2023/06/21

범한철학회‘ 학술대회 ‘공동체를 넘어 공생체로’ 주제.

군산뉴스


 범한철학회‘2023 정기학술대회’국립군산대 개최

‘공동체를 넘어 공생체로’ 주제...미래 새로운 철학 대안 논의 2023-06-10 19:38



범한철학회(회장 김성환 군산대 철학과 교수), 원광대학교 HK+동북아시아인문사회연구소(소장 김정현 원광대 철학과 교수), 군산대 문화사상연구소(소장 유재민 군산대 철학과 교수)가 공동으로 주최한 “2023 정기학술대회”가 10일 국립군산대학교에서 개최됐다.
학술대회 주제는 ‘공동체를 넘어 공생체로’였고 
다중위기의 위협에 직면한 시대에 
철학이 어떻게 문제를 인식하고 어떤 대안을 찾을 것인가를 논의했다.

김성환 범한철학회 회장은 “기후, 환경, 에너지, 팬데믹, 과학기술, 민주주의, 국제관계, 경제 등 지구와 인류의 삶 전반에서 다중위기가 심각하고도 광범위하게 발생하고 있다”며 “다중위기는 특정한 국가나 분야 혹은 집단에 의해 발생한다기보다 모든 문제가 ‘서로 얽힌’ 상태에서 동시다발적으로 발생한다”고 진단했다.

또한 “단지 기술의 진보와 경제적 풍요 혹은 국가의 힘 등으로 다중위기를 해결할 수 있으리라는 통속적 기대는 환상에 불과하며 폭증하는 다중위기 앞에서 그 결함을 드러낸 근대적 세계관과 현대인의 생활양식을 근본적으로 반성하고 대체할 철학의 대안을 찾아야 한다”고 말했다.

원광대 HK+동북아시아인문사회연구소를 이끌고 있는 김정현 교수는 “인류세 시대에 ‘공생’은 더 이상 ‘인류가 함께 잘 살자’는 인간중심적 구호가 아니다”며 “그것은 인간(human)과 비인간(nonhuman)이 ‘상호 얽힘의 상태에서 내적으로 작용하는 존재의 복잡성’을 의미한다. 모든 존재는, 작게는 곰팡이 네트워크에서 크게는 행성 지구에 이르기까지, 공통의 것을 공유하고 있는 ‘공생체’(symbiont)에 다름 아니다”고 말했다.

또 “근대 민족국가의 정체성을 전제로 전개되었던 기존의 공동체 담론을 넘어서 인류 사회가 공통의 것(the common)을 기반으로 하는 공생의 세계로 전환할 것”을 제안했다.

이번 학술대회는 근대적 ‘공동체’를 대체하는 ‘공생체’가 과연 미래의 새로운 철학적 대안이 될 수 있을 것인가에 관해 열띤 발표와 토론을 이어갔다.

원광대 HK+사업단의 조성환 교수는「지구공생체 : 가이아와 한살림」에서 얽힘의 존재론과 공생의 세계관을 담을 수 있는 우리 철학의 가능성을 모색했다.

허남진 교수는 동북아시아 담론이「공동체에서 공생체로」옮겨갈 수 있는 철학적 배경을 타진했다.

박일준 교수는 「공생을 위한 ‘사이-존재’론: 공생-네트워크로서 Mycorrhizal network(균근류 네트워크) 모델」에서 자연계의 공생 네트워크 모델을 토대로 공생체의 새로운 철학적 존재론 건립을 시도했다.

공주대 김연재 교수의「공생주의에서 본 동중서의 음양오행관과 중화(中和)의 생명미학」, 강철 서울시립대 교수의「라투스의 사물의회는 비인간과의 공생을 어떻게 가능하게 하는가?」, 제주대 박서현 교수의「공통주의(commonism)연구의 의미와 필요 그리고 과제」 등에서 공생주의에 대한 동서양 철학의 다양한 접근이 이뤄졌다.

