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Stefan Helmreich

    1. Jänner 1966

    Stefan Helmreich ist Professor für Anthropologie am Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Seine Arbeit untersucht, wie wissenschaftliche Vorstellungen vom Leben durch soziale und kulturelle Vorstellungen geprägt werden. Er erforscht, wie Menschen auf der ganzen Welt darüber nachdenken, was es bedeutet, am Leben zu sein, insbesondere im Kontext der Tiefsee und künstlicher Intelligenz.

    Sounding the Limits of Life
    A Book of Waves
    Alien Ocean
    What Is Life?
    • Charts how revolutions in genomics, bioinformatics, and remote sensing have pressed marine biologists to see the sea as animated by its smallest inhabitants: marine microbes.

      Alien Ocean
    • Drawing on ethnographic work among oceanographers and coastal engineers in the Netherlands, the United States, Australia, Japan, and Bangladesh, Stefan Helmreich examines ocean waves as forms of media that carry aquatic, geopolitical, and climatological news about our planet and its future.

      A Book of Waves
    • Sounding the Limits of Life

      • 328 Seiten
      • 12 Lesestunden
      3,7(9)Abgeben

      What is life? What is water? What is sound? In Sounding the Limits of Life, anthropologist Stefan Helmreich investigates how contemporary scientists—biologists, oceanographers, and audio engineers—are redefining these crucial concepts. Life, water, and sound are phenomena at once empirical and abstract, material and formal, scientific and social. In the age of synthetic biology, rising sea levels, and new technologies of listening, these phenomena stretch toward their conceptual snapping points, breaching the boundaries between the natural, cultural, and virtual. Through examinations of the computational life sciences, marine biology, astrobiology, acoustics, and more, Helmreich follows scientists to the limits of these categories. Along the way, he offers critical accounts of such other-than-human entities as digital life forms, microbes, coral reefs, whales, seawater, extraterrestrials, tsunamis, seashells, and bionic cochlea. He develops a new notion of "sounding"—as investigating, fathoming, listening—to describe the form of inquiry appropriate for tracking meanings and practices of the biological, aquatic, and sonic in a time of global change and climate crisis. Sounding the Limits of Life shows that life, water, and sound no longer mean what they once did, and that what count as their essential natures are under dynamic revision.

      Sounding the Limits of Life