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Following
in the wake of his groundbreaking work War in the Age of Intelligent
Machines, Manuel De Landa presents a brilliant, radical synthesis
of historical development of the last thousand years. A Thousand
Years of Nonlinear History sketches the outlines of a renewed
materialist philosophy of history in the tradition of Fernand Braudel,
Gilles Deleuze, and Félix Guattari, while engaging —
in an entirely unprecedented manner — the critical new understanding
of material processes derived from the sciences of dynamics. Working
against prevailing attitudes that see history merely as the arena
of texts, discourses, ideologies, and metaphors, De Landa traces
the concrete movements and interplays of matter and energy through
human populations in the last millennium. The result is an entirely
novel approach to the study of human societies and their always
mobile, semi-stable forms, cities, economies, technologies, and
languages.
De Landa attacks three domains that have given shape to human societies:
economics, biology, and linguistics. In each case, De Landa discloses
the self-directed processes of matter and energy interacting with
the whim and will of human history itself to form a panoramic vision
of the West free of rigid teleology and naive notions of progress
and, even more important, free of any deterministic source for its
urban, institutional, and technological forms. The source of all
concrete forms in the West’s history, rather, is shown to
derive from internal morphogenetic capabilities that lie within
the flow of matter-energy itself.
A Swerve Edition.
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