it is at the core of Kant’s political philosophy, since nature is “the great artist . . . the eventual ‘guarantee of perpetual peace.’”
Jan Nohas quoted4 years ago
we are not talking about a philosophy of the organism but rather arguing that the organic imposes on philosophy a new condition and new method of thinking.
Jan Nohas quoted4 years ago
The concept of the organic being consists in the reciprocal relations between parts and the whole and the capacity of reproduction.
Jan Nohas quoted4 years ago
The clearest definition of the organic form can be found in §64, where Kant defines the organic being as follows: “a thing exists as a natural end if it is (though in a double sense) both cause and effect of itself.”
Jan Nohas quoted4 years ago
autopoiesis, which we want to call recursivity.
Jan Nohas quoted4 years ago
recursion—is both operation and structure
Jan Nohas quoted4 years ago
For the Greeks, the verb cause, αἴτιον, means in the legal sense to be responsible, but also in some cases in guilt or in debt.
Jan Nohas quoted4 years ago
Information, as “difference which makes a difference,” is operational and self-referential.
Jan Nohas quoted4 years ago
In this sense, Simondon’s concept of information is closer to that of Gregory Bateson, for whom information is “the difference which makes a difference.”
Jan Nohas quoted4 years ago
Simondon’s approach to information is to turn it into a more general concept, which means signification. When an incoming signal produces signification to the system, it carries information.