
The Sparks of Randomness, Volume 1
Spermatic Knowledge
By: Henri Atlan, Lenn Schramm (Translator)
Paperback | 2 November 2010
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352 Pages
25.4 x 17.78 x 1.88
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The Sparks of Randomness, Henri Atlan's magnum opus, develops his whole philosophy with a highly impressive display of knowledge, wisdom, depth, rigor, and intellectual and moral vigor. Atlan founds an ethics adapted to the new power over life that modern scientific knowledge has given us. He holds that the results of science cannot ground any ethical or political truth whatsoever, while human creative activity and the conquest of knowledge are a double-edged sword. This first volume, Spermatic Knowledge, begins with the Talmudic tale about the prophet Jeremiah's creation of a golem, or artificial man. Atlan shows that the Jewish tradition does not demonize man for creating and changing living things-a charge often leveled at promoters of advanced technologies, like biologists, who are accused of "playing God." To the contrary, man is depicted as being the co-creator of the world.
Although Atlan believes that the fabrication of life "from scratch" will take place in the near future, he posits that this achievement will not really amount to creating life current biology and biotechnologies have demonstrated that there is no absolute distinction between life and non-life, no critical threshold whose crossing would be taboo. He also debunks and demystifies our belief in free will and our conviction, of theological origin, that there would be no possibility for ethics if free will were shown to be an illusion. Throughout, he combines science, religion, and ancient and modern philosophy in unexpected and inspired ways. His radical, uncompromising Spinozism allows him to propose a complete revision of cognitive science and philosophy of mind, while showing that their current impasses stem from remnants of traditional dualism. From his brilliant reflections on time, he also derives exciting considerations for medicine and epidemiology.
Industry Reviews
| Translator's Introduction | p. xiii |
| Introduction | p. 1 |
| The Sparks Of Randomness And The Manufacture of The Living | p. 21 |
| Producing Life, Controlling Time | p. 21 |
| Seminal Reason and "It's All in the Genes" | p. 23 |
| Concept and Life | p. 25 |
| Golems | p. 28 |
| The Sparks of Randomness and Their Ambiguity | p. 34 |
| The Generations of the Flood, of the Tower of Babel, and of the Wilderness | p. 37 |
| Ashmedai and Solomon: Tricks of Nature and Tricks with Nature | p. 39 |
| The Tree of Knowledge, Good and Bad | p. 43 |
| Ambiguity and Polysemy | p. 47 |
| The Randomness of Birth: Evil at Its Source Is Not Evil | p. 49 |
| The "Mixed Multitude" in the Wilderness and the "Head That Is Not Known" | p. 53 |
| The Flood and the Tower of Babel | p. 55 |
| The Time of Magic and the Time of Technology | p. 57 |
| The Times of Memory | p. 61 |
| The Individual "Seal" in the Nature of Things | p. 62 |
| No One Knows What The Body Can Do: The Tree of Knowledge and Games Of Absolute Determinism | p. 66 |
| The Shape of the Body and the Corporeality of God | p. 66 |
| Good and Evil: Moral Conscience or Knowledge of the True | p. 72 |
| The Tree of Knowledge and the Fall of the First Man, According to Rabbi Shlomo Eliaschow's Book of Knowledge | p. 74 |
| An Ambiguous Serpent | p. 79 |
| A Return to the Sparks of Randomness | p. 82 |
| The Yearning for Yearning: Eros and the Holy | p. 84 |
| Behemoth and Leviathan | p. 86 |
| What the Body Can Do | p. 88 |
| Mechanism and Responsibility | p. 90 |
| Nature's Ultimate Trick: The Parable of the Divine Intrigues ('alilot) | p. 96 |
| "Before Creation": The World of Tobu and the 974 Lost Generations | p. 101 |
| What Freedom? | p. 109 |
| The Call of Ethics | p. 119 |
| The Games of the Infinite-in Itself, by Itself, and for Itself | p. 124 |
| Incorporations | p. 130 |
| Appendix: The Dialectic of Absolute Determinism and Choice in the Book of Knowledge and in Ecclesiastes | p. 132 |
| Spirits And Demons: Subject And Shadow | p. 142 |
| Hidden Causes | p. 142 |
| Spinoza and the Spirits | p. 146 |
| Causes in Nature and Animation of Subjects | p. 149 |
| "Natural Magic" and the Science of Bygone Times | p. 149 |
| "The Spirits Tell" | p. 152 |
| The Determining Causes of Nature and Their Representations in Classical Antiquity | p. 153 |
| The "Genetic" Causes of Scholasticism | p. 155 |
| Elements of Talmudic Demonology | p. 156 |
| Divination and Prophecy | p. 158 |
| The Shadow of a Shadow | p. 162 |
| Shadow and Shade, Inside and Outside | p. 164 |
| Subject and Shadow | p. 166 |
| Knowledge Without Conscience? | p. 168 |
| Wisdom of the Left Side and Wisdom of the Right Side | p. 169 |
| Knowledge "Below" and Unity "Above" | p. 172 |
| The Ego and the Subject | p. 176 |
| The Stakes of the Infinite | p. 180 |
| Angels and Demons in the Generation of Babel | p. 182 |
| "God" and the Names of the Name | p. 184 |
| Myth And Philosophy, Kabbalah, "Expanded Spinozism" | p. 189 |
| Philosophical Questions, Mythical Answers | p. 189 |
| Criticism of Kant's Critique: Methodological Dogmatism and Empirical Skepticism in Salomon Maimon | p. 200 |
| Reconstruction and Active Thinking | p. 217 |
| East and West: New Philosophical Myths and Theological-Political Conflicts | p. 210 |
| The Indian East and Semitic East in the Contemporary History of Greek Philosophy | p. 216 |
| Spinoza's "Anti-Judaism" | p. 221 |
| Spinoza's "Pharisees" and the End of Prophecy | p. 232 |
| The Salvation of the Unlettered in the Tractatus Theologicus-Politicus | p. 238 |
| The Pharisees and the Birth of Judaism | p. 242 |
| The Book of Esther | p. 246 |
| Salvation for All and a Provisional Moral Code | p. 251 |
| Leibniz and Kabbalah: Mathematics and Theodicy | p. 259 |
| Leibniz and Spinoza: Science and Philosophy in the Europe of the Churches | p. 268 |
| Spinoza's "Christianity," Ancient Philosophy, and Eternal Wisdom | p. 273 |
| Expanded Spinozism and Limited Kabbalah | p. 279 |
| The Desacralization of Chance: From Oracular Lottery To The Indifference Of The Random | p. 289 |
| Chance and Casting Lots | p. 289 |
| A Rereading of Joshua 7:1-19 | p. 294 |
| Ruth and Boaz: Chance and Destiny | p. 299 |
| Desacralized Chance and the Paths of Knowledge | p. 302 |
| Throwing Dice | p. 305 |
| Appendix: Stéphane Mallarmé, "A Throw of the Dice Will Never Abolish Chance" | p. 306 |
| How The Biblical God "Goes At Random" In Hebrew, But Not In Translation | p. 310 |
| Index | p. 317 |
| Table of Contents provided by Ingram. All Rights Reserved. |
ISBN: 9780804760270
ISBN-10: 0804760276
Series: Cultural Memory in the Present : Book 1
Published: 2nd November 2010
Format: Paperback
Number of Pages: 352
Audience: Professional and Scholarly
Publisher: Stanford University Press
Country of Publication: US
Dimensions (cm): 25.4 x 17.78 x 1.88
Weight (kg): 0.61
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