 
In 1971, at a time of enormous political and social change, two of  the world's leading intellectuals, Noam Chomsky and Michel Foucault,  were invited by the Dutch philosopher Fons Elders to debate the  question: is there an 'innate' human nature independent of our  experiences and external influences?
Their debate was one of the most provocative and original debates to  have occurred between contemporary philosophers and serves as a concise  introduction to their respective philosophical theories. While the  debate began rooted in linguistics and theory of knowledge (the core  interests of the two philosophers who are arguably the defining academic  minds of the late twentieth-century) it became a much wider discussion,  encompassing topics from history and behaviourism to creativity,  freedom and the struggle for political justice.
This is an intellectually exciting record of a meeting between two  important philosophers and it also serves as the best possible  introduction to the essential concerns and ideas of contemporary  philosophy.