범한철학회 김성환 회장은 “학술대회가 열린 국립군산대는 올해 8월 세계잼버리가 개최되는 새만금에 인접한 국립대학이고 새만금의 브랜드 슬로건이 ‘새로운 문명을 여는 도시’이다”며 “새만금처럼 장기적이고 거대한 사업은 눈앞의 산업·경제적인 성과에만 매달려서 성공하기 어렵다”고 밝혔다.

이어 “여기서 펼칠 ‘새로운 문명’의 비전에 대한 진지한 고민이 필요하다. 세계 청소년들의 글로벌 축제를 앞두고 미래 세대가 ‘상호 얽힘’과 ‘존재의 복잡성’을 깨닫고 이전 세대가 심하게 망가뜨린 지구를 다 함께 살리며 살아가기를 바라며 이번 학술대회를 준비했다”고 강조했다.



김석주 기자 ( ju-stone@hanmail.net)

Damaging thinking: A review of Timothy Morton’s Being Ecological

 BOOK REVIEW www.ecologicalcitizen.net

 

Damaging thinking: A review of 

Timothy Morton’s Being Ecological

 

“W we know about ecology Adam Dickerson hy is everything we think 

About the author wrong?” the back cover 

Adam is a philosopher who of this book announces portentously. 

has taught at universities in the UK and    It is, we are told, written by no less a  Australia. personage than the “philosopher prophet 

He is the author of Kant on of the Anthropocene.” Turning to the 

Representation and Objectivity front cover we see that the designers have 

(Cambridge University thought fit to emboss there a vacuous 

Press, 2004) and various testimonial from the Icelandic popstar papers in philosophy, Björk, who tells us “I have been reading aesthetics, and cultural 

Tim’s books for a while and I like them 

history. He is an Associate a lot.” Editor of the Journal.

‘Tim’ is Timothy Morton, a professor 

Citation of English at Rice University in Houston, Dickerson A (2019) Damaging Texas, USA, and author of a number of thinking: A review of Timothy books in ‘eco’ inflected aesthetics and 

Morton’s Being Ecological. The critique (including Morton [2010] and 

Ecological Citizen 2: 198–9.

Morton [2016]). Once upon a time, ‘Tim’ Keywords was a fine analyst of romantic poetry, but then something happened – ‘Tim’ 

Anthropocentrism; became a celebrity academic. This book 

ecological ethics

is both an expression and a result of that unfortunate metamorphosis.

About the book

I will begin with the most obvious feature 

Author: Morton T of this book: it does not really contain any Year: 2018

arguments or reasoning at all; instead, it 

Publisher: Pelican Books 1 These riffs 

consists of “a series of riffs.”

(Penguin Random House) combine name-dropping of high theory 

Paperback ISBN: 

978-0241274231



and philosophical terms of art, mixed in a jocular way with preposterous verbal sophistries, pop-cultural references and contemporary idioms. It is hard to communicate the full flavour of Morton’s style in a short space, but the book is full of sentences like this: “time is an irreducible property of things, part of the liquid that jets out of a thing, undulating” (p 170). Or this: “Things are connected but in a kinda sorta subjunctive way. There’s room for stuff to happen” (p 54). Or this: “the full-on, twelve-inch remix of Husserl is full-on object-oriented ontology” (p 83). 

198 

Or this: “Karl Marx thinks of capitalism proper emerging from the collective whirr of enough machines. When enough of them are connected and whirring away, pop! Out comes industrial capitalism” (p 93). To get his profundity on the cheap, Morton is also fond of insisting that straightforwardly comprehensible claims are in fact ‘mysterious’ or ‘uncanny’ or ‘paradoxical’ – for example: “Evolution presents us with a continuum: humans and fish are related, so that if you go back far enough, you’ll find that one of your very, very distant grandmothers was a fish. Yet you are not a fish. Wherever we slice the continuum, we will find paradoxes [sic] like that” (pp 182–3). 

