00896nam a2200265 i 450099100124036970753620020507185833.0981212s1968 fr ||| | fre b10820206-39ule_instLE01309212ExLDip.to Matematicaeng511.6AMS 05-01Berge, Claude40970Principes de combinatoire /par C. BergeParis :Dunod,1968vi, 150 p. :ill. ;25 cm.Bibliography: p.[147]-149Combinatorial analysis.b1082020621-09-0628-06-02991001240369707536LE013 05-XX BER21 (1968)12013000105819le013-E0.00-l- 04040.i1092721928-06-02Principes de combinatoire924341UNISALENTOle01301-01-98ma -frefr 0103716nam 22005173 450 991055524350332120250604153210.0978111961829411196182909781119618317111961831297811196183481119618347(CKB)4100000008103909(MiAaPQ)EBC5761266(Au-PeEL)EBL5761266(OCoLC)1099526275(Perlego)995721(EXLCZ)99410000000810390920250604d2019 uy 0engurcnu||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierTheoretical anthropology or how to observe a human being /Albert Piette1st ed.London, UK :ISTE Ltd. ;Hoboken, NJ :John Wiley & Sons, Inc.,2019.1 online resourceScience, society and new technologies series ;Volume 19781786304131 1786304139 Includes bibliographical references and index.Cover -- Half-Title Page -- Dedication -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Contents -- Preface: The Quest of Anthropologicality -- Introduction: The Common Thread of this Book: The Anthropological Reversal -- 1. Theory: Observing the Human Volume -- 1.1. Volume and voluments -- 1.2. The entirety of a volume and the density of presence -- 1.3. Difference and separation -- 1.4. Volumuation and continuity -- 1.5. Lessereity -- 2. Illustrating: Drawings of Theory -- 2.1. Drawings and contraspective -- 2.2. Focusing on the human figure -- 2.2.1. Putting into perspective -- 2.2.2. Separation -- 2.2.3. Focusing on the volume -- 2.2.4. Rays -- 2.2.5. Voluments -- 2.2.6. Consistency and style -- 2.2.7. Volugrams -- 2.2.8. Peripheral gestures, presence and absence -- 3. Debates: Anthropology and the Human Entity -- 3.1. Experience and existence -- 3.2. Going beyond, wrenching and eccentricity -- 3.3. Lines and flow -- 3.4. Intersubjectivity -- 3.5. Perspections of the individual -- 4. Further Development: Structural Existantism -- 4.1. Lévi-Strauss and the difficult ambition of anthropology -- 4.2. A structural approach and the human volume -- Conclusion: Art as a Paradigm for Anthropology -- Bibliography -- Index -- Other titles from iSTE in Science, Society and New Technologies -- EULA.It may seem obvious that the human being has always been present in anthropology. This book, however, reveals that he has never really been a part of it. Theoretical Anthropology or How to Observe a Human Being establishes the foundations and conditions, both theoretical and methodological, which make it possible to consider the human being as a topic of observation and analysis, for himself as an entity, and not in the perspective of understanding social and cultural phenomena. In debate with both anthropologists and philosophers, this book describes and analyzes the human being as a "volume". To this end, a specific lexicon is built around the notions of volume, volumography and volumology. These notions are further illustrated and enriched by several drawings. Science, society and new technologies series.Research, innovative theories and methods in social sciences and humanities set ;Volume 1.AnthropologyPhilosophyAnthropologyPhilosophy.Piette Albert1960-988356MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910555243503321Theoretical Anthropology or How to Observe a Human Being2817157UNINA