ABSTRACT

Peter Sloterdijk is an internationally renowned philosopher and thinker whose work is now seen as increasingly relevant to our contemporary world situation and the multiple crises that punctuate it, including those within ethical, political, economic, technological, and ecological realms.

This volume focuses upon one of his central ideas, anthropotechnics. Broadly speaking, anthropotechnics refers to the technological constitution of the human as its fundamental mode of existence, which is characterized by the ability to create dwelling places that ‘immunize’ human beings from exterior threats while at the same time instituting practices and exercises that call on humanity to transcend itself ‘ascetically’. The essays included in this volume enter a critical dialogue with Sloterdijk and his many philosophical interlocutors in order to interrogate the many implications of anthropotechnics in relation to some of the most pressing issues of our time, including and especially the question of the future of humanity in relation to globalism and modernization, climate change, the post-secular, neoliberalism, and artificial intelligence.

The chapters in this book were originally published as a special issue of Angelaki.

chapter |2 pages

Foreword

Sloterdijk's Anthropotechnics

chapter |6 pages

Introduction

Sloterdijk's Anthropotechnics

chapter |13 pages

Alone With Oneself

Solitude as cultural technique

chapter |15 pages

Specters of Religion

Sloterdijk, immunology, and the crisis of immanence

chapter |11 pages

Sartre and Sloterdijk

The ethical imperative. you must change your life

chapter |15 pages

Ascetic Worlds

Notes on politics and technologies of the self after peter sloterdijk

chapter |17 pages

The Limits of the Spheres

Otherness and solipsism in peter sloterdijk's philosophy

chapter |18 pages

Staying With the Darkness

Peter sloterdijk's anthropotechnics for the digital age

chapter |14 pages

The Unknown Quantity

Sleep as a trope in sloterdijk's anthropotechnics