The book, in other words, does not position its readers as rational beings, and seek to persuade them via argument and evidence. Instead, the reader is positioned as a witness to a performance – the performance of Tim Morton being Tim Morton. What we have here is something all too familiar in the age of Instagram, ‘personal branding’ and the selfie stick: for all its greenwashed surface, this is the authoring of celebrity.

This explains the insistent reflexivity of the prose. While the book claims to be about the ‘uncanny paradoxical mystery’ (etc., etc.) of the other-than-human, it is in fact about Morton – so much so that it should really have been titled Being Tim Morton. Talking constantly about himself (often – disconcertingly, and rather like Kanye West – in the third person), we hear about Morton’s struggles with jet lag as he flies to speak at prestigious universities across the world; about his friendships with Yoko Ono and musicians with only one name; about the expensive art that hangs on the walls of his rich 

www.ecologicalcitizen.net Damaging thinking: A review of Timothy Morton’s Being Ecological

 

The Ecological Citizen Vol 2 No 2 2019 friends’ expensive houses; about his “ginger reddish” facial hair, and so on and so forth. This is a tale told from the comfortable, cosmopolitan life of the celebrity theorist – a tale told with that expectation (constitutive of celebrity) that the reader will be fascinated by such details.

Can anything of interest be extracted from this commodified simulacrum of philosophy? If we attempt to read through the clouds of dust raised by Morton’s barrage of mock-profundities, then the following would, I think, be a fair summary of this book’s main thesis. Why is everything we think we know about ecology wrong? It is because our very ways of talking and thinking about ecology are mired in anthropocentrism. We do not, Morton claims, need knowledge of more facts, and we do not need more sermons demanding we change our lives. Instead, Morton suggests, what we need to learn is “how to live ecological knowledge” (p 11). We will learn this via a non-anthropocentric awareness of the profound ways we are enmeshed in ecosystems – of our interrelations with the other-than-human. This awareness cannot take the form of knowledge, because that necessarily entails fitting other-than-human things within human conceptual frameworks – it is, for Morton, a kind of Procrustean coercion of the other-than-human. For a genuinely nonanthropocentric awareness of the otherthan-human, what is needed is thus a non-conceptual awareness. Morton finds a model for this awareness in Immanuel Kant’s aesthetics, and its account of our experience of beauty – a judgment that (according to Kant) is both ‘disinterested’ (non-instrumental) and non-conceptual. Hence, Morton writes, “when I experience beauty, I am coexisting with at least one thing that isn’t me, and doesn’t have to be conscious or alive, in a non-coercive way […] We coexist; we are in solidarity” (p 131). For Morton, then, our experience of art is a glimpse of a non-anthropocentric awareness of, or openness to, the otherthan-human, and thereby provides a model for a genuinely ecological ethics and politics.

So far we have a sketch of an outline of a shadow of a skeleton of a possible position – but this is as far as the book goes. All of the important questions raised by this view are ignored. Most crucially, the book has nothing to say about what ethics and politics might follow from this nonanthropocentric awareness. Morton is systematically evasive when it comes to saying something about ethical principles or resolving ethical problems – let alone addressing questions about political strategy, concrete actions, policies, organizational structures and so forth. Put another way: this book has nothing to say to us in our current predicament, other than to preach a pretentiously greenwashed version of the doctrine of the inward light. Its publication in the Pelican imprint (which, in the past, has published significant works by such figures as Freud, Virginia Woolf, George Bernard Shaw, Erving Goffman and Lewis Mumford) is a morbid symptom of the commodified state of our intellectual life in 21st century capitalism – the capitalism that is destroying the Earth, and which is deeply inscribed in the very form of this work.

Notes

1 The phrase is Nathan Brown’s, from his devastating review (2013: 64) of Morton’s work in the context of the broader metaphysical framework of ‘object oriented ontology’. An assessment of the latter is beyond the scope of this review, but for a systematic (and genuinely witty) demolition of its pretensions, see Wolfendale (2014).

References

Brown N (2013) The nadir of OOO: From Graham Harman’s Tool-Being to Timothy Morton’s Realist Magic: Objects, ontology, causality (Open Humanities Press, 2013). Parrhesia 17: 62–71.

