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196The concept of organism: historical philosophical, scientific perspectivesHistory and Philosophy of the Life Sciences 32 (2-3): 147. 2010.0. Philippe Huneman and Charles T. Wolfe: Introduction 1. Tobias Cheung, “What is an ‘organism’? On the occurrence of a new term and its conceptual transformations 1680-1850” 2. Charles T. Wolfe, “Do organisms have an ontological status?” 3. John Symons, “The individuality of artifacts and organisms” 4. Thomas Pradeu, “What is an organism? An immunological answer” 5. Matteo Mossio & Alvaro Moreno, “Organisational closure in biological organisms” 6. Laura Nuño de la Rosa, “Becoming organisms. The…Read more
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141Paolo Quintili, Matérialismes et lumières: philosophies de la vie, autour de Diderot et de quelques autres 1706-1789 (Paris: Honoré Champion, 2009) (review)Early Science and Medicine 17 (6): 669-671. 2012.
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1340In reflecting on the relation between early empiricist conceptions of the mind and more experimentally motivated materialist philosophies of mind in the mid-eighteenth century, I suggest that we take seriously the existence of what I shall call ‘phantom philosophical projects’. A canonical empiricist like Locke goes out of his way to state that their project to investigate and articulate the ‘logic of ideas’ is not a scientific project: “I shall not at present meddle with the Physical considerat…Read more
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1124Holism, organicism and the risk of biochauvinismVerifiche: Rivista Trimestrale di Scienze Umane 43 (1-3): 39-57. 2014.In this essay I seek to critically evaluate some forms of holism and organicism in biological thought, as a more deflationary echo to Gilbert and Sarkar's reflection on the need for an 'umbrella' concept to convey the new vitality of holistic concepts in biology (Gilbert and Sarkar 2000). Given that some recent discussions in theoretical biology call for an organism concept (from Moreno and Mossio’s work on organization to Kirschner et al.’s research paper in Cell, 2000, building on chemistry to…Read more
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186Le rire matérialisteMultitudes 3 (3): 177-185. 2007.The figure of the materialist philosopher as the « laughing philosopher », who mocks the rest of humanity, its fears, superstitions and even values, is a classic one. It has been associated variously with Democritus, Epicurus, Spinoza, Rabelais, La Mettrie and others. Apart from the interest one might have in this figure of the philosopher as someone who is rather far removed from school benches, the present essay seeks to describe or define this conceptual character in order to argue that laugh…Read more
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1281Cultured brains and the production of subjectivity: The politics of affect(s) as an unfinished projectIn W. Neidich (ed.), The Psychopathologies of Cognitive Capitalism II, Archivebooks. pp. 245-267. 2014.A reflection on overcoming Natur vs Geisteswissenschaften oppositions in thinking about the 'cultured brain' and plasticity
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39Généalogie de la sensation. Physique, physiologie et psychologie en Europe, de Fernel à Locke (review)Journal of Early Modern Studies 4 (2): 165-171. 2015.review of R de Calan's book Généalogie de la sensation, on Fernel, Locke et al.
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74The organism as ontological go-between: Hybridity, boundaries and degrees of reality in its conceptual historyStudies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences 48 151-161. 2014.The organism is neither a discovery like the circulation of the blood or the glycogenic function of the liver, nor a particular biological theory like epigenesis or preformationism. It is rather a concept which plays a series of roles, sometimes masked, often normative, throughout the history of biology. Indeed, it has often been presented as a key-concept in life science and its ‘theorization’, but conversely has also been the target of influential rejections: as just an instrument of transmiss…Read more
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156“Cabinet d'Histoire Naturelle,” or: The Interplay of Nature and Artifice in Diderot's NaturalismPerspectives on Science 17 (1). 2009.In selected texts by Diderot, including the Encyclopédie article “Cabinet d’histoire naturelle” (along with his comments in the article “Histoire nat-urelle”), the Pensées sur l’interprétation de la nature and the Salon de 1767, I examine the interplay between philosophical naturalism and the recognition of the irreducible nature of artifice, in order to arrive at a provisional definition of Diderot’s vision of Nature as “une femme qui aime à se travestir.” How can a metaphysics in which the con…Read more
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79Robert L. Martensen. The Brain Takes Shape: An Early History. xxvii + 247 pp., index. Oxford/New York: Oxford University Press, 2004 (review)Isis 100 (3): 659-659. 2009.
