Showing posts with label Timothy Morton. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Timothy Morton. Show all posts

2022/01/16

Lecture Archive – Footnotes2Plato

Lecture Archive – Footnotes2Plato




Lecture Archive

PARTICIPATORY KNOWING IN GOETHE AND WHITEHEAD: SCIENCE AND THE SOUL OF THE WORLD

GOETHE’S STUDY OF METAMORPHOSIS IN LIGHT, LEAF, AND BONE

A CARTOON INTRODUCTION TO WHITEHEAD’S ORGANIC COSMOLOGY

A DRUNK HISTORY OF TIME: THE EINSTEIN, BERGSON, WHITEHEAD DEBATES

ALTERED CONSCIOUSNESS AFTER DESCARTES: WHITEHEAD’S PHILOSOPHY OF ORGANISM AS PSYCHEDELIC REALISM

INTRODUCTION TO GERMAN IDEALISM


RUDOLF STEINER’S TWELVE VIEWS OF THE WORLD

THE BIRTH OF LIFE AND THE FUTURE OF CONSCIOUSNESS WITH BRUCE DAMER

ASTROLOGY: ART, SCIENCE, OR RELIGION?

WORLD-ECOLOGY RESEARCH NETWORK CONFERENCE PRESENTATION ON WHITEHEAD AND MARX

LECTURE CLIPS ON SCHELLING & HEGEL FROM MY ONLINE COURSE “MIND AND NATURE IN GERMAN IDEALISM”

THE STATE OF CONTEMPORARY COSMOLOGY: INTRODUCTORY LECTURE FOR A SHORT COURSE AT SCHUMACHER COLLEGE


Lecture Playlist from Spring 2018 course “Process and Difference in the Pluriverse”

INTRODUCTION TO PROCESS PHILOSOPHY

DIAGRAMMING GERMAN IDEALISM (KANT, FICHTE, SCHELLING, & HEGEL)

CRITIQUE OF PURE FEELING: WHITEHEAD ON KANT’S TRANSCENDENTAL AESTHETIC

THE INTERRUPTED IRRUPTION OF TIME: TOWARDS AN INTEGRAL COSMOLOGY, WITH HELP FROM BERGSON AND WHITEHEAD

RELIGION IN HUMAN AND COSMIC EVOLUTION: WHITEHEAD’S ALTERNATIVE VISION

WHITEHEAD’S NON-MODERN PHILOSOPHY: COSMOS AND POLIS AND THE PLURIVERSE

WAR OF THE WORLDS: LOVE AND STRIFE IN THE PLURIVERSE

MINDING TIME: CHRONOS, KAIROS, AND AION IN AN ARCHETYPAL COSMOS

EVOLUTIONARY PANPSYCHISM OR ELIMINATIVE MATERIALISM: TOWARDS AN ANTHRODECENTRIC PHILOSOPHY OF NATURE

PSYCHEDELICS AND THE EXTENDED MIND THESIS: THE ECOLOGIZATION OF CONSCIOUSNESS

INTRODUCTION TO GERMAN IDEALISM/ROMANTICISM (PARTS 1 AND 2)







THE PSYCHEDELIC EUCHARIST: TOWARDS A PHARMACOLOGICAL PHILOSOPHY OF RELIGION

THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN KANT’S AND SCHELLING’S PHILOSOPHIES OF NATURE

DISENCHANTMENT, MISENCHANTMENT, RE-ENCHANTMENT: A DIALOGUE WITH RICHARD TARNAS

EMERSON AND WHITEHEAD: TOWARDS A TRANSCENDENTALIST COSMOPOLITICS

WORLDLY RELIGION IN WHITEHEAD AND DELEUZE: STEPS TOWARD AN INCARNATIONAL PHILOSOPHY

COSMOPOLITICAL THEOLOGY: THE PUSH FOR A PLANETARY PEOPLE

DEMOCRACY AND INITIATION AT BURNING MAN: A COSMOTHEANDRIC INQUIRY

THE COPERNICAN ODYSSEY: FROM KANTIAN SKEPTICISM TO TARNASIAN PARTICIPATION


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2 COMMENTS

Judy Frey
MAY 4, 2015 AT 7:57 AM


Where are any thoughts on Rudolf Steiner?
REPLY

Matthew David Segall
MAY 4, 2015 AT 1:30 PM


https://www.youtube.com/user/0ThouArtThat0/search?query=rudolf+steiner
REPLY

WHAT DO YOU THINK?



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Online Courses – Process and Difference in the Pluriverse

Online Courses – Footnotes2Plato

Process and Difference in the Pluriverse

PARP 6135 | Spring 2018 (Jan-May)| 3.00 Units | Online

Matthew T. Segall, PhD | msegall@ciis.edu |415.575.6104

This course aims to address the challenge of thinking and acting with creativity and compassion in an increasingly complex and pluralistic set of social and ecological contexts. 

It draws upon an array of diverse process, post-structuralist, and pragmatist thinkers, including William James, WEB DuBois, Gilles Deleuze, Michel Weber, William Connolly, Catherine Keller, Isabelle Stengers, Bruno Latour, Timothy Morton, and Donna Haraway. 

The ideas and methods of these thinkers provide a means of reimagining classical liberal constructs (like atomistic individualism) by offering a more relational form of identity and a more receptive and participatory way of encountering difference (whether based in race, class, gender, religion, or political ideology).

Course Texts and Reading Materials:

Required texts*:

William Connolly, Facing the Planetary: Entangled Humanism and the Politics of Swarming (Duke University Press, 2017).

Donna Haraway, Staying with the Trouble: Making Kin in the Chthulucene (Duke University Press, 2016).

Catherine Keller, Cloud of the Impossible: Negative Theology and Planetary Entanglement (Columbia University Press, 2015).

Bruno Latour, Facing Gaia: Eight Lectures on the New Climatic Regime (Polity Press, 2017).

Timothy Morton, Humankind: Solidarity with Non-Human People (Verso, 2017).

*As of October 2017, all required texts are available online for between $15 and $25, cheaper if used.

Selections of texts to be provided electronically include:

Gilles Deleuze and Felix Guattari, A Thousand Plateaus: Capitalism and Schizophrenia (University of Minnesota Press, 1987).

W.E.B. DuBois, selected essays

Shamoon Zamir. Dark Voices: WEB Dubois and American Thought, 1888-1903.

Michael Halewood, Rethinking the Social Through Durkheim, Marx, Weber, and Whitehead (Anthem Press, 2014).

William James, The Principles of Psychology, Volume 1, Ch. 10: “The Consciousness of Self” (1890, http://psychclassics.yorku.ca/James/Principles/prin10.htm).
____. A Pluralistic Universe.

Keenan Ferguson. William James: Politics in the Pluriverse (Rowman and Littlefield, 2007).

Catherine Keller and Anne Daniell, Process and Difference: Between Cosmological and Poststructuralist Postmodernisms (State University of New York Press, 2002).

Email me if you’re interested in auditing or enrolling in this course as a special student.

2021/12/20

제3시대 그리스도교연구소 '민중' 효과 리뷰(김현주), 비평연습 1회차 글쓰기

[프로그램 리뷰] 제237차 월례포럼 <'민중' 효과> 리뷰(김현주)


[프로그램 리뷰] 제237차 월례포럼 <'민중' 효과> 리뷰(김현주)
프로그램 리뷰

by 제3시대 2021. 2. 18. 11:42

제237차 월례포럼 <'민중' 효과> 리뷰


김현주(대전보건대 식품영양학과 교수)

우선 코로나 덕분에 지방에서도 비대면으로 포럼에 참석할 수 있어 감사했다. 민중신학과 거리가 먼 나로서는 긴 시간 유학한 황용연 박사의 모습을 괄목상대하고픈 마음이 컸다. 강의는 흥미롭고 재미있었다. 나와 같은 문외한도 이해할 만큼 쉬웠으며, 강의를 마친 후 다른 논문을 들여다보니 전과 달리 뜻이 들여다보일 만큼 눈을 띄우는 힘이 있었다. 강의를 들은 후 이전과 다른 시각을 갖게 되었으니 상당한 배움이 있었던 것 같다. 논문에 담긴 복잡한 논의를 연구자의 정리된 언어로 들을 수 있어서 좋았다.

‘민중’이 누구냐는 질문을 학생운동권 시절에 자주 물었지만 뾰족한 답은 아무도 하지 못했다. 대개 ‘그들’이라는 대상으로 여기면서도 민중이라는 말을 놓지는 못했으니, 현실 역사의 주체가 민중이 아니라는 괴리에 주목한 연구자의 문제의식에 개인적으로 납득이 되었다. 연구자는 이 괴리를 드러내기 위하여 박권일의 ‘표준시민’이라는 개념을 가져왔다. 표준시민은 수도권에서 나타나는 중산층 지향 대중 현상을 가리킨다. 표준시민은 능력주의 이데올로기에 따라 인정투쟁을 수행한다. 이때 무능력자와 무자격자가 마땅하고 상식적이며 폭력적인 방식으로 배제되고 마는데, 바로 여기에 민중이라는 용어를 호출하자는 것이다. 1970년 전태일 사건으로 사람들이 눈을 뜨고 민중에 주목하였던 것처럼, 무능력자와 무자격자가 무자비하게 배제되는 사건을 지금 증언하기 위하여 민중이라는 안경을 쓰자는 것이다. 

제 눈에 안경이 같은 사건을 보여주지도 않을뿐더러 같은 증언을 요청하지도 않을 것이다. 다만 이주노동자, 난민, 여성, 성 소수자, 하층 노동자만 아니라, 범죄자, 채용시험 탈락자, 대학의 제2캠퍼스 재학생조차 이 무능력자 또는 무자격자로 배제될 수 있다고 말한다. 배제하는 칼금은 우리들 사이 어디에나 있다.

