"And what if the paradox proposed by the philosophical life were precisely this: that underneath it all there is nothing to think but the body? The body as origin and space of thought, the body that imagines and loves, the body that lives and dies, the body that hopes and desires? But nothing to do with sex ... Neither voluptuousness nor eroticism nor whispering ... Sex will never come up. Not once... Sex is the silent other of philosophy."--from "Two or three things we know about them..." "This wide-ranging, provocative book is partly philosophical, partly a literary evocation of the pleasures and difficulties of sex and of thinking."--Times Higher Education