The Human Age

I. Duncan
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Abstract

This introductory chapter discusses how the novel, the ascendant imaginative form in nineteenth-century Europe, did more than broadcast the anthropological turn of secular knowledge: it helped steer it and—under the license of fiction—it pressed it to its limits. As the history of man broke up among competing disciplinary claims on scientific authority after 1800, the novel took over as its universal discourse, modeling the new developmental conception of human nature as a relation between the history of individual persons and the history of the species. The novel's supposed aesthetic disability, its lack of form, now marked its fitness to model the changing form of man. Novels could offer a comprehensive representation of human life—a Human Comedy—in a general writing accessible to all readers, mediated not by specialist knowledge or technical language but by the shared sensibilities that constitute “our common nature.” Thus, novels became active instruments in the ongoing scientific revolution, advancing its experimental postulates that human nature may not be one but many, that humans share their nature with other creatures, that humans have no nature, that the human form is variable, fluid, fleeting—as well as developing a technical practice, realism, to defend humanity's place at the center of nature and at the end of history.
人类时代
这一引言章节讨论了小说,十九世纪欧洲崛起的想象形式,如何不仅仅传播了世俗知识的人类学转向:它帮助引导了世俗知识,并在小说的许可下将其推向了极限。1800年后,随着人类历史在科学权威的相互竞争的学科主张中分裂,小说成为了它的普遍话语,将人性的新发展概念塑造为个体历史与物种历史之间的关系。小说被认为是审美上的残疾,缺乏形式,现在标志着它适合模仿人类不断变化的形式。小说可以提供对人类生活的全面再现——一出人类喜剧——以一种所有读者都能接受的普通写作方式,不依靠专业知识或技术语言,而是通过构成“我们共同天性”的共同情感。因此,小说成为正在进行的科学革命的积极工具,推进其实验假设,即人性可能不是单一的,而是多种多样的,人类与其他生物共享他们的本性,人类没有本性,人类的形态是可变的,流动的,转瞬即逝的,以及发展一种技术实践,现实主义,捍卫人类在自然中心和历史终结的地位。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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