Using philosophical and scientific work to engage the perennial question of human nature This book takes a look at the formation, and edges, of states: their breakdowns and attempts to repair them, and their encounters with non-state peoples. It draws upon anthropology, political philosophy, neuroscience, evolutionary biology, child developmental psychology, and other fields to look at states as projects of constructing "bodies politic," where the civic and the somatic intersect. John Protevi asserts that humans are predisposed to "prosociality," or being emotionally invested in social partners and patterns. With readings from Jean-Jacques Rousseau and James C. Scott; a critique of the assumption of widespread pre-state warfare as a selection pressure for the evolution of human prosociality and altruism; and an examination of the different "economies of violence" of state and non-state societies, Edges of the State sketches a notion of prosocial human nature and its attendant normative maxims. Forerunners: Ideas First Short books of thought-in-process scholarship, where intense analysis, questioning, and speculation take the lead
John Protevi Knihy
John Protevi sa zaoberá teóriou dynamických systémov, kognitívnymi, životnými a zemepisnými vedami a súčasnou francúzskou filozofiou. Jeho práca skúma, ako sa tieto disciplíny prelínajú a ako môžeme tieto systémy pochopiť a opísať. Zameriava sa na prepojenie vedeckého myslenia s filozofickými otázkami.



Political Affect investigates the relationship between the social and the somatic: how our bodies, minds, and social settings are intricately linked. Bringing together concepts from science, philosophy, and politics, he develops a perspective he calls political physiology to indicate that subjectivity is socially conditioned and sometimes bypassed in favor of a connection of the social and the somatic, as with the politically triggered emotions of rage and panic.
A deep exploration of the many possibilities inherent in linking Gilles Deleuze's philosophy to contemporary science, this book demonstrates how Deleuze's ontology of the virtual, intensive and actual can enhance our understanding of important issues in cognitive science, biology and geography.