여기서 바울의 칭의론이 비유대인 그리스도인에 대한 배제를 해소하기 위한 투쟁담론이라는 김창락의 민중신학적 해석이 흥미롭게 등장한다. 로마 식민지 도시의 디아스포라 교회에서 유대인 그리스도인은 율법을 근거로 이방인 그리스도인을 배제하고자 했다. 이 긴장관계를 지배자와 피지배자로 해석할 수는 없지만 표준시민과 무자격자로 이해하는 데는 무리가 없다. 바울은 교회의 경계를 율법에서 믿음으로 옮김으로써, 무자격자인 이방인이 할례를 받지 않고도 그리스도인이 될 수 있도록 안내했다. 이때 바울이 가졌던 남다른 눈이 바로 민중이라는 용어 작용과 유사하다는 주장이다.

연구자는 안경을 쓰라고 하지 않고 안경 씌움을 당하라고 말한다. 나는 그가 바디우 식의 사건을 대망하고 있다고 느꼈다. 시각이 바뀌면 시야가 달라진다. 민중이라는 안경은 경계 밖에 있는 사람과 경계 안에 있는 사람 모두가 경계를 바라보게 할 것이다. 나-남을 알아보는 시력이 배제의 도구가 되어서는 우리가 직면한 시대적·사회적 갈등을 극복하지 못한다. 우리의 증언은 우리들 사이를 가르는 경계를 인식하고 해석하고 정의하여 마침내 경계를 옮기고 허무는 일이 될 것이다.

성문 밖에서 십자가에 달린 그리스도의 몸은 경계를 옮기는 역사적 사건이었다. 성벽이라는 정치적·경제적·사회적 담을 허물고 지성소 안에서 사람과 신을 가르던 휘장을 찢었다. 우리들도 지금 여기에서 우리를 조각내는 헝클어진 경계를 쳐다보고 경계 너머에 있는 타자의 이야기를 듣고 그이를 받으며 그리스도의 몸을 증언할 수 있다.

강의 후 질의에 답하며 연구자는 ‘경계를 허무는 사건의 양면성’을 생각하는 민중신학자의 조심스러움을 덧붙였다. 문득 여리고성이 무너진 사건을 생각했다. 성이 다른 방향으로 무너졌다면 성을 돌던 백성들의 운명은 어떻게 바뀌었을까? 현실에서는 경계를 움직이고자 하는 힘의 의도대로 결과가 펼쳐지지 않을 때도 많다. 이제 와서 우리가 촛불을 후회하겠는가? 사건은 영원으로부터 현실로 온다. 학자의 정교한 시각과 신중한 계산, 신학자다운 초월적 관점을 느끼며 이제는 다음 연구 결과물을 기다리겠다.

황용연 제3시대 그리스도교연구소 연구기획위원장은 배제된 사람들이 자기식의 언어를 갖게 하자는 목적으로 글쓰기 강좌를 계획하고 있다고 하였다. 글쓰기는 두려운 일이다. 생각과 마음을 박제하는 결과물이 무겁고 의도와 다르게 적힌 내 글은 낯설기도 하다. 그러나 어려운 논문을 쉽게 설명하는 황용연 박사라면 때로는 표준시민인 듯싶다가 졸지에 무자격자 또는 무능력자로 전락하고 마는 우리들이 무겁거나 낯설지 않은 내 목소리를 가질 수 있도록 도와줄 수 있을 것이라 기대해도 좋겠다.

ⓒ 웹진 <제3시대>

출처: https://minjungtheology.tistory.com/1297 [웹진 <제3시대>]


[#180, 비평연습 특집] 그의 이름은(창세기 2:4-3:24) : 
비평연습 1회차 글쓰기
웹진 제3시대

2021-11-07
조회수 166
그의 이름은 (창세기 2:4-3:24) : 비평연습 1회차 글쓰기

김현주(대전보건대 식품영양학과 교수)

첫 사람의 이름은 사람일까, 아담일까, 남자일까? 그대와 함께 사는 강아지의 이름은 개인가, 댕댕이인가? 시츄일수도 있고 푸들일 수도 있다. 그러나 그대가 애완하는 강아지를 개라고 부르지는 않을 것이다. 그 아이는 여느 강아지와 다른 내 아이이며 내가 이름을 부를 때 꼬리를 흔들며 달려와 안기는 존재이기 때문이다. 청소노동자들의 몸짓을 춤으로 담은 과정을 영상으로 보았다. 동대입구역에서 야간노동을 하는 그분의 이름은 배남이였다. “내가 배남이라는 사실을 잊어버리고 살았어요.” 누군가가 자신의 이름을 불러주고 이제껏 누가 볼까 창피하던 청소하는 모습을 자세히 들여다보고 거기에서 아름다움을 발견당하는 경험을 그분은 눈물로 감격했다.

성경의 첫 사람은 아담이다. 창조설화에는 개체의 이름과 종의 이름이 섞여 있다. 그래서 이 첫 사람을 좀 알아보려면 정신을 바짝 차리고 읽어야 한다. 한글 성경에서는 아담을 사람이라고도 번역했고 남자라고도 번역했다. 어느 쪽이든 사람의 이름은 아니다. 심지어 하나님도 첫 사람의 이름을 부르지 않았다. 첫 사람은 이름이 없는 사람이었다. 아무도 그에게 이름을 지어주지 않았고 아무도 그의 이름을 불러주지 않았다.
그의 이름을 지어 불러줄 이가 아무도 없는 아담에게서 절대 고독의 무게가 느껴진다.

흥미롭게도, 이름이 없던 첫 사람의 직업은 작명가였다. 그는 이름을 지어주는 일을 하며 살았다. 짐승을 보고 그가 이르는 것이 그 이름이 되었다. 허나 그가 지어준 이름은 상대와 관계를 구성하는 애칭이 아니라 공식적인 명칭이었다. 아담은 여러 짐승들에게 이름을 지어 주었으나 무엇과도 벗 삼지는 않은 것 같다(창 2:18-20). 첫 사람이 하나님이 데려온 강아지에게 ‘개’라는 이름을 지어 주었을까, 아니면 ‘댕댕이’라는 이름을 지어 주었을까? 전자였다. 만일 후자였다면 하나님이 추가로 여자를 만들 필요가 없었을 테다. 사람이 혼자라서 좋지 않으니 짝을 지어 주자던 하나님의 첫 시도는 뜻을 이루지 못하여 다음 장면으로 넘어간다.

여기서 창조자가 첫 사람의 이름을 지어 부르지 않았다는 사실은 의미심장하다. 나는 하나님이 첫 사람의 짝(돕는 베필)이 되어줄 수는 없다는 뜻으로 이해했다. 마치 첫 사람이 어떤 짐승도 짝으로 삼을 수 없었던 것처럼 하나님도 사람의 짝으로는 맞지 않았다. 바울은 에베소 교회에 보낸 편지에서 그리스도와 교회의 관계를 남편과 아내의 관계로 비유하였다. 이 편지는 성경에 새겨져 기독교 세계에서 가부장을 지지하는 메시지로 기능해 왔다. 성인지 감수성이 좀 생기고 나서는 남편은 아내를 사랑하고 아내는 남편에게 복종하라는 말에서 아내의 복종은 수월하고 남성의 사랑은 엄청 힘들다는 식으로 양보하기도 하지만 그런 시각으로 남편과 아내의 위계를 해체하지는 못한다. 비록 바울이 윤리적인 설교의 형식을 빌리기는 하였으나 이 비유를 부부관계의 첫 모형인 창조 설화의 첫 남자와 아내의 관계에 비추어 보면, 바울의 비유는 그리스도와 교회가 동등하다는 뜻으로 해석된다. 예수는 생전에 딱 한 번 베드로 위에 교회를 세우겠다고 미래형으로 말한 것 외에 교회라는 것을 시도한 적이 없다. 베드로와 긴장 관계에서 정통성이 간절했던 바울이 본격적으로 교회를 세우고 관리하면서 자신이 세운 교회의 권위를 그리스도와 동등한 수준으로 주장하고 싶었다는 느낌을 지울 수 없다. 물론 그 동등함은 동일함이 아니다. 하나님과 사람이 다르고 사람과 짐승이 다른 것처럼 존재는 구별이 되지만 남자와 여자는 그런 구별이 없다는 정도로만 이해하여도 교회의 위상은 상당히 올라간다.

이 동등한 여자와 남자는 어떻게 생겨났을까? 하나님은 첫 사람의 갈빗대를 뽑아 여자를 만들어 데려왔다. 이제 첫 사람 아담은 더 이상 아담이 아니다. 계산을 해 보면, 갈빗대를 잃은 아담은 당연히 원래 아담보다 모자란다. 본질적으로 다른 존재가 되었다. 아담에게서 떼어낸 갈빗대는 여자가 되었기 때문이다(창 2:23). 여기서 여자를 만들었다는 표현에 NASB는 fashion이라는 동사를 썼다. 상당히 모양을 낸 것 같은 느낌이다. 들짐승도 날짐승도 움직이지 못한 아담의 굳은 마음을 흔들어보겠다는 창조자의 의지겠다. 갈빗대를 잃어 아담보다 조금 모자라게 된 (첫 사람이 아닌) 첫 남자는 이제 여자에게서 자신의 모자람을 채워 줄 무언가를 발견했는지 신이 나서 노래를 부른다(창 2:24). 합본 편집된 성경에서 가장 앞자락에 기록된 노래다.

