Sloterdijk uses "anthropotechnics" to refer to "techniques of individual and collective self-transformation" with a lens that sees "human life not in terms of a struggle between those who wield power and those who are subject to it, but in terms of the networks of 'discipline' through which we live our lives and construct our world". The book's title comes from the final line of Rainer Maria Rilke's poem "Archaic Torso of Apollo". Sloterdijk describes it as the "absolute imperative—the quintessentialmetanoetic command".
Reception
Originally published in German by Suhrkamp Verlag in 2009, the book was translated into English in 2013. Keith Ansell-Pearson received this work as "a tour de force that engages the history of philosophy, religion, and thought, both Western and Eastern, in ways that make you think deeply about the evolution of the human being these past few thousand years. As if this weren’t already enough, Sloterdijk is also concerned with the future, and on a planetary scale. Where are we heading? Where do we wish to go? More to the point, where must we go? How must we change our lives?"