ABSTRACT

This book provides a comprehensive account of the work of Bernard Stiegler, one of the most influential living social and political philosophers of the twenty-first century. Focusing on Stiegler’s thought on hyperindustrial society and the development of technological systems through which the social, economic and political life of human beings has been transformed, the author examines Stiegler’s claim that the human species is ‘originally technological’ and that to understand the evolution of human society, we must first understand the interface between human beings and technology.

A study of the reciprocal development of technical instruments and human faculties, that offers a chapter-by-chapter account of how this relationship is played out in the digital, informatic and biotechnological programmes of hyperindustrial society, The Thought of Bernard Stiegler develops Stiegler’s idea of technology as a pharmakon: a network of systems that provoke both existential despair and unprecedented modes of aesthetic, literary and philosophical creativity that can potentially revitalize the political culture of human beings.

As such, it will appeal to social and political theorists and philosophers concerned with our postmodern inheritance.

chapter |10 pages

Introduction

Technology and spirit

chapter 1|26 pages

Originary technicity

Aporias of the origin: Derrida and Stiegler

chapter 2|27 pages

The evolution of the arche-programme

Technicity and the history of technology

chapter 3|26 pages

The capitalization of life

Bioscience and the informatic programme

chapter 4|28 pages

Transhuman networks

General organology and the ‘N’ and ‘R’ revolutions

chapter 5|27 pages

Crises of the aesthetic

The evolution of artistic technique

chapter 6|25 pages

A planetary pharmacology?

Time, liquidity and mondialization

chapter |16 pages

Conclusion

The internation and the university