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see [[Bennett 2010]] on vitalism, around 78; Dreisch's ''entelechy'' is an "intensive manifold"; Bergson's ''elan vital'' is "in the form of a sheaf" (see pg 78)
see [[Bennett 2010]] on vitalism, around 78; Dreisch's ''entelechy'' is an "intensive manifold"; Bergson's ''elan vital'' is "in the form of a sheaf" (see pg 78)
"The Gathered Text" conference: [[http://theconveyor.wordpress.com/2010/09/08/the-gathered-text-2-september-2010-csb/]]

Revision as of 02:21, 13 September 2010

Barker, Miles. "Putting Thought in Accordance with Things: The Demise of Anaimal-based Analogies for Plant Functions." Science & Education 11: 293–304
Fournier, Marian. The Fabric of Life: Microscopy in the Seventeenth Century. Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins University Press, 1996.
Garrett, Brian. "Vitalism and Teleology in the Natural Philosophy of Nehemiah Grew (1641-1712)." BJHS 36.1 (March 2003): 63-81.
Nicolson, Marjorie. Science and Imagination. Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1956.
Pavord, Anna. The Naming of Names: The Search for Order in the World of Plants. London: Bloomsbury, 2005.
Webster, Charles. "The Recognition of Plant Sensitivity by English Botanists in the Seventeenth Century." Isis 57.1 (Spring 1966): 5-23.
Wilson, Catherine. "Visual Surface and Visual Symbol: The Microscope and the Occult in Early Modern Science." Journal of the History of Ideas 49.1 (Jan-Mar 1988): 85-108.
Wilson, Catherine. The Invisible World: Early Modern Philosophy and the Invention of the Microscope. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1995.


"surface effect" -- see Wilson [[1]] Wilson 1995 on microscope removing privilege of surface -- we only see surface, scenery, not hidden machinery behind it; also Deleuze, "Paradox of Surface Effects" [[2]] Deleuze 1990


affective history


metaphor of "COMPENDIUM", folding up of plants


Leibniz, Monadologie -- example of blowing up something, the way one would with a microscope, to see its operation -- these mechanisms never explain the being's consciousness/perception; also see 64, on divine technologies as being composed of machines ad infinitum

"Each portion of matter can be conceived as like a garden full of plants, or like a pond full of fish. But each branch of a plant, each organ of an animal, each drop of its bodily fluids is also a similar garden or a similar pond." (67)
"And although the earth and the air separating the plants in the garden, or the water separating the fish in the pond, are neither plant nor fish, yet they still contain them — though they are usually far too small for us to be able to perceive them." (68)


see Bennett 2010 on vitalism, around 78; Dreisch's entelechy is an "intensive manifold"; Bergson's elan vital is "in the form of a sheaf" (see pg 78)


"The Gathered Text" conference: [[3]]