000 01914cam a2200277zu 4500
001 88864954
003 FRCYB88864954
005 20250107153546.0
006 m o d
007 cr un
008 250107s2018 fr | o|||||0|0|||eng d
020 _a9781433142925
035 _aFRCYB88864954
040 _aFR-PaCSA
_ben
_c
_erda
100 1 _aLevitt, Cyril
245 0 1 _aBeyond the Juxtaposition of Nature and Culture
_bLawrence Krader, Interdisciplinarity, and the Concept of the Human Being
_c['Levitt, Cyril']
264 1 _bPeter Lang
_c2018
300 _a p.
336 _btxt
_2rdacontent
337 _bc
_2rdamdedia
338 _bc
_2rdacarrier
650 0 _a
700 0 _aLevitt, Cyril
856 4 0 _2Cyberlibris
_uhttps://international.scholarvox.com/netsen/book/88864954
_qtext/html
_a
520 _aThe essays contained in Beyond the Juxtaposition of Nature and Culture represent an attempt by scholars from Canada, Germany, and Mexico to come to grips with the innovative work of the American philosopher and anthropologist Lawrence Krader who has proposed nothing less than a new theory of nature, according to which there are at least three different orders?the material-biotic, the quantum, and the human?which differ from one another according to their different configurations of space-time, and which cannot be reduced the one to the others. Each author takes up Krader's theory in relation to its impact on their own discipline: sociology, anthropology, the study of myth, the theory of labor and value, economics, linguistics, and aesthetics. The question of how nature and culture can be integrated within a theoretical framework which links them in difference and nexus and allows each their non-reductive space leads each of the contributors to move in their thinking beyond the old dualisms of materialism and idealism, fact and value, nature and culture.
999 _c39369
_d39369