사람이라는 보통명사로 불리던 이름 없고 외로운 작명가에게 이제 재미라는 것이 생겨났다. 그동안은 갈빗대가 있어서 외롭지 않았을지도 모른다. 갈빗대를 잃고 부족함이 생기자 관계에 대한 갈망도 생긴 것이 우연일까? 처음 만들어진 완벽했던 첫 사람은 여러 짐승과 심지어 창조주에게도 무심했다. 세상에는 동식물이 가득하고 성부, 성자, 성령이 역동하고 있었음에도 하나님은 그가 ‘홀로’라서 좋지 않다고 하였다. 복잡한 놀이공원에서 홀로인 사람을 상상해 보자. 그는 누군가를 기다리고 있거나 아무에게도 관심이 없는 것이다. 창조자가 그의 벗이 되어주는 대신 그에게 벗을 만들어 준 이유는 아무래도 그에게 부족했던 것이 바로 ‘부족함’ 그 자체였기 때문일 것 같다. 갈빗대라는 것이 신체 기관인지 마음의 조각인지 영혼의 부스러기인지 모르겠으나 그것이 빠져 나간 ‘빈자리’가 없는 첫 사람은 완벽하지만 무언가 모자랐던 것이다. 이름이 없어도 부족함이 없던 그에게 결핍이 없어서 부족했다는 역설이 흥미롭다.

이어서 선악과를 먹는 장면에서 우리는 뭔가 잘못되었다고 느낀다. 분명히 첫 사람에게 ‘선과 악을 알게 하는 나무의 열매를 먹는 날에는 반드시 죽는다.’고 말했다는데, 여자의 말에서는 ‘먹지도 말고 만지지도 말라고 하셨고, 어기면 우리가 죽을 것이라고 하셨다.’고 묘하게 달라져 있다. 남자가 들은 말을 여자에게 정확히 전달했다면 여자가 열매를 가져와도 바로 먹지는 않았을 것이다. 한마디는 했겠지. 사실 남자도 헷갈렸을까? 여자가 열매를 먹었다는데 죽지 않고 와서 열매를 주니까 아마 괜찮은가보다 믿었을지도 모른다. 이 중요한 장면에서 아담은 망설이지를 않는다. 하나님의 명령은 막연하지만 그걸 어기고도 생존한 아내가 와서 하는 말은 구체적이다. 그래 너만 먹을 순 없지. 나도 먹어보자.

그런데 여자만 열매를 먹어서는 나타나지 않던 열매의 효과가 남편도 먹고 나서야 나타난다. 그들은 눈이 밝아졌다. 이름이나 짓던 한량이 노동으로 옷을 지어 벗은 몸을 가린다. 벗은 몸이 부끄러울 수 있는 여건은 누군가가 쳐다볼 때다. 길고양이는 옷을 입는 법이 없다. 그래도 전혀 부끄럽지 않다. 고양이는 인간의 몸을 쳐다보지 않는다. 관심이 없으므로. 마치 백인 여성이 흑인 남성 노예 앞에서 아무렇지도 않게 옷을 갈아입었다던 상황처럼 상대의 시선이 나에게 의미가 없다가, 눈이 밝아지고 나서야 비로소 상대의 시선을 의식하게 된 것이다. 이렇게 선악과를 먹은 효과는 일차적으로 개인이 아니라 관계에서 나타났다. 만일 첫 사람이 홀로일 때 선악과를 먹었다면 도대체 무엇이 부끄러웠을까? 여자가 뱀을 만나 열매를 따 먹은 후 남편 것도 따서 가져올 때 옷을 입었을 리가 없다. 눈이 밝아진다는 것은 상대를 바라보는 눈이 밝아져서 관계가 달라지는 것이다. 그것은 창조된 동산의 파국이자 인간이 만드는 새로운 관계, 사회의 시작이었다.

우라사와 나오키의 만화 ‘몬스터’의 몬스터는 괴롭힐 대상의 이름을 기억하는 사람들을 모두 찾아서 죽임으로써 피해자가 자신을 기억하는 사람이 하나도 없는 세상을 외롭게 살아가게 한다. 이 만화는 이름을 아는 사람이 없는 사람은 존재도 없는 것이라는 명제에서 출발한다. 성경은 끝내 가인과 아벨과 셋의 아버지인 첫 남자의 이름을 밝히지 않는다. 마치 절대적인 존재인 양 내내 아담이었다. 그러나 첫 여자의 이름은 ‘생명’이었다. 하와라는 이 이름은 창조된 동산을 떠나 인간의 사회로 가면서 죽음과 고통을 경험하게 될 아내에게 선물처럼 남편이 지어준다. 첫 남자가 죽을 때까지 아내를 ‘생명’이라고 불렀다니, 애절하지 않은가! 그는 죽을 운명이었지만 그의 입으로는 생명이라는 단어를 끊임없이 말했을 것이다. ‘생명’이라고 불리는 그의 아내는 세 아들을 낳았고 가인과 셋이라는 이름을 지어 주었다(창 4:1, 15). 아벨의 이름에 대해서는 설명이 부족하다. 이 ‘부족함’이 완벽함이 지닌 모자람을 채워줄 수 있다는 것을 앞에서 말했다.

첫 사람이자 첫 남자인 이름 없는 사나이는 바울이 로마 신도들에게 보낸 편지에 ‘장차 오실 분, 즉 예수 그리스도의 모형’으로 언급된다(롬 5:14). 죄를 지은 첫 사람이라는 멸칭을 장차 오실 분의 모형으로 역전시키는 바울의 논리가 흥미롭다. 예수 그리스도의 모형인 아담은 갈빗대를 지녔던 첫 사람일까, 아니면 갈빗대를 잃고 여자의 짝이 된 첫 남자일까? 다시 묻자. 예수는 남자였을까? 요셉의 정자 없이 마리아의 태에서 성령으로 발생되었다면 일단 Y 염색체를 인간에게서 받지는 못했을 것이다. 굳이 남성일 필요가 없지. 남성이든 여성이든 간성이든 굳이 공개할 필요도 없었다. 분명히 예수는 남성이 아니라 인간으로 성육신하였고 인간으로 살았고 인간으로 부활하였다. 예수는 혼인하지 않았고 자녀를 낳지 않았다. 남성으로서 생식능력을 확인한 바 없으니 남성이었다고 주장할 생물학적 근거도 없다. 그러니 예수의 모형으로 언급되는 아담은 갈빗대를 지닌 첫 사람이라고 하자. 그 사람 안에는 남자와 여자가 있었고 그들의 관계도 들어있었다. 선악과를 먹고 죽음을 맛본 이는 개별적인 여자, 남자가 아니라 그 남자와 그 여자가 연합하여 한 몸이 된 인간(人間)이었다. 이 비밀을 자기 몸에 간직한 아담은 누군가의 남편이기 전에 온전한 원형적 인간이어야 했다. 그래서 그는 누가 지어 준 이름으로 불리며 개인적인 관계 속에 머물 수가 없었다. 그는 모든 인간의 대표가 되어야 했고 모든 인간관계를 구성하는 초주체(hypersubject)여야 했으니까. 그리고 신이면서 인간인 예수는 아담의 이름으로 인류와 만났다. 첫 사람 아담은 예수 그리스도가 나타나자 비로소 모든 관계를 왜곡시킨 초주체로 이름을 얻는다. 이것은 공자가 논어에서 답한 세상을 바로 세우는 정명(正名)이다. 이제 나는 초주체라는 괴물이 해소된 새로운 세상에서는 hyposubjects가 이름을 얻을 수 있겠다는 꿈을 꾸고 있다.

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(Hyposubjects are necessarily feminist, colorful, queer, ecological, transhuman, and intrahuman. Hyposubjects make revolutions where technomodern radar can’t glimpse them. They patiently ignore expert advice that they do not or cannot exist. They are skeptical of efforts to summarize them, including everything we have just said. Timothy Morton)

ⓒ 웹진 <제3시대>

2021/11/07

Nothing: Three Inquiries in Buddhism by Marcus Boon | Goodreads

Nothing: Three Inquiries in Buddhism by Marcus Boon | Goodreads

Nothing: Three Inquiries in Buddhism
(TRIOS)
by Marcus Boon, Eric Cazdyn, Timothy Morton
 3.67  ·   Rating details ·  24 ratings  ·  1 review


Though contemporary European philosophy and critical theory have long had a robust engagement with Christianity, there has been no similar engagement with Buddhism—a surprising lack, given Buddhism’s global reach and obvious affinities with much of Continental philosophy. 

This volume fills that gap, focusing on “nothing”—essential to Buddhism, of course, but also a key concept in critical theory from Hegel and Marx through deconstruction, queer theory, and contemporary speculative philosophy. 

Through an elaboration of emptiness in both critical and Buddhist traditions; an examination of the problem of praxis in Buddhism, Marxism, and psychoanalysis; and an explication of a “Buddhaphobia” that is rooted in modern anxieties about nothingness, Nothing opens up new spaces in which the radical cores of Buddhism and critical theory are renewed and revealed.

Review
“Nothing’s overarching contribution clarifies the problematics of Buddhist critical theory as the intra-active, performative effects of a mutualizing ethico-ontoepistemology. This invites critical mindfulness of the immediate existential-material circumstances that may at once inspire and constrain any given attempt/location of Buddhist critical theory.”
About the Author
Marcus Boon is professor of English at York University in Toronto.

Eric Cazdyn is Distinguished Professor of Aesthetics and Politics at the University of Toronto.

Timothy Morton is the Rita Shea Guffey Chair in English at Rice University in Houston, Texas.

5.0 out of 5 stars Challenging
Reviewed in Canada on 21 September 2021
Verified Purchase
A tour through theory and praxis, Buddhism, and the contemporary extrapolation of structures of thought. The three essays are challenging - I read them over twice, necessary to understand.

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REVIEW OF NOTHING: THREE INQUIRIES IN BUDDHISM
WRITTEN BY GLENN WALLIS

Nothing: Three Inquiries in Buddhism. By Marcus Boon, Eric Cazdyn, and Timothy Morton. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2015.

By James M. Cochran, Baylor University*

Marcus Boon, Eric Cazdyn, and Timothy Morton open Nothing: Three Inquiries in Buddhism claiming that their book is nothing: “So much nothing, so little time. This is a book made of nothings: with a smile and a quizzical frown, let us talk about nothing” (1). 