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2096“Was Canguilhem a biochauvinist? Goldstein, Canguilhem and the project of ‘biophilosophy’"In Darian Meacham (ed.), Medicine and Society, New Continental Perspectives (Dordrecht: Springer, Philosophy and Medicine Series, 2015), Springer. pp. 197-212. 2015.Canguilhem is known to have regretted, with some pathos, that Life no longer serves as an orienting question in our scientific activity. He also frequently insisted on a kind of uniqueness of organisms and/or living bodies – their inherent normativity, their value-production and overall their inherent difference from mere machines. In addition, Canguilhem acknowledged a major debt to the German neurologist-theoretician Kurt Goldstein, author most famously of The Structure of the Organism in 1934…Read more
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4444Monsters and Philosophy (edited book)College Publications. 2005.Table of contents for MONSTERS AND PHILOSOPHY, edited by Charles T. Wolfe (London 2005) List of Contributors iii Acknowledgments vii List of Abbreviations ix Introduction xi Charles T. Wolfe The Riddle of the Sphinx: Aristotle, Penelope, and 1 Empedocles Johannes Fritsche Science as a Cure for Fear: The Status of Monsters in 21 Lucretius Morgan Meis Nature and its Monsters During the Renaissance: 37 Montaigne and Vanini Tristan Dagron Conjoined Twins and the Limits of our Reason 61 Annie Bitbol-…Read more
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1311Review of Lucretius and the Early ModernThe Classical Review. forthcoming.long version of review forthcoming in much shorter version in Classical Review
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3630From Locke to Materialism: Empiricism, the Brain and the Stirrings of OntologyIn A. L. Rey S. Bodenmann (ed.), 18th-Century Empiricism and the Sciences, . pp. 235-263. 2018.My topic is the materialist appropriation of empiricism – as conveyed in the ‘minimal credo’ nihil est in intellectu quod non fuerit in sensu (which interestingly is not just a phrase repeated from Hobbes and Locke to Diderot, but is also a medical phrase, used by Harvey, Mandeville and others). That is, canonical empiricists like Locke go out of their way to state that their project to investigate and articulate the ‘logic of ideas’ is not a scientific project: “I shall not at present meddle wi…Read more
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85L'anomalie du vivantMultitudes 33 (2): 53. 2008.Philosophy first encounters the figure of the monster as a challenge to order – whether natural or moral, the distinction is in fact secondary. This challenge can also be a bearer of meaning, as in a curse. Then philosophy « naturalises » this figure, either to erase any potentially chaotic dimension from the universe, or to construct an ontology of Life and its unpredictability, of which the monster is the prime case. But there is a third moment, a third « encounter » between philosophy and the…Read more
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76Endowed molecules and emergent organization : the Maupertuis-Diderot debateIn Tobias Cheung (ed.), Transitions and borders between animals, humans, and machines, 1600-1800, Brill. pp. 38-65. 2010.At the very beginning of L’Homme-Machine, La Mettrie claims that Leibnizians with their monads have “rather spiritualized matter than materialized the soul”; a few years later Pierre-Louis Moreau de Maupertuis, President of the Berlin Academy of Sciences and natural philosopher with a strong interest in the modes of transmission of ‘genetic’ information, conceived of living minima which he termed molecules, “endowed with desire, memory and intelligence,” in his Système de la nature ou Essai sur …Read more
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132The species of vitalism discussed here, to immediately rule out two possible misconceptions, is neither the feverish cosa mentale found in ruminations on ‘biopolitics’ and fascism – where it alternates quickly between being a form of evil and a form of resistance, with hardly any textual or conceptual material to discuss – nor the opaque, and less-known form in which it exists in the worlds of ‘Theory’ in the humanities, perhaps closely related to the cognate, ‘materiality’. Rather, vitalism her…Read more
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79Vitalism and the scientific image, 1800-2010. (edited book)Springer. 2013.TOC 0. Introduction (SN/CW) I. Revisiting vitalist themes in 19th-century science 1. Guido Giglioni (Warburg Institute) – Jean-Baptiste Lamarck and the Place of Irritability 2. in the History of Life and Death 3. Joan Steigerwald (York) – Rethinking Organic Vitality in Germany at the Turn of the Nineteenth Century 4. Juan Rigoli (Geneva) –The “Novel of Medicine” 5. Sean Dyde (Cambridge) – Life and the Mind in Nineteenth-Century Britain. Somaticism in the Wake of Phrenology. II. Twentieth cen…Read more
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65Pour une philosophie hybridée de la biologieMultitudes 2 (2): 11-14. 2004.introduction to special issue I edited on philo. of biology
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3171The eminent French biologist and historian of biology, François Jacob, once notoriously declared “On n’interroge plus la vie dans les laboratoires”: laboratory research no longer inquires into the notion of ‘Life’. Nowadays, as David Hull puts it, “both scientists and philosophers take ontological reduction for granted… Organisms are ‘nothing but’ atoms, and that is that.” In the mid-twentieth century, from the immediate post-war period to the late 1960s, French philosophers of science such as G…Read more
