Skip to main content Skip to main navigation menu Skip to site footer
Technophany
  • All Issues
  • Commentaries
  • Book Reviews
  • News & Announcements
  • Submission Guidelines
  • About
    • About the Journal
    • Author Guidelines
    • Editorial Board
    • Editorial Team
    • Review process
    • Research Network for Philosphy and Technology
    • Privacy Statement
    • Ethics Statement and Misconduct in Publication Practices
    • Contact
  • Register
  • Login
  1. Home /
  2. Search

Search

Advanced filters
Published After
Published Before

Search Results

Found one item.
  • A Conceptual History of Entropies from a Stieglerian Point of View Epistemological and Economic Issues of the Entropocene

    Anne Alombert
    1-15
    2025-01-03

    In this article I will try to suggest a transdisciplinary framework in order to analyse the contemporary ecological polycrisis which is usually described as the Entropocene era. According to French philosopher Bernard Stiegler, the Anthropocence can be understoodas an Entropocene, because the current ecological crisis consists in a process of massive increase of entropy in all its forms : thermodynamic entropy (that is, dissipation of physical or chemical energy), biological entropy (as the destruction of biodiversity), and psycho-social entropy (as the reduction of knowledge to data and calculations, through digital disruptive technologies). In order to analyze this situation, we need a transversal conception of entropy : from Bergson’s philosophy of life to Stiegler’s philosophy of technics, going through Schrodinger’s physics, Wiener’s cybernetics, Lotka’s biology and Levi-Strauss’s anthropology, I will try to build a conceptual history of entropies and to explore its economic and political consequences, in order to open new paths beyond the Entropocene era.In this article I will try to suggest a transdisciplinary conception of entropy in order to analyse the contemporary ecological polycrisis which is usually described as the Anthropocene era. According to French philosopher Bernard Stiegler, the Anthropocence can be understood as an Entropocene, becausethe current ecological crisis consists of a process of massive increases of entropy in all its forms: thermodynamic entropy (that is, dissipation of physical or chemical energy), biological entropy (as the destruction of biodiversity), and psycho-social entropy (as the reduction of knowledge to data and calculations, through digital disruptive technologies). In order to analyse this situation, we need a transversal conception of entropy: from Bergson’s philosophy of life to Stiegler’s philosophy of technics, through Schrodinger’s physics, Wiener’s cybernetics, Lotka’s biology and Levi-Strauss’s anthropology, I will try to build a conceptual history of entropies from a Stieglerian point of view and to explore its economic and political consequences in Stiegler’s thought, in order to open new paths beyond the Entropocene era.

1 - 1 of 1 items

Links

Make a Submission
 
Subscribe to Newsletter 
 

Information

  • For Readers
  • For Authors
  • For Librarians
  • Peter Sloterdijk’s Philosophy of Technology: From Anthropogenesis to the Anthropocene
    6971
  • The Physiology of Money: Containment and Circulation in the Alternative Economy
    817
  • Affirming Entropy
    694
  • Art and Language After AI
    634
  • A Conceptual History of Entropies from a Stieglerian Point of View: Epistemological and Economic Issues of the Entropocene
    390
Technophany is a journal of the Research Network for Philosophy and Technology, dedicated to the philosophical and historical studies of technologies.
E-ISSN: 2773-0875 | Privacy Statement | 
Published by Radboud University Press
Supported by Openjournals | Policy Responsible Disclosure
Supported by
Erasmus School of Philosophy and Hanart Forum

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
Site Design and Modification by ein doughnut studio

 

More information about the publishing system, Platform and Workflow by OJS/PKP.