Morton T (2010) The Ecological Thought. Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA, USA.

Morton T (2016) Dark Ecology: For a logic of future coexistence. Columbia University Press, New York, NY, USA.

Wolfendale P (2014) Object-Oriented Philosophy: The noumenon’s new clothes. Urbanomic, Falmouth, UK.

 

 

The Ecological Citizen Vol 2 No 2 2019 199


2023/06/20

Being Ecological by Timothy Morton review – a playfully serious look at the environment | Science and nature books | The Guardian

Being Ecological by Timothy Morton review – a playfully serious look at the environment | Science and nature books | The Guardian




Review
Being Ecological by Timothy Morton review – a playfully serious look at the environment


There are not too many ‘scary facts’ in this ambitious book, which draws on both Kantian philosophy and Star Wars to explain our relationship to the world


PD SmithSat 20 Jan 2018 19.59 AEDT





37



From the outset, Timothy Morton is very clear about the kind of book he isn’t writing. This is not another “confusing information dump, slapping you upside the head to make you feel bad”. What he terms “ecological information delivery mode”, heavy in “factoids” and accompanied by a “guilt-inducing sermon”, is counterproductive. Deluging readers with scary facts about global warming, which is what most environmental writers do, is “inhibiting a more genuine way of handling ecological knowledge”. To understand the true gravity of the current situation we need “to start to live the data”.

At the heart of this immensely ambitious book is a radical critique of how we know and relate to the world around us. Morton argues that our scientific age is characterised by an epistemological gulf between objects and data: “things are mysterious, in a radical and irreducible way”. Critical of a scientistic approach to knowledge, he believes the world can be grasped only by moving to a viewpoint that is both experiential and reflexive. The observer needs to be part of the equation: “Being ecological includes a sense of my weird inclusion in what I’m experiencing.”



In order to “live ecological knowledge”, Morton thinks we need to break through the “massive firewall” our Neolithic ancestors built between humans and non-humans some 12,000 years ago, as they began creating agriculture and theistic religions. Today we need to abandon the arrogance of anthropocentrism. In a memorable analogy, drawing on both Kantian philosophy and Star Wars, Morton observes that the idea of “mind melding with a non-human being” resembles the Force, an invisible field that permeates and binds everything. Sensing this “force”, the underlying connectedness of all things, is an experience Morton describes as “attunement”.

To read Being Ecological is to be caught up in a brilliant display of intellectual pyrotechnics. The playful seriousness of Morton’s prose mixes references to Blade Runner and Tibetan Buddhism with lyrics from Talking Heads and concepts from German philosophers. He doesn’t offer a plan to make society more environmentally friendly; instead, in what is an inspiringly idealistic book, he calls for a paradigm shift in our relationship to the world.

Being Ecological is published by Pelican. To order a copy for £7.64 (RRP £8.99) go to guardianbookshop.com or call 0330 333 6846. Free UK p&p over £10, online orders only. Phone orders min p&p of £1.99.

===




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Pelican Books #17
Being Ecological


Timothy Morton

3.57
626 ratings94 reviews

'To read Being Ecological is to be caught up in a brilliant display of intellectual pyrotechnics' P.D.Smith, Guardian

Why is everything we think we know about ecology wrong?
Is there really any difference between 'humans' and 'nature'?
Does this mean we even have a future?

Don't care about ecology? This book is for you. Timothy Morton, who has been called 'Our most popular guide to the new epoch' (Guardian), sets out to show us that whether we know it or not, we already have the capacity and the will to change the way we understand the place of humans in the world, and our very understanding of the term 'ecology'. A cross-disciplinarian who has collaborated with everyone from Björk to Hans Ulrich Obrist, Morton is also a member of the object-oriented philosophy movement, a group of forward-looking thinkers who are grappling with modern-day notions of subjectivity and objectivity, while also offering fascinating new understandings of Heidegger and Kant. Calling the volume a book containing 'no ecological facts', Morton confronts the 'information dump' fatigue of the digital age, and offers an invigorated approach to creating a liveable future.