Yet, their book is also about something—a lot of “somethings,” often competing and in tension with each other’s something. Boon’s essay, “To Live in a Glass House is a Revolutionary Virtue Par Excellence: Marxism, Buddhism, and the Politics of Nonalignment,” begins the collection, looking at the ideologies and political dimensions of Buddhism. Next, in “Enlightenment, Revolution, Cure: The Problem of Praxis and the Radical Nothingness of the Future,” Cazdyn argues for a reclamation project to save the radical force of Buddhism, Marxism, and psychoanalysis. Finally, Morton concludes the collection with “Buddhaphobia: Nothingness and the Fear of Things,” an essay examining modernity’s cultural anxiety surrounding Buddhism. While these essays cover three distinct topics, taken together, they represent a serious and significant engagement with critical theory and Buddhism.

Nothing attempts to fill a gap in critical theory, which, in Boon, Cazdyn, and Morton’s accounts, has largely disregarded or ill-treated Buddhism. According to the three authors, contemporary philosophy and theory have witnessed a “Christian turn,” but there has been no equal “Buddhist turns.” Boon, Cazdyn, and Morton admit that they have cannot completely explain the absence of Buddhism in Western critical theory, but they point to two main reasons—at least within the works of Badiou, Žižek, and Agamben. First, Boon, Cazdyn, and Morton claim that “there is a lack of engagement born from the sheer compulsion inherent in Western traditions that makes it difficult for any scholar to realize how entangled in them she is” (12). Second, many contemporary philosophers draw from Hegel’s texts on Buddhism, drawing from “rather sketchy Jesuit reports from Tibet” (12). Recognizing these limitations, the authors attempt to illuminate both the gaps and connections between Buddhism and theory.

Boon’s essay “To Live in a Glass House is a Revolutionary Virtue Par Excellence: Marxism, Buddhism, and the Politics of Nonalignment,” explores the political dimensions or the ideologies of Buddhism. Boon frames his essay by considering the common misperception that Buddhism and Marxism (or critical theory, broadly) are radically opposed: “the world-negating spirituality of the Buddha as ideological obfuscation versus the concrete struggle over material conditions of the Marxist militant on the one hand” (25). Boon recognizes that this binary—of Buddhism as an ideology-free system and Marxism as a radically ideological system—holds true at times, but, as the historically complex uses of Buddhism demonstrates, this binary is far too simplistic.

Boon opens with a consideration of the French theoretical thinker Georges Bataille, who had significant influence on Jacques Lacan, Michel Foucault, Julia Kristeva, Jacques Derrida, Giorgio Agamben, Jean-Luc Nancy, Achille Mbembe, Judith Butler, Lee Edelman, and many others, and, in particular, Boon focuses on Bataille’s relation to Buddhism. Bataille was introduced to yoga and meditation in the late 1930s, and his interest in Buddhism (and other Eastern religions) influenced his notion of “sovereignty,” a concept grounded in nothingness, unknowing, and self-annihilation. Boon reveals how Bataille bases “sovereignty” in Buddhism, believing that monasticism is the “perfect solution” that is “pure expenditure” and “renunciation of expenditure” (Bataille, qtd. in Boon 46). Boon also argues for a reconsideration of the political dimensions of “inner experience” in Buddhism, one that offers a “potential connection between nonalignment and nonviolence in the politics of sovereignty” (57).

To further explore and develop the connection between nonalignment and nonviolence, Boon next turns to the 1945-80 Cold War period of decolonization in India, China, and other places, and he argues that Buddhism, during this period, was starkly partisan. On one hand, Buddhism represented the “residual force of tradition, often transfigured by and adapted to European colonial regimes;” on the other hand, Buddhism was central to the development of anticolonial forces (57). Yet, following World War II, these attempt to develop a Buddhist politics failed because of “military takeovers,” “communist attempts to disassemble the feudal or colonial political-economic basis of existing Buddhist societies”, and the “fading away of the politics of ‘nonalignment’ ” as Asian nations integrated themselves into the “global capitalist economy” (60).

Although a Buddhist politics of nonalignment failed to fully emerge, Boon, by reading the works of Gendun Chopel, Gary Snyder, Thomas Merton, and others, imagines the possibility of such a politics of nonalignment. That is, Boon imagines a system that “rejects the alienation of both capitalist and communist materialisms” (73). For Boon, this political system would involve “gift economy, interdependence, the inconceivable,” elements that are, as Boon argues, central to both a Bataillean general economy and the “Buddhist description of the human condition” (74). Thus, Boon situates a Buddhist politics as an alternative vision within the polarized politics of the Cold War.

Boon closes his essay by turning to a discussion of speculative non-Buddhism and the works of Glenn Wallis, Tom Pepper and Matthias Steingass. Boon offers a brief summary of what are, in his view, the two main arguments of speculative non-Buddhism: first, they critique the appropriation of Buddhist techniques and ideologies to resonate with and reinforce “global corporate capitalism,” and, second, they develop speculative non-Buddhism as a model to “think about and practice Buddhism” in contrast to any of the X-Buddhist communities that rely on “irrational obedience to the authority of tradition” (83, 84). Boon critiques “Wallis et al.” for their lack of “subtlety and…compassion” and for oversimplifying the divide between X- and non-Buddhism (85).


However, Boon admits that the value of speculative non-Buddhism is that it signals the “emerging relationship between Buddhism and the emerging paradigm of cognitive capitalism” (86). In part, the relation between Buddhism and politics is founded in interiority or cognitive activity.

Boon concludes, wondering “What will cause human beings to act differently?” (90). While Boon wrestles with this question throughout his essay, he has no clear solution, but he imagines the possibility of collective Buddhist practice spurring this change and bringing about compassion. Boon advises readers to practice: “But basically what I’m saying is meditate. Do it. Right now” (91). Beyond this advice, Boon suggests we have no simple solutions.

Next comes Cazdyn’s investigation of praxis in Buddhism, Marxism, and psychoanalysis in “Enlightenment, Revolution, Cure: The Problem of Praxis and the Radical Nothingness of the Future.” In this essay, Cazdyn compares Buddhism, Marxism, and psychoanalysis in an attempt to understand the negotiation of thought and action:

This is also an effort to understand Buddhism, Marxism, and psychoanalysis as problematics—as modes of engagement that prioritize the inextricable relation between their distinct forms of thought and action (and non-thought and non- action) on the one hand and the historical situation in which they are situated and generate new problems on the other hand. (113)

By first considering and re-theorizing praxis, defined as the “problem of the relation between theory and practice,” Cazdyn hopes to re-emphasize the radical dimensions of enlightenment, revolution, and cure (106). Specifically, concerning Buddhism, the essay attempts to answer, or at least approach, the question of how one attains enlightenment without desiring it.

After establishing his goals and frameworks, Cazdyn traces the original problem of praxis in the histories and development of Buddhism, Marxism, and psychoanalysis. I do not find it necessary to regurgitate Cazdyn’s historical surveys here: it is sufficient to recognize that, first, Cazdyn sees Buddhism, Marxism, and psychoanalysis as originating at initial problems of praxis within specific historical situations. Second, Cazdyn argues that the “recentering of the problem of praxis…is always accompanied by a return (sometimes reactionary, sometimes radical) to the original production of praxis in each discourse” (117). Third, drawing from his first two points, Cazdyn asserts that some of the most radical contemporary engagements with Buddhism, Marxism, and psychoanalysis are occurring outside of these fields in forms that might not seem to resemble Buddhism, Marxism, and psychoanalysis; yet these contemporary engagements are still connected to enlightenment, revolution, and cure.

Toward the end of his essay, Cazdyn turns toward the concept of nothing. In particular Cazdyn is interested in the work of Arata Isozaki because his negotiation of the problem of nothing speaks to the contradiction of “how to think and act for a radical break with our current situation (as individuals and as collectives) without reproducing global capitalism’s dominant ideological assumptions that there is no alternative, only more of the same” (164). According to Cazdyn, Isozaki’s negotiation of this problem is especially significant because it attempts to unite theory and practice.

For Cazdyn, Isozaki’s music hall “Ark Nova,” an impermanent, human heart-like structure that inflates right on top of the rubble of the past, always ready to be relocated and placed on top of the rubble of the future,” demonstrates the negotiation of the problem of nothing (170). “Arc Nova” makes no attempt to stop or withstand future disasters; instead, it imagines the possibility of a future different than our present. According to Cazdyn, “Ark Nova” bespeaks Isozaki’s interest in ma, or space-time. Isozaki’s use of Ma, Cazdyn continues, represents the “repressed on the return—the future that cannot be contained or managed, and always arrives as something that exceeds our present possibilities” (168). As such, ma is a central component of enlightenment, revolution, and cure.

In the first essay, Boon seems to conclude that meditation is—at least—one answer; in the second essay, Cazdyn concludes, “There is no answer. There is praxis” (173). That is, Cazdyn has no answer to the impossible question: “How does one still hold on to the desire for enlightenment, revolution, and cure without this desire turning into a self-satisfied retreat from the world, a sad militancy, a naïve optimism, or a nonsystematic critique of local transgressions and individual symptoms?” (171). “Ark Nova” represents one answer to the problem of praxis but it does not completely revolve it. Ultimately, praxis remains, and, potentially, the paradoxes that praxis reveals reinvigorate the radical component of Buddhism, Marxism, and psychoanalysis.

Morton closes the collection with his essay, “Buddhaphobia: Nothingness and the Fear of Things.” Morton’s work on Buddhaphobia clearly grows out of his previous theoretical writings, especially his work on dark ecology, strange strangers, and object-oriented ontology. Anyone familiar with Morton’s previous works will instantly recognize his intricate mesh of philosophical inquiry and clever prose: for example, at the close of his essay, Morton writes, “Or was American wing mirrors say: OBJECTS IN MIRROR ARE CLOSER THAN THEY APPEAR. Buddhaphobia is nothing but a fear of subjectivity as such” (252).

