Description

Book Synopsis

The Greek philosopher Protagoras, in the opening words of his lost book Truth, famously asserted, “Man is the measure of all things.” This contention—that humanity cannot know the world except by means of human aptitudes and abilities—has endured through the centuries in the work of diverse writers. In this bold and creative new investigation into the philosophical and intellectual parameters of the question of the animal, Tom Tyler explores a curious fact: in arguing or assuming that knowledge is characteristically human, thinkers have time and again employed animals as examples, metaphors, and fables. From Heidegger’s lizard and Popper’s bees to Saussure’s ox and Freud’s wolves, Tyler points out, “we find a multitude of brutes and beasts crowding into the texts to which they are supposedly unwelcome.”

Inspired by the medieval bestiaries, Tyler’s book features an assortment of “wild animals&rd

Trade Review

"Tom Tyler’s reinvention of the bestiary is a remarkable achievement, and Tyler emerges as an engaging storyteller. The book’s teeming pages are full of improbable pleasures, pictorial and philosophical. Presented with modesty and wit, the result is an audacious account of what it is not to be human. This is a beautifully written book of exceptional imaginative range and it amounts to nothing less than a poetics of the posthuman." —Steve Baker, author of The Postmodern Animal


"CIFERAE is a remarkable accomplishment. Tyler provides the most subtle and thorough analysis of anthropocentrism I have encountered; and his critical reworking of the relationship between animals and philosophy allows for an extraordinarily rich understanding of more-than-human subjectivities." —Matthew Calarco, California State University, Fullerton


"CIFERAE engages and pushes forward the theoretical foundation of human-animal studies. Tyler aptly develops a critique that encourages the recognition of a perspective that decenters human experience as the primary mode through which knowledge is produced. This work also has pragmatic implications, as it clears a path to understanding people’s subjective experiences as ‘more than human.’ " —Society and Animals

"Delivers tremendous insight into philosophy’s indefensible anthropocentrism, concluding that pragmatic knowledge (and its refusal of a “God’s eye view”) is most promising." —CHOICE

"Sizable but thoroughly convincing. . . [CIFERAE] is a thoroughly enjoyable experiment in literary analysis and creation, a very original attempt at weaving very different themes — epistemology, animals, and hands — into a broad discussion that constantly plays with its own elements." —Journal for Critical Animal Studies


"The book is not merely an astute jeu d’esprit around our ways to count and account animals. It also carefully probes the ostensible anthropocentricism of three dominant epistemological paradigms in Western thought: realism, relativism, and pragmatism." —Humanimalia

"This book is an experience." —Environmental Values

"CIFERAE is a playful philosophy with a serious purpose. This is a cogently argued and beautifully produced (and illustrated) argument for why the persistent invocation of animals in philosophy is significant, and for why animal knowing (as Nietzsche recognized) drives a cart and horses through anthropocentricism." —New Formations

"For scholars in science studies and animals studies, CIFERAE offers a thought-provoking and entertaining opening onto a question of central importance: whether and how our membership in the human species, or in any other species, determines what we can know." —Configurations



Table of Contents

Contents


Acknowledgments

Prelude

1. VALLATUS INDICIBUS ATQUE SICARIISSurrounded by Informers and Assassins
Like Water in Water
Into Your Hand They Are Delivered
Deciphering Deciphering
Prickly Porcupines and Docile Dogs
An ABC of Animals
If a Lion Had Hands
Quia Ego Nominor Leo
Taking Animals in Hand

2. RIDETO MULTUM ET DIGITUM PORRIGITO MEDIUM Laugh Loudly and Flip Them the Bird
Two Hands Are Better Than One
The Truth about Mice and Ducks
The Philosopher and the Gnat
The Birds and the Bees
The Back of a Tiger

3. MEDICO TESTICULI ARIETINIOn the Ring Finger a Ram’s Testicles
The Digestive System of the Mind
An Unknown Something
Praying to the Aliens
Nothing to Phone Home About
From Noumena to Nebula
Those Who Like to Think So
One Ring to Rule Them All

4. DIGITO MINIMO MUNDUM UNIVERSUM EXCITESWith Your Little Finger You Would Awaken the Whole World
The Eyes Have It
A Tale of Three Fish
Handing On and Gathering In
Bird Brains
Getting Stuck In

5. MANUS PARVA, MAIORI ADIUTRIX, POLLEXThe Thumb Is a Little Hand, Assistant to the Greater
To We or Not to We
If I Had a Hammer
The Rule of Thumb
Four Hands Good, Two Hands Bad
Report to an Academy

Coda

Notes
Bibliography
Publication History and Permissions
Index

CIFERAE

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    RRP £23.99 – you save £2.40 (10%)

    Order before 4pm today for delivery by Fri 3 Jul 2026.

