The Implications of Immanence develops a philosophy of life in opposition to the notion of bio-power, which reduces the human to the question of power over what Giorgio Agamben terms bare life, mere biological existence. Breaking with all biologism or vitalism, Lawlor attends to the dispersion of death at the heart of life, in the minuscule hiatusthat divides the living present, separating lived experience from the living body and, crucially for phenomenology,...