Morton’s essay investigates a fear of Buddhism or Buddhaphobia, a modern anxiety concerned with nothingness. For Morton, this nothingness is theoretically complex and would require a few pages of summary, and, or the sake of space, Morton’s nothingness is meontic nothingness, which has a “certain physicality, a physicality whose phenomena I cannot predictably demarcate from its reality in advance” (203). Meontic nothingness is queer and uncanny, speaking to the gap between thing and phenomenon.

Like Boon, Morton also addresses non-Buddhism, a framework that Morton sees as affected by Buddhaphobia. According to Morton, one weakness of non-Buddhism is that it is intellectually dismissive of devotion, or “nonconceptual intimacy of mind with itself,” which is central to many x-Buddhist schools (188). In addition, non-Buddhism rejects mindfulness as “relaxationism,” but Morton disagrees with this argument because “Buddhisms” never claim “calm attention” as a goal; instead, the emphasis is “what one is aware of…impermanence, suffering, emptiness” (188-89). Moreover, many Buddhist texts critique mindfulness so, in this manner, to critique mindfulness is to find oneself deeper within the Buddhist tradition.

The majority of Morton’s essay centers on Western modernity’s fear of Buddhism, consisting of and connected to a “fear of consumerism, fear of narcissism, fear of passivity, fear of loops, [and] fear of things” (213). This phobia is, at its core, a fear of intimacy with the self because what is within one is more than just oneself: “There is an entity in me that is not me…this idea compresses a central tenet of Mahayana Buddhism concerning Buddha nature—it is an entity in me that is more than me” (189).

Morton also attempts to counter Žižek’s (and others’) argument that Buddhism is narcissistic, and Morton does so, precisely by defending narcissism. Critics of Buddhism suggest that it is a religion of the self, concerned only with self-soothing. Yet, Morton responds that this critique is itself narcissistic: “The trouble with trying to step outside of narcissism is the same as the trouble with trying to step outside of language” (223). Morton continues, explaining that the critique of Buddhist as narcissistic stems from a “narcissistic woundedness so painful that it seems better to paint the whole world with its raw colors than examine itself in all its halting lameness” (223). For Morton, narcissism is necessary to relate to others and oneself.

By considering the cultural anxieties around Buddhism and nothingness, Morton suggests that we can recognize the weird encounters between Buddhism and critical theory that have been happening since the mid-eighteenth-century Jesuit accounts of Tibet that informed Hegel. An engagement with Buddhism also means a “meaningful encounter with commodities and consumerism, and thus with those unloved things we call objects” (251). To survive in the postmodern age, Morton concludes, people need a less fearful encounter with nothing and Buddhism.

Nothing: Three Inquiries in Buddhism represents a helpful starting point for spurring critical investigations of theory and Buddhism; yet, in my view, the collection is not without weaknesses. At times, the collected essays seem to meander, as Boon, Cazdyn, and Morton wrestle with the intersections between Buddhism and critical theory. This meandering is likely intentional as the three authors, moving through an array of theoretical and Buddhist works, attempt to answer their research questions, but it is meandering nonetheless and fails to retain a clear development of the argument. Additionally, because one of the work’s central concerns is theory, the work is obviously theory-heavy. The discussion of and dissection of theory is, of course, expected and reasonable, but some more explicit definitions and development of the authors’ theoretical concepts and texts could help keep readers more grounded in Nothing.

Beyond the essays themselves, Nothing includes a brief and helpful glossary of Buddhist terms, prepared by Claire Villareal. Certainly the glossary is not essential to Nothing, but it seems to serve as a significant part of Boon, Cazdyn, and Morton’s mission—that is, to spark a serious engagement with critical theory and Buddhism. The glossary offers a means for those in the philosophy and theory fields to fully digest Nothing as well as grasp basic terms that they can then incorporate into their own critical contemplations. Boon, Cazdyn, and Morton decide not to include a critical theory glossary, “assuming that most readers of this text will already have some familiarity with the critical theory lexicon” (19). As I have mentioned, a critical theory glossary to coincide with Villareal’s glossary might improve Nothing.

Still, as a work that attempt to jump start conversation about Buddhist and critical theory, Nothing succeeds. Boon, Cazdyn, and Morton neither attempt to synthesize their separate arguments nor do they pretend that they have said all there is to say about the intersection of Buddhism and theory. Nothing is certainly not a comprehensive treatment of Buddhism and theory; indeed, Boon, Cazdyn, and Morton announce, “This conversation is not intended to end, but rather to begin the investigation” (20). The three essays succeed through the ways in which the essays, while containing distinct arguments, speak to and interact with each other, especially in approaching the concept of nothing and the relationship between practice and thought. Despite its limitations, Nothing is a worthy attempt to prompt the “Buddhist turn” in critical theory.

_______________

 James M. Cochran is a doctoral student in the Religion and Literature Ph.D. program in Baylor’s English department. He teaches in the first-year writing program at Baylor, and his research centers broadly on twentieth-century and contemporary American literature, religion, and culture. He can be found online at Academia.edu or on Twitter.
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Humankind: Solidarity with Nonhuman People: Morton, Timothy: 9781786631329: Amazon.com: Books

Humankind: Solidarity with Nonhuman People: Morton, Timothy: 9781786631329: Amazon.com: Books



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Humankind: Solidarity with Nonhuman People Hardcover – August 22, 2017
by Timothy Morton (Author)
4.7 out of 5 stars 45 ratings



A radical call for solidarity between humans and non-humans

What is it that makes humans human? 
As science and technology challenge the boundaries between life and non-life, between organic and inorganic, this ancient question is more timely than ever.

 Acclaimed object-oriented philosopher Timothy Morton invites us to consider this philosophical issue as eminently political. 
In our relationship with nonhumans, we decide the fate of our humanity. 
Becoming human, claims Morton, actually means creating a network of kindness and solidarity with nonhuman beings, in the name of a broader understanding of reality that both includes and overcomes the notion of species.

 Negotiating the politics of humanity is the first crucial step in reclaiming the upper scales of ecological coexistence and resisting corporations like Monsanto and the technophilic billionaires who would rob us of our kinship with people beyond our species.

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Editorial Reviews

Review
“I have been reading Timothy Morton’s books for a while and I like them a lot.”
—Björk

“Considered by many to be among the top philosophers in the world, especially among those tackling issues related to human effects on our environment, Morton herein provides an important, spirited, and sometimes frenetic analysis of the foundational assumptions of Marxism and other -isms with regard to nature and culture.”
—Jeff Vandermeer, author of The Southern Reach trilogy, The Millions

“A very good introduction to what Theory (capital T) might have to say about climate change and species die-off.”
—Ted Hamlton, Los Angeles Review of Books

“A great work of cognitive mapping, both exciting and useful.”
—Kim Stanley Robinson, author of The Mars Trilogy (in praise of Hyperobjects)

“His book exemplifies the ‘serious’ humanities scholarship he makes a plea for. My head’s still spinning.”
—Noel Castree, Times Higher Education
 (in praise of The Ecological Thought)

“Sassy, brilliant, a genuine engagement with and of thought, this work tunes us to a thrilling, endorphinating way of thinking: my drug of choice.”
—Avitall Ronell, New York University (in praise of Nothing: Three Inquiries in Buddhism)

“Timothy Morton is a master of philosophical enigma. In Dark Ecology, he treats us to an obscure ecognosis, the essentially unsolvable riddle of ecological being. Prepare to be endarkened!”
—Michael Marder, author of The Philosopher’s Plant
 (in praise of Dark Ecology)

“A poetic tour de force that is both academically and philosophically rigorous.”
—Steven Umbrello, Journal of Critical Realism

“Drawing from the Buddhist understandings of emptiness and form, Morton develops a version of ‘object oriented ontology’ that seeks connection and particularity without essences, fully formed identities, or wholes.”
—Whitney A Bauman, Religious Studies Review
About the Author


Timothy Morton is Rita Shea Guffey Chair in English at Rice University. He is the author of 

  • Dark Ecology: For a Logic of Future Coexistence
  • Nothing: Three Inquiries in Buddhism; 
  • Hyperobjects: Philosophy and Ecology after the End of the World; 
  • The Ecological Thought; and Ecology without Nature.

Product details

Publisher ‏ : ‎ Verso (August 22, 2017)
Language ‏ : ‎ English
Hardcover ‏ : ‎ 224 pages

Customer reviews
4.7 out of 5 stars



Christine M. Skolnik

5.0 out of 5 stars Humankind Rocks!Reviewed in the United States on September 10, 2017
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In his characteristically eccentric and predictably enthralling new book, Humankind, Timothy Morton argues that Marxism has erred in excluding nonhumans from “social space,” but is capable of correcting its course because of its commitment to solidarity. The exclusion of nonhumans is a bug, rather than a feature of Marxist thought. Capitalism, based on property ownership and various forms of slavery, conversely, is necessarily exclusive and hierarchical.[i] Resources, including humans and nonhumans, are subordinated to the transcendent value of capital, and human beings, in effect, develop kinship bonds with capital rather than human and nonhuman beings. Folding anarchy back into Marxism, Morton argues that solidarity with nonhuman beings simply effaces our ties to consumer capitalism (“Kindness,” 2300 – 2313). Though Morton criticizes the New Left’s focus on identity politics for reproducing essential difference and thus undermining solidarity, his vision is certainly a boon for the Left (“Things in Common,” 207-261). I’m not quite sure if Morton’s radical reconfiguration of social space is Marxism as we know it, or as it was conceived, but Humankind might encourage intellectuals to trade their chains for an optimistic New New Left. Humans and nonhumans in solidarity, willing Trump’s last tweet.

