This book contains reflections on the faculty of language, that is, on human nature. Take the floor: this familiar event is nothing less than the most affordable experimental basis to face many capital problems of philosophy and politics. Starting from the microcosm of the enunciation, Virno gradually lengthens the visual angle of the investigation: after shedding some light on the constitutively public (or even better, political) character of the linguistic mind, he examines the link between invariant biological requirements and mutable historical experiences. The point of arrival is an original concept of "natural history." The author tries to demonstrate that the conditions of possibility of our experience do not remain in the background, but that they are the pure object of the immediate experience: to that end, he describes the occasions in which human nature knows a complete rev...read more