I have been working through (part 1, part 2, part 3) some of what Foucault says about anthropology in his 1954-5 course at Lille, recently published as La question anthropologique. Last time, I focused on (1) Heidegger’s reading of Kant and (2) contrasted that with Foucault’s. Here, I’ll track how Foucault connects his Kant reading to anthropology, contrast that with Heidegger, and return to Foucault on post-Kantian anthropology.
3. Foucault: how this begets anthropology
Heidegger’s interest in legitimating his Kant reading is at least partly in the service of legitimating his own project in Being and Time, which had appeared two years prior to Kant and the Problem of Metaphysics (KPM). Foucault’s interests are of course different, but there’s something of a Heideggerian drift to the argument. Recall that Heidegger’s conclusion about anthropology: it may tell us lots of things about human beings, but ultimately “conceals [birgt] in itself the constant danger that the necessity of developing the question concerning human beings first and foremost as a question, with a view toward laying of the ground for metaphysics, will remain concealed [verdeckt]” (KPM 153/ GA 218).
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