In the eighteenth century, medicine underwent a mutation. For the first
time, medical knowledge took on a precision that had formerly belonged
only to mathematics. The body became something that could be mapped.
Disease became subject to new rules of classification. And doctors begin
to describe phenomena that for centuries had remained below the
threshold of the visible and expressible.
In The Birth of the Clinic the philosopher and intellectual historian
who may be the true heir to Nietzsche charts this dramatic
transformation of medical knowledge. As in his classic Madness and
Civilization, Michel Foucault shows how much what we think of as pure
science owes to social and cultural attitude--in this case, to the
climate of the French Revolution. Brilliant, provocative, and
omnivorously learned, his book sheds new light on the origins of our
current notions of health and sickness, life and death.