GenresPhilosophyNonfictionEnvironmentEcologyScienceClimate ChangeNature
...more



230 pages, Mass Market Paperback

First published January 1, 2018
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Timothy Morton73 books280 followers

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Timothy Bloxam Morton is Rita Shea Guffey Chair in English at Rice University. They are the author of Dark Ecology: For a Logic of Future Coexistence; Nothing: Three Inquiries in Buddhism (with Marcus Boon and Eric Cazdyn); Hyperobjects: Philosophy and Ecology after the End of the World; and other books.




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Neil MacDonald
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February 8, 2018
This is a playful (in a very odd way) book about a serious subject (ecological crisis). Morton is a philosopher not a scientist. He is at pains to tell you there are no truthy factoids in the book. Rather, it’s an appeal that we should think about life, the universe, and everything in a different way. His style is folksy (or as folksy as you can get with object oriented ontology), and, like a mythic sprite, he delights in turning our “common sense” understanding of stuff upside down. His basic argument is that the way we think about ecology is distorted by the intellectual legacy of the hierarchical societies that came into being with the invention of agriculture. This legacy separates subject from object, the human from the non-human, spirit from body. In short, it’s anthropocentric patriarchy. When we see the environment as something we can operate on, we destroy the connection of everything to everything else. He feels most at home, not with a scientific grasping of the universe but with an artistic one, or even one of “enchantment” – “the aesthetic experience,” he says, “is about solidarity with what is given.” He is telling us how to care. And he reassures us, we already do. The parts, he says, are greater than the whole.

As play, I enjoyed the book’s deeply intellectual anti-intellectualism. As a writer, I enjoyed his turning the world upside down, his archaeology of thought. It was a wonderfully pleasurable artistic experience reading the book, a wander through a hall of mirrors. But intellectually, practically, politically I’m less sure how useful the book is (Morton, of course, would say I’m asking the wrong, utilitarian, question). The mirrors seem to go along with a fair amount of smoke. There are too many logical elisions – to take one example the statement “when you play a game like cricket or baseball, the ball arrives at your bat within a few milliseconds. That’s faster than your brain.” The elision here is between brain and conscious brain. Of course it’s not faster than your brain or you couldn’t hit it. Or, again, his argument that not knowing why a painting moves you is like not knowing why you should care about the environment, as if there was only one way to not know things.

Reading the book isn’t really the point though. Letting it happen to you is. Its object is to “re-confuse” us, in the hope that will re-attune us to our environment. Perhaps, you have to be a philosopher for this to work.

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Uroš Đurković
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February 13, 2021
OOO je, osim što izgleda divno šašavo, skraćenica za „objektno orijentisanu ontologiju”.
A izgled, u neku ruku, i ne vara: OOO je filozofski pravac 21. veka, koji pokušava da preispita odnos između subjekta i objekta u smeru afirmacije postojanja objekta kao takvog. Dakle, od Kanta u metafizici dominira tzv. korelacionizam, iliti (putem uzročnosti) potvrda objekta u svesti subjekta, dok predstavnici OOO smatraju da objekat ne samo što postoji nezavisno od subjekta (što, realno, u filozofiji i nije neka novina), već čovekova svest nema privilegovano mesto u poimanju sveta te predstavlja samo jednu od ravnopravnih mogućnosti. Takođe, OOO smatra da misao ne samo što nije jedini način pristupa svetu, nego nije ni najbolji, jer najboljeg pristupa nema. (Uostalom, pitam se ja, u odnosu na šta se može ustanoviti ovo stepenovanje, a da nije izvan same misli?) A budući da je istorija ljudskog roda neraskidivo povezana sa istorijom misli, tako da je čovek jedini posednik misli, a time i centar značenja i moći, OOO pokušava da napravi silovit odmak od antropocentrizma.

