
In
philosophical thermodynamics,
Michel Serres (1930-) is a French philosopher noted for his use of thermodynamics logic in a number of publications. He is said to be “renowned for his philosophical excursions concerning thermodynamics.”
In his 1980 book
The Parasite, one of his best-known books (aside from
Hermes), Serres, supposedly, uses
thermodynamics and
information theory in the form of fable to explore how human
relations are identical to that of the parasite to the host body; although, to note, this may be a secondary interpretation, by either
Bruce Clarke or
William Paulson, as the book does not seem to use the word thermodynamics. [1]
In his 1982
Hermes, Serres discusses the second law in terms of
Sigmund Freud and
Henri Bergson.
Serres philosophical thermodynamic theories has been discussed and critiqued by those including: William Paulson, Bruce Clarke,
Mazyar Lotfalian, and
Ira Livingston.
His 1982 work is described, by Lotfalian, as an extensive work on the history of science and the significance of thermodynamics as it affects the concept of
time and its directionality, asserting that time is no longer independent and
reversible: it moves towards
death. [2]
EducationSerres completed his undergraduate work at the Ecole Normale Superieure in 1955 in philosophy and his PhD in 1968 with a thesis on
Gottfried Leibniz’s philosophy. Serres comments, in interview, that at the Ecole Normale one of his friends lent him a copy of the newly published 1959
Science and Information Theory by
Leon Brillouin. On reading this book, Serres comments “from it I understood that Brillouin was a veritable philosopher of physics—an authentic physics and a philosophy at the same time, somewhat like thermodynamics, from which, in fact, it sprang.” [3] Serres, in the 1960s, taught with Michel Foucault at the Universities of Clermont-Ferrand and Vincennes and was later appointed to the chair of the history of science at Sorbonne, where he also taught. [4]
References1. Serres, Michel. (1980).
The Parasite (
Le Parasite)
. Grasset.
2. Lotfalian, Mazyar. (2004).
Islam, Technoscientific Identities, and the Culture of Curiosity (Serres,
pg. 46, etc.). University Press of America.
3. Serres, Michel and Latour, Bruno. (1995).
Conversations on Science, Culture, and Time (
pg. 12). University of Michigan Press.
4. Lechte, John. (1994).
Fifty Key Contemporary Thinkers: from Structuralism to Postmodernity (
Michael Serres, pgs. 82-85). Routledge.
External links●
Michel Serres – Wikipedia.