The
Normal and the Pathological is one of the crucial contributions
to the history of science in the last half century. It takes as
its starting point the sudden appearance of biology as a science
in the nineteenth century and examines the conditions determining
its particular makeup.
Canguilhem analyzes the radically new way in which health and disease
were defined in the early nineteenth century, showing that the emerging
categories of the normal and the pathological were far from objective
scientific concepts. He demonstrates how the epistemological foundations
of modern biology and medicine were intertwined with political,
economic, and technological imperatives.
Canguilhem was an important influence on the thought of Michel Foucault
and Louis Althusser, among others, in particular for the way in
which he poses the problem of how new domains of knowledge come
into being and how they are part of a discontinuous history of human
thought.
“A brilliant and stimulating book.”
— Journal of Interdisciplinary History See also:
A Vital Rationalist: Selected Writings from Georges Canguilhem
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