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Montaigne : il corpo, la malattia, l'eccedenza

2016 - Franco Angeli

97-110 p.

  • Having stones in the kidney - an illness affecting Montaigne that he talked a lot about - what a body is, and the rejection of medicine, are a set of subjects continuously interwoven in his mental map. Like Lucretius, he thinks that all bodies - both animal and human - are made up of lopins or atoms, each of which moves by itself changing direction at any moment. This movement is put at the centre of the entire discussion. Regarding what is to be understood by subjective production, Montaigne says that it is impossible to go beyond singularité. Medical diagnosis fails. It is from this perspective that he makes his critique of medicine. The erroneous prescriptions of physicians are set against what could be called a pleasures ethics, founded on the awareness that bodies are changing and that individual lives should not be planned in terms of monotonous development. [Publisher's Text].

Fait partie de

Rivista di storia della filosofia : LXXI, supplemento 4, 2014