    A Paperback / softback by Tom Tyler

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      Publisher: University of Minnesota Press
      Publication Date: 07/03/2012
      ISBN13: 9780816665440, 978-0816665440
      ISBN10: 0816665443

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      The Greek philosopher Protagoras, in the opening words of his lost book Truth, famously asserted, “Man is the measure of all things.” This contention—that humanity cannot know the world except by means of human aptitudes and abilities—has endured through the centuries in the work of diverse writers. In this bold and creative new investigation into the philosophical and intellectual parameters of the question of the animal, Tom Tyler explores a curious fact: in arguing or assuming that knowledge is characteristically human, thinkers have time and again employed animals as examples, metaphors, and fables. From Heidegger’s lizard and Popper’s bees to Saussure’s ox and Freud’s wolves, Tyler points out, “we find a multitude of brutes and beasts crowding into the texts to which they are supposedly unwelcome.”

      Inspired by the medieval bestiaries, Tyler’s book features an assortment of “wild animals&rd

      Trade Review

      "Tom Tyler’s reinvention of the bestiary is a remarkable achievement, and Tyler emerges as an engaging storyteller. The book’s teeming pages are full of improbable pleasures, pictorial and philosophical. Presented with modesty and wit, the result is an audacious account of what it is not to be human. This is a beautifully written book of exceptional imaginative range and it amounts to nothing less than a poetics of the posthuman." —Steve Baker, author of The Postmodern Animal


      "CIFERAE is a remarkable accomplishment. Tyler provides the most subtle and thorough analysis of anthropocentrism I have encountered; and his critical reworking of the relationship between animals and philosophy allows for an extraordinarily rich understanding of more-than-human subjectivities." —Matthew Calarco, California State University, Fullerton


      "CIFERAE engages and pushes forward the theoretical foundation of human-animal studies. Tyler aptly develops a critique that encourages the recognition of a perspective that decenters human experience as the primary mode through which knowledge is produced. This work also has pragmatic implications, as it clears a path to understanding people’s subjective experiences as ‘more than human.’ " —Society and Animals

      "Delivers tremendous insight into philosophy’s indefensible anthropocentrism, concluding that pragmatic knowledge (and its refusal of a “God’s eye view”) is most promising." —CHOICE

      "Sizable but thoroughly convincing. . . [CIFERAE] is a thoroughly enjoyable experiment in literary analysis and creation, a very original attempt at weaving very different themes — epistemology, animals, and hands — into a broad discussion that constantly plays with its own elements." —Journal for Critical Animal Studies


      "The book is not merely an astute jeu d’esprit around our ways to count and account animals. It also carefully probes the ostensible anthropocentricism of three dominant epistemological paradigms in Western thought: realism, relativism, and pragmatism." —Humanimalia

      "This book is an experience." —Environmental Values

      "CIFERAE is a playful philosophy with a serious purpose. This is a cogently argued and beautifully produced (and illustrated) argument for why the persistent invocation of animals in philosophy is significant, and for why animal knowing (as Nietzsche recognized) drives a cart and horses through anthropocentricism." —New Formations

      "For scholars in science studies and animals studies, CIFERAE offers a thought-provoking and entertaining opening onto a question of central importance: whether and how our membership in the human species, or in any other species, determines what we can know." —Configurations



      Table of Contents

      Contents


      Acknowledgments

      Prelude

      1. VALLATUS INDICIBUS ATQUE SICARIISSurrounded by Informers and Assassins
      Like Water in Water
      Into Your Hand They Are Delivered
      Deciphering Deciphering
      Prickly Porcupines and Docile Dogs
      An ABC of Animals
      If a Lion Had Hands
      Quia Ego Nominor Leo
      Taking Animals in Hand

      2. RIDETO MULTUM ET DIGITUM PORRIGITO MEDIUM Laugh Loudly and Flip Them the Bird
      Two Hands Are Better Than One
      The Truth about Mice and Ducks
      The Philosopher and the Gnat
      The Birds and the Bees
      The Back of a Tiger

      3. MEDICO TESTICULI ARIETINIOn the Ring Finger a Ram’s Testicles
      The Digestive System of the Mind
      An Unknown Something
      Praying to the Aliens
      Nothing to Phone Home About
      From Noumena to Nebula
      Those Who Like to Think So
      One Ring to Rule Them All

      4. DIGITO MINIMO MUNDUM UNIVERSUM EXCITESWith Your Little Finger You Would Awaken the Whole World
      The Eyes Have It
      A Tale of Three Fish
      Handing On and Gathering In
      Bird Brains
      Getting Stuck In

      5. MANUS PARVA, MAIORI ADIUTRIX, POLLEXThe Thumb Is a Little Hand, Assistant to the Greater
      To We or Not to We
      If I Had a Hammer
      The Rule of Thumb
      Four Hands Good, Two Hands Bad
      Report to an Academy

      Coda

      Notes
      Bibliography
      Publication History and Permissions
      Index

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