One of Morton’s most radical concepts is the symbiotic real. I say it’s radical not because symbiosis is new, but because Morton presents non-hierarchical symbiosis as an integral feature of political life. When we become aware of the symbiotic real, solidarity is no longer a value, choice, or decision. It simply is, and any social, economic, or political theory that externalizes nonhuman beings is recognized as inoperable—an insolvent fantasy (“Things in Common,” 66 – 87). Another important element of Morton’s project here, and I think it’s his most significant one to date, is interrogating life, categorically. “Life” based on substance ontology, and specious distinctions between its various forms, is antithetical to life (“Life,” 807). Rather than subordinating life to the “agrologistic” principles of non-contradiction and the excluded middle, that create mutually exclusive categories of life and non-life, and identify life with autonomous being, Morton rediscovers and celebrates life as quivering, shimmering, spectral (“Life,” 770, 776, 846, 850, 860). He sings of life forms that overflow their boundaries, downward and upward. Human beings, composed of myriad nonhuman beings, and haunted by what have heretofore been considered inanimate objects; nonhuman beings composed of what have heretofore been considered inanimate objects, and haunted by human beings. “[T]he intrinsic shimmering of being” (“Life,” 860).

Subscendence is the most theoretically important concept of the book, and possibly the most important piece of Humankind’s political argument. Under the sign of subscendence, Morton illustrates that wholes are smaller and more fragile than the sum of their parts (“Subscendence,” 1767 – 1794). And this applies to menacing hyperobjects such as neoliberalism. Though we imagine it as Cthulu, Morton suggests neoliberalism may be ontologically small and easy to subvert. It pervades social space, but it cannot contain or rule its parts. Our fear and cynicism is based on an assumption that neoliberalism is a transcendent whole, but solidarity with human and nonhumnan beings can help us dismantle it. Locally unplugging from fossil fuel energy grids seems trivial, until we rediscover solidarity and begin to replicate such local forms of resistance (“Subscendence,” 1726 – 1828).

Subscendence replaces mastery. Because parts exceed wholes, and because all objects withdraw, increasing knowledge does not result in mastery. The more objects and levels of objects we discover, the more objects withdraw. And this includes our knowledge of ourselves. The more we know about ourselves the more we perceive our withdrawl. “You are a haunted house” (“Subscendence,” 1965). The dream of access to the thing itself is replaced by a real feeling of being followed or watched. Intimacy is paranoia, and truth is being haunted (“Subscendence,” 1912; “Kindness,” 2649)

Humankind, like human beings, is “a fuzzy, subscendent whole that includes and implies other lifeforms, as a part of the also subscendent symbiotic real” (“Subscendence,” 2013). This quote reminds us not to reify the symbiotic real—it’s not a new transcendent whole, God or Gaia. Just as humankind is haunted by the inhuman, so the symbiotic real is haunted by spectral beings in a spectral dimension (“Specters,” 1198; “Kindness,” 2274).

Another of the book's powerful and utterly persuasive concepts is “The Severing,” a “traumatic fissure” between the “human-correlated world” and the “ecological symbiosis of human and nonhuman parts of the biosphere” (“Things in Common,” 272). Solidarity is the “default affective environment,” but anthropocentrism suppresses solidarity between humans and nonhumans, and erects boundaries between humans (“Things in Common,” 296 – 299). The effects of this intergenerational trauma are widespread, resulting in a desert landscape “from which meaning and connection have evaporated” (“Things in Common,” 312, 355). This results in alienation, not from some transcendent presence but from “an inconsistent spectral essence we are calling humankind,” as well as the spectrality of nonhuman beings (“Species,” 2197-2201). “What capitalism distorts is not an underlying substantial Nature or Humanity, but rather the ‘paranormal’ energies of production” (“Species” 2204).

Ultimately, Morton argues that solidarity is kindness, and kindness is an unconscious aspect of ourselves, which we share with nonhumans (“Kindness,” 2283- 2306). Acknowledgement, awareness, and fascination are all aesthetic and ethical/political acts of solidarity (“Kindness,” 2296 – 2368). And since our origins lie in the symbiotic real, these “styles” of being also belong to nonhumans (“Kindness,” 2294, 2453, 2835). Indeed, recent animal behavior studies suggest that solidarity is inherited from nonhumans (“Kindness,” 2860). Morton ends by queering the active and passive categories, and “veering” love toward the environment (“Kindness,” 2963, 3119). Solidarity requires nonhumans because we are inseparable from the symbiotic real (“Kindness,” 3123 – 3127). We are them. “Solidarity just is solidarity with nonhumans.”

[i] “Things in Common,” 416, 430. All in-text references are to chapter titles and locations.

See complete review at Environmental Critique.

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Walter Lerchner

5.0 out of 5 stars Speculative Realism at it's bestReviewed in the United States on August 27, 2020
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With language reminiscent of Douglas Hofstadter combined with the sharp wit reminding of Richard Dawkins building on the penetrating logical clarity of Graham Harman’s Object-Oriented Ontology, Morton somehow finds the contradictory space between certainty and non-existence where life exists. Building on the tensions of Marx and Nitsche, Heidegger and Kant he arrives at a new ecology of the Symbiotic Real - humans and non-human objects including molecules, ideologies and societies, co-existing as part of symbiotic hyperobjects. Ideas that might just save us all, or at minimum shine light on our path towards dissolution.

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Richmond

5.0 out of 5 stars greatReviewed in the United States on September 29, 2018
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great

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Nicholas J. Perry-Guetti

3.0 out of 5 stars A Former Realist Returns to Idealism; a Postmodern Liberal Restructures MarxismReviewed in the United States on February 23, 2018

I avoided reviewing this book for a long time after reading it, as I have very mixed opinions of it. On one hand, I think that both the writing and many of the ideas expressed thereby are excellent, as Morton's writing (technically and stylistically) always is. I agree wholeheartedly with the most appreciative critics' reviews of the *content* of the book, to which I have nothing to add: in terms of text, Morton has always been a superb ecocritic and a compelling philosopher, and his writing has an allure that is impossible to overstate.

Philosophy, however is not just about content. It is also about context, sincerity and integrity. Up until now, Morton has championed the idea of "ecology without Nature", in which true ecological thinking dispenses with the Western myth of Nature as a given, reified object, and he has used as a reference the new philosophy movement of Object Oriented Ontology, a very interesting and endlessly applicable turn towards realism pioneered by Graham Harman, to support his rejection of Nature in favor of a non-holistic approach to ecological communities as dynamic multiplicities. 

In the last several years, Morton has become so associated with Object-Oriented Realism that he is considered one of its central figures. It was therefore with great disappointment that I read, in *Humankind*, Morton establishing a singular entity––the "Symbiotic Real"––as the sum total of all ecological relationships. The Symbiotic Real is Nature by another name, pure and simple, and although Morton goes to great lengths to explain that this is an "implosive" rather than an "explosive" holism, it is yet a reified object "over there" that we are all "part" of. This represents not only a rebranding of what he once considered a very bad idea (a sort of "new and improved" version of the very mechanistic, agrilogistical monadism he simultaneously decries––quite rightly, I believe), but also a sharply pronounced turn away from Speculative Realism to an identifiably idealistic way of thinking. Instead of the indefinite regress of beings so magically evoked in the object-oriented realist Graham Harman's philosophy (and Tim Morton's earlier work!), we now have a definite, easily knowable end-point for thinking ecology...the very picture of what Morton has elsewhere derisively called "the easy-think substance". It is, indeed, far too easy an answer to qualify as Object-Oriented Speculative Realism, in which the Real (Symbiotic or otherwise) is simply not directly knowable, as nothing we can know about it is ever really IT, and each revelation is only a prelude to the next stage of our search. This idealist turn represents OOO very badly, and should not in my opinion be taken as typical of the movement. This inconsistency is also not very representative of good philosophy in general, sacrificing rigorous experimental thinking for the sake of attractive, shining truths that are easy to digest.

Familiarity with Morton's blog and general online presence, outside of his books, also reveals another significant disconnect: this time a political rather than a philosophical one. Although he is a more than qualified Romanticism scholar (Romanticism, that is, in the sense of Jane Austen, Wordsworth, Da Quincy, Shelley, Coleridge, etc.), a startlingly innovative eco-critic (I strongly advise you to read Dark Ecology), and a peerless writer of alluring prose, one thing he is probably least qualified to attempt is the restructuring of Marxism he undertakes in this book. An outspoken centrist liberal Democrat who denounces with bitter ridicule such excessively radical figures as Bernie Sanders (in all seriousness, Sanders is no farther to the left than an old-school New Deal Democrat) for drawing votes away from candidates he considers more sensible, it is impossible to understand what Tim Morton could possibly have the right to recommend for the development of socialism, or indeed what *interest* he might have in even a modified form of Marxism. The compelling sociopolitical and human-ecological propositions he makes in the book would actually stand quite well without any mention of Marx at all, though this might require a longer book as the easy reference to the historical figure would necessitate more in-depth explanation, of which Morton would be easily capable.

And kindness, one would think, requires *no* explanation at all, and Humankind certainly centers around the theme of kindness. Again, however, Morton's presence online, outside of his own literature, reveals a level of intellectual combativeness at least as strident as the examples of it he often decries, both in this book and elsewhere. His appeal to kindness is touchingly eloquent and well-made; it is, however, the man's *words* that should inspire our course, rather than the man himself.

Mixed feelings indeed. The writing and *most* of the ecological ideas I loved as much as anything Morton has ever written before...probably better, actually. The misrepresentation of OOO philosophy and the playing fast-and-loose with Marxism is, I believe, unworthy of him, and of more serious philosophers and Marxist theorists, though I admit I certainly have no more familiarity with the latter than Morton does. Will I still read his soon to be published next book? You bet I will; I just hope its doubtless beautiful writing style will be better matched by an integrity of content and a consistency with the author's true gifts, because in Humankind, Morton goes very eloquently––and unfortunately––astray.

