalid—Plurality of Societies as a Priori
DAn Answer—Historical Generation of the Universal as a History of Differentiation
3Cultural and Natural Space/Times
iIntroduction. for an Explanation of Difference
iiNewtonian Space/Time & Practical Knowledge
iiiSpecies Construction and Its Transcendental Space/Time
ivExtension in Space/Time
ARephrasing the Coordinates of Choice & Limit with Respect to Reason
BNeither Closed nor Infinite, but Finite & Illimitable
aA Unity of Formative and Constructional Principle of the Exotic
bBut What Kind of Unity?
cA Poesis of the Incomparable
dNot an Infinity but Finitude
eA Finitude Closed and Bounded? or Open and Illimitable? Our Return to Kant!
fThinking the Object into Being and the Reality-Status of That Thought
gAn Edifice Built Only with Matter Accessible to Human Kind
CFurther Thoughts about the Meaning of a « Universal » Culture of Practice and Mind
vIntersubjectivity and Non-Essentialist Construction
4Postface
Introduction to Part 2: Plant Artifice/Plant Nature
4A General Framework
1Introduction: Artifice & Nature
2Contexts, Empirical & Intellectual
3Foundational Difficulties
iProblem Domains
iiSubstantive Discussion
AThe Continuum of Culture, Language and Systematics, and Thus Translatability
BThe Cultural Specificity of Any Grown Plant. Selection in Artificial Botanies
CMarket Determination of « Artificial » Plant Variation
DA Partial Explanation in Terms of Transmission of Cultural Universals, in the Kantian Sense
5Foundations of Botany in Western Europe
1Europe and the World: The Phases and Aspects of Botanical Taxonomy and Abstraction
iMedical Botany, Horta Botanica, Taxonomies & Pharmacopoeia
iiThe Concept of Type, Agricultural Part-Products & Market Continua
6A Postface: Narrative Style, Evolutionary Form, and the Shaping of an Early Science: Botany
Appendix 1Order in Artificial and Spontaneous Natures
Appendix 2« The Phenomenology Lesson ». A Commentary on the Illustrations
Bibliography
1Introduction: Selection and Translation
2Kant, Hegel and Husserl 54
3General Bibliography
Index
Acknowledgements
Notice to the Reader
List of Illustrations
More than a Preface or Introduction!: The Transcendental Constitution of the Cultural, Historical and Empirical Object: The Problem and Task of the Two Anthropologies
1Initial Notice—an Order of Reading
2The Subject Matter and the Project
3To Constitute History and Society … the Two Taxonomies
4The Three Criticisms
5A Critical and Transcendental Anthropology of Intercultural Translatability—the Question of Method
6Final Resolution of a Dilemma: The A-Priori, at Once Universal and Empirical
7The Composition of the Book
Part 1: Artifice & Nature: A Kantian and Historical Anthropology of Commoditisation before Industrialisation
1 From the Closed World to the Open Continuum
1Complexity, Language & Uncertainty
2Order, Unit & Convenience in Economic History. Language-Use as Problem
3Production and Marketing as an Issue of Complexity
4Alternative Principles of Order & Method
iThe Propositions
iiSampling as Method
iiiResources for Sampling, and a Hypothesis
ATextile Market-Censuses
BRaw Cottons
CPre-Spun Wools & Woollen Yarns
DThe Knowledge Problem
ELists of Coinages Brought to Particular Markets
2 Unpacking, Disengaging and Linking
1The Production and Marketing of Type: Phases, Extensions, Disengagements and Articulations
iThe « Raw Materials » of Production
AEmpirical Linkage
BInitial Implications
iiCloth Typologies
iiiSpeciation in Field & Market (Autonomy for Connection)
2Quality and Number
3A Second Object World
1The Continuum
iA Problem of Method
iiCommodity Nature
AAn Artificial Object World, & Its Taxonomy
BMarketisation as Communication
aMarkets & Complexity
bThe Issue of Translatability—Markets & Frontiers
cMarkets & Information
2Kant’s Tower of Babel & the Cultural Universal
iMetaphor & Construction
iiA Kantian Approach to Commoditisation & Translatability
iiiThe Universal and Cultural Difference
AThe Problem of the Very Idea of a Universal Culture and Mind
BFirst Invalid—the Biological A-Priori
CSecond Invalid—Plurality of Societies as a Priori
DAn Answer—Historical Generation of the Universal as a History of Differentiation
3Cultural and Natural Space/Times
iIntroduction. for an Explanation of Difference
iiNewtonian Space/Time & Practical Knowledge
iiiSpecies Construction and Its Transcendental Space/Time
ivExtension in Space/Time
ARephrasing the Coordinates of Choice & Limit with Respect to Reason
BNeither Closed nor Infinite, but Finite & Illimitable
aA Unity of Formative and Constructional Principle of the Exotic
bBut What Kind of Unity?
cA Poesis of the Incomparable
dNot an Infinity but Finitude
eA Finitude Closed and Bounded? or Open and Illimitable? Our Return to Kant!
fThinking the Object into Being and the Reality-Status of That Thought
gAn Edifice Built Only with Matter Accessible to Human Kind
CFurther Thoughts about the Meaning of a « Universal » Culture of Practice and Mind
vIntersubjectivity and Non-Essentialist Construction
4Postface
Part 2: Taxonomy & Commodity: In Global Transfers of Plant Forms and Plant Products into Early-modern Europe (the cultural production of nature, or the foundations of early botany)
Introduction to Part 2: Plant Artifice/Plant Nature
4A General Framework
1Introduction: Artifice & Nature
2Contexts, Empirical & Intellectual
3Foundational Difficulties
iProblem Domains
iiSubstantive Discussion
AThe Continuum of Culture, Language and Systematics, and Thus Translatability
BThe Cultural Specificity of Any Grown Plant. Selection in Artificial Botanies
CMarket Determination of « Artificial » Plant Variation
DA Partial Explanation in Terms of Transmission of Cultural Universals, in the Kantian Sense
5Foundations of Botany in Western Europe
1Europe and the World: The Phases and Aspects of Botanical Taxonomy and Abstraction
iMedical Botany, Horta Botanica, Taxonomies & Pharmacopoeia
iiThe Concept of Type, Agricultural Part-Products & Market Continua
6A Postface: Narrative Style, Evolutionary Form, and the Shaping of an Early Science: Botany
Appendix 1Order in Artificial and Spontaneous Natures
Appendix 2« The Phenomenology Lesson ». A Commentary on the Illustrations
Bibliography
1Introduction: Selection and Translation
2Kant, Hegel and Husserl 54
3General Bibliography
Index
Notă biografică
Frank Perlin, University of London BA History Honours First Class; University of Leiden PhD; author of The Invisible City, and Unbroken Landscape, and substantial articles. Specialisations: historical-anthropological archival research; methodology interdisciplinary and comparative; philosophy of knowledge; derivation of the universal foundation of human reason and difference.