"A provocative counter history to vitalist and organicist theories and the absolute idealism of Schelling and Novalis, Experimenting at the Boundaries of Life emphasizes not just the experimental footing of emergent life science but its inevitable inconsistencies and aporias. This extraordinary work is a major intervention not only for historians of the life sciences and German Idealism but also for scholars of Romanticism and current philosophy of biology and science studies." --John H. Zammito, author of The Gestation of German Biology: Philosophy and Physiology from Stahl to Schelling
"The most comprehensive engagement of organicist thought from one source in the almost half century since Donna Haraway's (1976) touchstone Crystals, Fabrics, and Fields. . . .The book's overall value to the community. . .is substantial." --History and Philosophy of the Life Sciences
"Steigerwald's truly remarkable accomplishment. . . impressively draws on the incredibly rich and diverse approaches of an amazing collection of thinkers, artists, poets, and writers at Jena in these years. . . . When we are done we have gained a far richer exposure to the collective wisdom of this time." --Centaurus
"Steigerwald's impressive interdisciplinary work draws together the histories of philosophy, science, and literature to examine attempts to delineate the boundary of the living." --European Romantic Review
"A vast undertaking. . . . the text is structured in such a way that individual chapters, specific figures, and relevant themes provide captivating and useful insights in isolation."--Goethe Studies
"Experimenting at the Boundaries of Life succeeds admirably in its examination of the complex entanglements of science and philosophy prior to the founding of biology. . . . The philosophical and scientific traditions here explored do not live in isolation from one another, even if disciplinary boundaries often mean that we now treat them this way. Steigerwald's truly interdisciplinary approach to this period demonstrates this fact in ways that are uniquely rewarding and intellectually stimulating." --Journal of the History of Biology
"Joan Steigerwald has written an amazing book, which will attract a wide and ready readership. . . . Her core notion of 'boundaries of life' offers a novel and powerful means by which to organise much of the history of biology." --NTM Journal of the History of Science, Technology, and Medicine
"Remarkable for its clear elucidation of such an unfocused epistemological terrain. . . . There is, to be sure, much more to say about this remarkable piece of scholarship, equally impressive for its depth and breadth. Upon finishing Experimenting at the Boundaries of Life, every reader, no matter what their background, will be left with the experience akin to the one that comes from attending the best possible graduate seminar: full of knowledge and further questions in equal measure." --Eighteenth-Century Studies