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Dan Schellenberg

5.0 out of 5 stars IncredibleReviewed in the United States on September 20, 2017
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Fantastic book and fantastic service

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LJS
3.0 out of 5 stars Good stuff, if only I knew what it meantReviewed in the United Kingdom on June 23, 2018
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impenetrable. I'm certainly not claiming to be a genius, but I do have a couple of masters' degrees and I couldn't work out what Morton is getting at. Its an interesting read - if you want to google every other sentence, but he assumes such a vast amount of previous reading that it must be impenetrable to anyone without a phd in the subject. Tim, once you've figured out what all this means, do you think you could write us plebs a pamphlet? Cheers,

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Duncan Spence
5.0 out of 5 stars The best reading of Marx(ism) since Harry CleaverReviewed in the United Kingdom on February 12, 2020
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Professor Morton's unusual style puts some people off. Which is a pity because what he writes "shows his working" as it used be said. He writes not only his thinking but the thinking of his thinking. According to Nietzsche this was one of the great dangers faced by philosophers trying to write, Morton knows this, he is conscious of writing in a way very different from the philosophers in Nietzsche's sights. This book is a marvellous tour round every issue faced by radicals.be they activists or intellectuals. Like all of Morton's work, this is a book about how to think differently.

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Laura
5.0 out of 5 stars Very insightfulReviewed in the United Kingdom on October 27, 2020
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Helped me get the A I needed plus it was an insanely interesting read.
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François Truyts
5.0 out of 5 stars Very, very interestingReviewed in the United Kingdom on January 15, 2020
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Existential paradigm shift
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4tt3nt4t
5.0 out of 5 stars I'm no academic though I do enjoy reading similar textsReviewed in the United Kingdom on September 6, 2017
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Well, I'm no academic though I do enjoy reading similar texts. I was blown away by his common sense & choice of actors.
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Humankind: Solidarity with Non-Human People

by
Timothy Morton
3.71 · Rating details · 273 ratings · 34 reviews
A radical call for solidarity between humans and non-humans

What is it that makes humans human? As science and technology challenge the boundaries between life and non-life, between organic and inorganic, this ancient question is more timely than ever. Acclaimed object-oriented philosopher Timothy Morton invites us to consider this philosophical issue as eminently political. In our relationship with nonhumans, we decide the fate of our humanity. Becoming human, claims Morton, actually means creating a network of kindness and solidarity with nonhuman beings, in the name of a broader understanding of reality that both includes and overcomes the notion of species. Negotiating the politics of humanity is the first crucial step in reclaiming the upper scales of ecological coexistence and resisting corporations like Monsanto and the technophilic billionaires who would rob us of our kinship with people beyond our species. (less)

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Hardcover, 224 pages
Published July 4th 2017 by Verso
Original Title
Humankind: Solidarity with Non-Human People
ISBN
1786631326 (ISBN13: 9781786631329)
Edition Language
English

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Oct 01, 2017Nick rated it it was ok
Stylistically designed to mask a lack of novel ideas or interesting synthesis of existing knowledge. Smug and obfuscatory language is knowingly used to couch a series of ideas the author seems to beleive are evident in their assertion without recourse to real world context or evidence (evidence? Reductionist!), interjected with non-sequiturs and cringe worthy folksiness. At least I was able to scrape the bibliography for interesting references, references this text puts a fog in front of rather than shines a light on. (less)
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Sep 06, 2017Andy rated it it was amazing
Reading this book was like having the conversation that comes at the end of the film "Her," but where I, the reader, realize that Tim, with Alan Watts/Buddhist flavors, has achieved like a quantum capacity beyond my capacity to imagine.
BUT, unlike in "Her," I didn't feel narcissistic and depressed to witness this leap that left me limning my limits. Because things flicker and I still see some of them. (less)
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Oct 18, 20175 Track rated it it was amazing
Shelves: go-read-this-now
Bear with Morton as he states his position & defines his terms. It's slow & careful going. Plow ahead if you are uncertain, backtrack as needed—or don't, & count on your capacity to integrate knowledge while you are doing other things. Read it before you go to sleep, & dream about the concepts in the form of relations between your pickup truck & your apartment, city streets & inclement weather, music & food.

It should not be 'radical' to think that we might consider 'non-humans' in our worldview, in our day-to-day & moment-to-moment. That it IS radical should give anyone pause for thought.*

What is more interesting here is the idea that in defining our selves as 'human'—as opposed to everything else, as opposed to 'nature'—we have set in motion a long-running machine which intends to destroy meaning, context, interconnectedness, if it has to destroy the world to do so.

*(or thoughtful paws) (less)
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Apr 10, 2020Perry rated it it was ok · review of another edition
Shelves: philosophy-lit-theory
It took me two tries, but I finally managed to finish this book, and it was, to say the least, frustrating.

The goal of the book is to imagine a Marxism that includes nonhumans. This is very theoretical, and Morton passes through ontology, metaphysics, sociology, and so on to make his point. However, what this practically means (and this is the unfortunate bit) remains to be explained. Although by no means does this invalidate the book, the word "veganism" does not appear, and to my knowledge "vegetarianism" appears only once -- despite the fact that the predominant way in which humans interact with some of the most abundant life-forms on the planet is by killing them and eating them or using the byproducts for other purposes. You would think this would be at least addressed. But, and I do understand this, this is a book about philosophy and as such it is heavy on theory. It is a playful journey through the history of ideas. But the problem with speculative realism (and OOO or object-oriented ontology, the scene/school with which Morton is most closely associated) is that it does't change anything about how one interfaces with the world. It is a shuffling around of the categories of being "behind the scenes".

There are a handful of interesting concepts in this book, and though Morton's method of philosophy is irreverent and sloppy, a few shining bits of insight break through. Let's start with those.

First, there is the concept of what Morton classifies as the "correlationist" world view. To paraphrase Kant, there is truly a world out there, but all that we (we being humans, and often humans of a specific caste) can access is data about that world. There is a gap, and so one restricts the definition of "world" to be the sphere accessed by humans. Morton imagines a slider between the "correlator" and "correlatee". What is necessary, then, is to turn the slider towards letting the thing-in-itself assert itself. Of course, any "access mode" we have is incomplete, and we cannot escape the prison of our perception, so this doesn't much change how we think about nonhumans. But downstream of this ontology (which is related to animism or First Peoples religion) one can imagine a world in which the agency of nonhumans is treated with more reverence. An intriguing idea, and one I agree with.

Next, there is the "Severing", a moment (but really a process located everywhere in space and time-- what Morton calls a hyperobject) at which humans walled off the nonhuman concomitant with the Neolithic revolution. Morton asserts that a truly staggering amount of Western cultural perceptions is a consequence of the trauma of this event. While I don't really buy this, it is true that exclusionary societal structures necessarily entail violence, and that speciesism and racism can both be seen as mirroring the cloistering-in of humanity away from nature that is the Severing. At the very least, it is true that in "taming nature", there is a violent exclusion going on, one which certainly has higher order effects.

Morton critiques teleology in a number of guises, and this is where things start to get sloppy. A number of terms are defined as being "the same", as the group of "things Morton doesn't like" grows like a game of Katamari Damacy. There is Hegel's Geist, "explosive holism" (the belief that the whole is greater [in what sense? Keep wondering!] than the sum of its parts), agrilogistics, western patriarchy, Mesopotamian utilitarianism, and so on. For the record, I more or less agree with this critique, but the connections drawn between all these subtly different concepts are not at all well-justified. In its stead, Morton posits a theory of "implosive holism", or "subscendence", the belief that the whole is "less than the sum of its parts". Again, it's a bit of a mystery what more than/less than mean exactly (Morton says "has more qualities than", which doesn't clear much up) but the attractiveness of the idea survives. Instead of thinking of each individual as subservient to capitalism, the human species, the planet etc, we turn this upside down and say that the individual is more than a component of a whole. This is subtly different than neoliberal individualism (there is no society), since instead, individual and society are placed on more or less equally footing. There is some dodgy mathematics here where Morton argues that a forest is "ontologically smaller" (there is no such thing) than its trees because a forest is one thing, and each tree is one thing. It's not nearly as original an idea as Morton seems to think it is, nor does this theory make neoliberalism or capitalism less powerful and dominant, but it is an appealing idea. I'm not willing to go to bat for Morton, though, when he insists that "cynical reason" is all that is behind the belief that capitalism is more powerful than any of us.

One of the ways in which teleology is self-destructive is that in an "explosive holist" framework, quantity of life is more important than quality of life, which is ultimately how the proliferation of life becomes a death drive. We see this confirmed in climate change. The problem is that the concept of life is not so stark. This is where Morton introduces (or parlays Derrida's concept of) spectrality, which is unfortunately very muddy.

Spectrality is a "shimmering" an "X-quality", and a superpower. It is the paradox that something is exactly what it is, yet not exactly what it appears. At the same time it is the potentiality of the future, "givenness", the curiosity of ennui, the uncanny, and more. At the very least, I agree with Morton that humans are haunted. By the weight of dead traditions, the potentiality of the future, and the halo of nonhuman entities with which we are independent in the "symbiotic real". Solidarity is, for Morton, recognizing this spectrality. Recognizing our interdependence with nonhumans is part of this.

Most of the book meditates on these ideas and a few more. There is also a fascinating and utterly unnecessary analysis of the Christopher Nolan movie Interstellar. The ideas double back on themselves, and at some points one wonders if one has accidentally jumped backwards a few chapters. You haven't, it's just that the structure of this book is not exactly linear. It's more of an improvised homily than anything.

But its maddening structure is not the worst part of this book. In fact, at times I found the structure to be quite beautiful, as there is a poetic interconnectedness to it all. A total lack of direction combined with the almost imperceptible feeling of progress -- it was almost dreamlike at times.

The style of Morton's prose -- which blends high culture, with low culture, abstract philosophy-jargon with slang and breezy conversation -- is not that fresh or new anymore. At times it is genuinely exciting, and there are nuggets of profundity in this book, as you would find in any two hundred page work of philosophy. But Timothy Morton is not Nietzsche. Most of the time, however, it is cheeky to the point of irritating, especially when it is totally opaque. This is especially maddening when the book takes a turn for the New Age, as Morton recklessly flirts with exponents, quantum physics, Möbius strips, the continuum hypothesis (which one of you told him about the continuum hypothesis?!) and other quantum spirituality Deepak Chopra clichés, never making it totally clear how serious he intends these metaphors to be.

