The Late Foucault: Ethical and Political Questions
In: Re-Inventing Philosophy As a Way of Life Ser.
Cover page -- Halftitle page -- Series page -- Title page -- Copyright page -- Contents -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction: Another Word on Foucault's Final Words -- Notes -- References -- Part One Philosophical Practices, Philosophy as Practice -- 1 Foucault's Reinvention of Philosophy as a Way of Life: Genealogy as a Spiritual Exercise -- Philosophical Heroism -- Foucault's Reinvention of Philosophy as a Way of Life -- Genealogy as a Spiritual Exercise -- Conclusion -- Notes -- References -- 2 Self or Cosmos: Foucault versus Hadot -- Foucault's Late Work and its Debt to Hadot -- Hadot's Criticisms of Foucault -- Analysis of Hadot's Criticisms -- Conclusion -- Notes -- References -- 3 The Great Cycle of the World: Foucault and Hadot on the Cosmic Perspective and the Care of the Self -- Hadot's Critique -- Government, Life, Self -- Foucault's "Cybernetics" -- Cosmos and Experience in Hadot -- Foucault on the Knowledge of Nature and the Care of the Self -- Conclusion -- Notes -- References -- Part Two Care of the Self, Care of Others -- 4 Foucault According to Stiegler: Technics of the Self -- Between Subjectivation and Subjection -- The Technicization of Subjectivation -- Between the Transcendental and the Empirical -- Stiegler's Politics of Care -- Conclusion -- References -- 5 Notes Towards a Critical History of Musicalities: Philodemus on the Use of Musical Pleasures and the Care of the Self -- The Hupomnēmata and the "Moral Problematization" of "Musical" Pleasures -- A "Moral Sociology" of Music versus an "Anthropology of Musical Moralities" -- Notes -- References -- 6 Foucault's Ultimate Technology1 -- "We Should Not Let Ourselves Be Worried About the Future" -- A Hierarchy Based on Perception of Temporality -- Praemeditatio Malorum -- Meditatio Mortis -- Conclusion -- Notes -- References.