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1539“Man-Machines and Embodiment: From Cartesian Physiology to Claude Bernard’s ‘Living Machine’”In Justin E. H. Smith (ed.), Embodiment: A History, Oxford University Press. 2017.A common and enduring early modern intuition is that materialists reduce organisms in general and human beings in particular to automata. Wasn’t a famous book of the time entitled L’Homme-Machine? In fact, the machine is employed as an analogy, and there was a specifically materialist form of embodiment, in which the body is not reduced to an inanimate machine, but is conceived as an affective, flesh-and-blood entity. We discuss how mechanist and vitalist models of organism exist in a more compl…Read more
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59Le rêve matérialiste, ou « Faire par la pensée ce que la matière fait parfois »Philosophiques 34 (2): 317-328. 2007.Cet article vise à expliciter la notion de « rêve matérialiste » à partir d’une réflexion sur l’ouvrage de Diderot, Le Rêve de D’Alembert. Quel lien y a-t-il entre le matérialisme philosophique proclamé dans ce livre et la forme du rêve qui donne un caractère inédit à la présentation de cette philosophie? Une approche purement textuelle montrerait, déjà, une indissociabilité particulière entre forme et contenu; mais l’approche proposée ici s’attache à la manière dont une certaine idée du rêve se…Read more
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1486Chance between holism and reductionism: tensions in the conceptualisation of LifeProgress in Biophysics and Molecular Biology. 2012.In debates between holism and reductionism in biology, from the early 20th century to more recent re-enactments involving genetic reductionism, developmental systems theory, or systems biology, the role of chance – the presence of theories invoking chance as a strong explanatory principle – is hardly ever acknowledged. Conversely, Darwinian models of chance and selection (Dennett 1995, Kupiec 1996, Kupiec 2009) sit awkwardly with reductionist and holistic concepts, which they alternately challen…Read more
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1440Introduction: Vitalism without Metaphysics? Medical Vitalism in the EnlightenmentScience in Context 21 (4): 461-463. 2008.my introduction to special issue of Science in Context on 18c vitalism
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1304The self-fashioning of French Newtonianism Content Type Journal Article DOI 10.1007/s11016-010-9511-3 Authors Charles T. Wolfe, Unit for History and Philosophy of Science, University of Sydney, Sydney, NSW 2006, Australia David Gilad, Unit for History and Philosophy of Science, University of Sydney, Sydney, NSW 2006, Australia Journal Metascience Online ISSN 1467-9981 Print ISSN 0815-0796.
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719“Determinism/Spinozism in the Radical Enlightenment: the cases of Anthony Collins and Denis Diderot”International Review of Eighteenth-Century Studies 1 (1): 37-51. 2007.In his Philosophical Inquiry concerning Human Liberty (1717), the English deist Anthony Collins proposed a complete determinist account of the human mind and action, partly inspired by his mentor Locke, but also by elements from Bayle, Leibniz and other Continental sources. It is a determinism which does not neglect the question of the specific status of the mind but rather seeks to provide a causal account of mental activity and volition in particular; it is a ‘volitional determinism’. Some dec…Read more
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132The Animal Economy as Object and Program in Montpellier VitalismScience in Context 21 (4): 537-579. 2008.Our aim in this paper is to bring to light the importance of the notion of économie animale in Montpellier vitalism, as a hybrid concept which brings together the structural and functional dimensions of the living body – dimensions which hitherto had primarily been studied according to a mechanistic model, or were discussed within the framework of Stahlian animism. The celebrated image of the bee-swarm expresses this structural-functional understanding of living bodies quite well: “One sees them…Read more
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69Sommes-nous les héritiers des lumières matérialistes?Revue Phares 8. 2008.An essay on whether or not we today are the 'heirs' of the materialist Enlightenment.
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2489Materialism and ‘the soft substance of the brain’: Diderot and plasticityBritish Journal for the History of Philosophy 25 (5): 963-982. 2017.ABSTRACTMaterialism is the view that everything that is real is material or is the product of material processes. It tends to take either a ‘cosmological’ form, as a claim about the ultimate nature of the world, or a more specific ‘psychological’ form, detailing how mental processes are brain processes. I focus on the second, psychological or cerebral form of materialism. In the mid-to-late eighteenth century, the French materialist philosopher Denis Diderot was one of the first to notice that a…Read more
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3202Sensibility as vital force or as property of matter in mid-eighteenth-century debatesIn Henry Martyn Lloyd (ed.), The Discourse of Sensibility: The Knowing Body in the Enlightenment, Springer Cham. pp. 147-170. 2013.Sensibility, in any of its myriad realms – moral, physical, aesthetic, medical and so on – seems to be a paramount case of a higher-level, intentional property, not a basic property. Diderot famously made the bold and attributive move of postulating that matter itself senses, or that sensibility (perhaps better translated ‘sensitivity’ here) is a general or universal property of matter, even if he at times took a step back from this claim and called it a “supposition.” Crucially, sensibility is …Read more
Charles T. Wolfe
Université de Toulouse Jean-Jaurès
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Université de Toulouse Jean-JaurèsProfessor
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Università Di Venezia "Ca' Foscari"Post-doctoral fellow
Areas of Specialization
2 more
| Philosophy of Biology |
| 20th Century Philosophy |
| 17th/18th Century Philosophy |
| History of Biology |
| Life |
| Vitalism |
| 17th/18th Century French Philosophy |