It's not that the writing style is obfuscating here -- that would imply there is something to be obfuscated. Instead, Morton seems content to half-commit to half-positing a half-idea, and let you do the rest of the work for him. Among some of the most irritating Zen koans here:

"X just is Y" (usually not given with any serious explanation)
"X is retweeting Y" (Kant retweeting Hegel....it just makes one cringe a bit, doesn't it?)
“Greater than” must mean “having more qualities than.” “More real than” must mean “having more essence than.”(Dodgy ontology and metaphysics)
"X is the cool kids version of Y"
"X is cheap" (Probably the most maddening of them all, as the central thesis of the book is that 'solidarity is cheap', but it unclear whether cheap means abundant, easy to access, easy to cultivate, or something else entirely)
"An idea exists in the same way as a quasar" (Yet more dodgy metaphysics)
"X is a twelve inch remix of Y"
"X exists in the VIP lounges of agricultural-age religions"

While Humankind does occasionally reach the exalted key of joyful, playful philosophical theorizing, its flimsy foundations, sloppy methodology, and tendencies towards philistinic pseudo-profundity ultimately render the whole book more of a gesture towards a theory of solidarity with nonhumans than what it could have been, a thought-provoking and thorough manifesto. There is enough philosophy in here to keep the curious reader entertained (and it is probably worth skimming the bibliography just for culture -- Morton is nothing if not a skilled name-dropper), and equally enough sketchiness to keep a disciplined and clear thinker agitated. (less)
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Jul 12, 2018Bruce rated it really liked it
As a representative of OOO- Object Oriented Ontology- Timothy Morton rejects "Correlationalism" which is the tendency for Philosophy to persistently have only two options - Is reality a construct of the human mind? or is the human mind the product of physical substantial objectivity? A third consideration is a de-anthropocentric approach where all objects, from the smallest particles to the great galaxies and ourselves have a mutual referential interplay. That is to say my perception of the flower is of no less or of more importance than the flowers' perception of me. Whether connected to the above or not, he also dismisses what he calls "hyperobjects" - not too dissimilar to the post modern dismissal of the meta-narrative. A hyperobject is any whole that is considered to be greater than the sum of its parts - "Nature" being one. Timothy's argument is that these two perceptions limit the contribution we can have towards ecology. Only as we truly relate to objects and participate from a bottom up rather than a top down approach can we make a positive contribution. There is much more to this book and apologies for any misrepresentation(s) I may have made. I read it a couple of months ago.
My personal interest is from a theistic perspective. Timothy quite clearly dismisses the idea of God as just one more hyperobject. I think (at least my idea of) God can cope with that. For me the greatness of God does not consist in bigness but in how small God can become yet remain God. I believe fully in the bottom up idea - hence the incarnation.
The deanthropocentrism is also containable within my theology. While I still believe that man is created in God's image I do believe that religious man has falsely interpreted this to mean that humankind is more important - more valuable - and the rest of creation is a mere commodity to that end. But if we take the words of Christ who said "let him who is the greatest become the least - become the servant of all" seriously, then the closer we are to God's image the least we become. The outcome should be that complexity carries with it responsibility and this in Christian terms means to become a humble servant of creation - to care selflessly for all objects.
I understand the god that Timothy is dismissing but there are different ways to view God that actually affirm his concerns and contribute to his aims in this book.
That whole is not greater than the sum of its parts is an oversimplification although I believe that what Timothy is saying "What if we consider the whole is not greater than the sum of its parts". That said I would say that the whole does not needto be greater than the sum of its parts but it can be. Take England football team last night each individual player was brilliant but as a team they just didn't work well. On other occasions the team worked well and produced something that exceeded the sum of the individuals. So that would need looking into (Perhaps he did - sorry if that's the case)
At the end of the book I became aware of the significance of the title "Humankind" (Trudeaux would be impressed!) and the meaning implied by the word "kind" as in kinship as in mutual reciprocal participation in this thing we call life illiciting respect and compassion.
I've missed loads out and made considerable highlights which I will have to go back to but for all its complexity and quirky terms, whatever the motive, I have come away enlightened, informed and thinking in more depth, my part in the cosmos and my faith in God. For that I am grateful :) (less)
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Mar 17, 2019Owen Moorhead rated it it was ok
I considered awarding this an extra star for chutzpah, but I couldn't do it.

This is a book that defines "spectre", "rock", and "solidarity", but neglects to explain a sentence like, "In the world of macro-Hegel, the Slinky is implausibly capable of going upstairs." At one point, I forgot what page I was on and skipped ahead fifty pages or so without realizing it. Now that I've finished, I'm still not sure if I actually read the whole book. It's a mess.

I should add that I am sympathetic to many of the arguments made by Morton in this book, so I was rooting for him.

But it's just such a bewildering barrage of references, "cool professor"-speak ("Micro-Hegel is generally awesome", "Infrasound is a Tolstoy novel about mountains, oceans, and deserts", etc.), and then at the end there's an extended exegesis of "Interstellar" that is totally incomprehensible. That was really the final nail in the coffin of the book for me, because I don't care what Tim Morton says, that movie was terrible.

I picked up this book because I was interested in a book about "Solidarity with Non-Human People." Maybe I'm a dummy. This book is about many things, but perhaps least of all "solidarity with non-human people." Rarely have I felt so keenly the truth of the old saw about judging books by their covers.

Having read one other of his books ("Dark Ecology: For a Logic of Future Coexistence"--again, great title), I am beginning to suspect that he has a hat full of cool book titles and subtitles and chooses them at random whenever he finishes a new one.

I'll probably keep reading his books, though. (less)
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Apr 04, 2019b rated it it was amazing
Shelves: non-fiction, theory
I’ve read a lot of Morton, and probably with the huge mistake of not totally immersing myself in Graham Harman and the other OOO-types in advance. I might actually hate Morton, but also find myself bursting out in laughter when he writes things like “again I must be the devil,” because I think he somehow knows how much I hate him, and I realize now that a lot of what he is doing is “playing.” I’m sure some folks have spent careers trying to “debug” Marxism, and done so a lot less successfully than Morton does (or doesn’t? It doesn’t seem like he’s quite all the way there in this, but it was still nice following his ideas in this book, particularly as it reads more coherently than Dark Ecology did). Morton cuts to the chase when necessary, makes the best of a discipline obsessed with jargon by making his own candied-buzzwords (his are always the sweetest), and by pointing out some things that we really need to remember when we “do theory,” most importantly, that dumb questions are really important, maybe most important. I can see the appeal for those who love him, and I can see how folks who are tangled up in the wires of obfuscation and purity-politics and finding truth in one clear philosophical line are completely flabbergasted by Morton’s appeal. Not sure I can recommend it, but if any of this sounds appealing, why don’t you give it a go? (less)
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Jan 09, 2018M rated it it was amazing
Shelves: anthropocene, favorite, sociology, non-fiction, recommended
Perforated, fuzzy, broken & spectral: that’s how the arguments of this book are, making its way through continental philosophy and Marxism to insert non-humans, only to argue, ultimately, that there’s no such thing as solidarity without non-humans anyway. Reading it is a game: annoying, because you don’t know the rules, but nonetheless, fascinating. Morton keeps being in conversation with this, and that, from critical theorists to pop icons, jumping and jumping, unable to be grasped, constantly unfollowing himself from the reader’s understanding. But for all that it tortured me with, I loved it. I both believe it and not believe it. It makes such great arguments: adding non-humans to marxist theory, ontologically unpinning species (and thus race, and racism, too), accepting the fuzziness of the world (its spectral x-being), but also its toughness (it’s object oriented, not socially constructed), strongly in favor of an implosive holism (one that isn’t a whole greater than the sum of its parts, but less – subscendence), and pushing (rocking) against anthropocentrism. But also, it’s not very serious, it’s rather playful, which is, maybe, the point, or part of it, anyway. Is it like this so it cannot be contradicted? Maybe. Morton would love that, getting into a space into which contradictions are possible, and present – an excluded middle. Getting us into a loop, or brain-fucked, or preferably both, but in a beautiful, disgusting kind of way.

<< Love is not straight, because reality is not straight. Everywhere, there are curves and bends, things veer. Per-ver-sion. En-vir-onment. These terms come from the verb „to veer”. To veer, to swerve toward: am I choosing to do so or am I being pulled? Free will is overrated. I do not make decisions outside the Universe and then plunge in, like an Olympic diver. I am already in. >>
(less)
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Jul 13, 2019Juan Pablo rated it it was amazing · review of another edition
I believe the role of philosophy has always been to question, to reflect, to envision all possibilities and the possibilities of those possibilities. To embrace and accept paradoxes and that nothing is certain or “written in stone”.
We live on an age where nothing is valid if it’s not “scientifically” proven. We also live on an age where we accumulate massive evidence of what fits our prejudice.
I felt that this work humbles ya down to where philosophy should. It points out how anthropocentrism clouds our vision in a new and fresh way. Even pointing out how philosophy can also be biased by our anthropocentrism and even envisioning anthropocentrism is in itself anthropogenic because we can never escape our “human” point of view. But like I said before. Philosophy should embrace paradoxes. It’s is its job.
I believe that philosophy is not out there to show us the answers, but to ask questions. Questions that disrupt our certainties and truths not validate them.
I’ve seen people slam this book because it has “over the top” or “pretentious” language to “say what has already been said” and that it provides no evidence of what it implies. Well. Sorry to disappoint you guys, this book is not a scientific paper. It embraces the philosophical paradox that what it implies might not be 100% true or factual but makes the observation that paradoxes are ok. We don’t need to fix on a law of non-contradiction. It’s a book about the paradox of acceptors anthropocentrism exists while looking at it through an anthropocentric lens.
It’s ok to accept paradoxes. That’s philosophy’s role. (less)
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