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This essay critically reflects on the late-modern obsession with health by presenting Descartes as an almost ideal type of the health-conscious subject. Descartes’ life, works, and death are interpreted from the unlikely theoretical combination of Charles Taylor and Jean Baudrillard. Despite significant differences, both of these theorists rely heavily on Weber’s concept of disenchantment, and each develops a “punctual” concept in their analysis of modernity. Specifically, the essay combines Taylor’s “punctual self,” which can remake itself at will, with Baudrillard’s “punctual death,” which presents death as a meaningless terminus. Viewing Descartes through these punctual concepts, it becomes clear that the extensive anatomical investigations he conducted throughout his career shaped his uniquely modern stance toward death and health. However, Descartes maintained an ambivalent relationship with traditional conceptions of death and health, which prevented him from fully embracing modern health-consciousness. The essay concludes with a reconsideration of Descartes’ “premature” death, which invites critical reflection on the role that the predictable behavior of health-conscious subjects plays in the ever-expanding biomedical order.

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This page is a summary of: Punctual selves, punctual death and the health-conscious cogito: Descartes’ dead bodies, Economy and Society, May 2012, Taylor & Francis,
DOI: 10.1080/03085147.2011.635436.
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