A zašto je ovo uopšte važno? Misao o odnosu subjekta i objekta temeljno određuje i ekološka pitanja. Timoti Morton, kao jedan od istaknutijih predstavnika OOO-a, uzbudljivo pokazuje različita gledišta koja uspevaju da uzdrmaju niz naizgled očiglednih predstava o prirodi. Njegova fenomenologija znanja je vrcava, neočekivana, a bujajući (anti)intelektualizam inspirativan. I više od praktičnih rešenja, Morton se bavi ekologijom kao diskurzivnim konstruktom i njenim posledicama na mišljenje. Međutim, ovde je mnogo reči posvećeno i faktoidima (tzv. „lažnim činjenicama”), aroganciji nauke, estetici (lepota je u datosti koja donosi prepoznavanje nečega što nisam JA i što, na neki način, proizvodi vreme), ali npr. i naizgled sofističkoj argumentaciji da je celina manje od skupa delova – budući da celina predstavlja jedno, a delovi mnoštvo (opet, to je vezano sa teorijom o hiperobjektima, ali o tome drugom prilikom).

Bilo kako bilo, ovo je jedna zaista i eklektična studija (električno-eklektična), tobogan za misli koji nagrađuje tamo gde se najmanje očekuje. A zaključak se može naslutiti: priča o ekologiji često upućuje na ono što nema veze sa ekologijom, a stalni imperativ da budemo saobrazni ekološkoj misli, treba da bude drukčije shvaćen: mi već jesmo, hteli to ili ne, ekološka bića. Od prirode se ne može pobeći.


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Anna
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January 14, 2023
One of the reasons that I read a lot is my enjoyment of many different types of books and topics. After decades of reading, I'm also pretty good at judging whether a book will be my kind of thing. Thus I rarely give one or two star ratings. In the case of Being Ecological, it's especially surprising because I've already read and enjoyed another book by Timothy Morton on the same subject, The Ecological Thought, as well as a book about his preferred philosophy, Object-Oriented Ontology: A New Theory of Everything. Yet somehow I found Being Ecological so incredibly irritating that I would have left it unfinished had it not been the first nonfiction book of 2023. Abandoning it would have been such a poor omen for the year ahead that I pushed on.

It was not so much Morton's ideas that I had a problem with, although I am doubtful about many of them, but the way he explained them. The best hypothesis I can come up with about what happened here is as follows: Morton is an academic and talks about lecturing indifferent students in philosophy at one point in Being Ecological. So presumably he teaches, or has taught, generation Z. I've done so as well, not very competently, and can understand the urge to try and make your material more appealing to the youth. Could that be what he's attempting with this writing style?


In the beauty experience, there is some kind of mind-meld-like thing that takes place, where I can't tell whether it's me or the artwork that is causing the beauty experience: if I try to reduce it to the artwork or to me, I pretty much ruin it. This means, argues Kant, that the beauty experience is like the operating system on top of which all kinds of cool political apps are sitting, apps such as democracy. Nonviolently existing with a being that isn't you is a pretty good basis for that.

The first sentence is fine, but I cannot believe that the second is an accurate account of Kant. I also have no idea what 'cool political apps' even means. Whether such a style actually appeals to those under the age of 22 is a mystery, but I find this sort of thing pretty unbearable:


Art is a place where we get to see what it means to be human or whatever, which is why what I do is called humanities. But this isn't enough. One way this becomes obvious is when writing grant proposals that sound like pleading. Please, please don't hurt me, Mr Funding Source, I'm a sort of educated PR guy who is going to decorate this boring cupcake of scientism with these nice human-flavoured meaning-candies.

Such metaphors explain nothing. His constant use of 'retweet' is likewise tiresome and seems unlikely to age well. The Ecological Thought was not written in such a manner, indeed my review comments on how clearly the ideas in it are articulated! Being Ecological starts out reasonably well, with some thoughtful stuff about truth and falsity not being a simple dichotomy, then unravels around ninety pages in. I did not follow this logic:


When you draw a set of things, the circle you draw around those things is always going to be bigger than the set, physically speaking. Otherwise it wouldn't be able to encompass them. But how a drawing looks isn't the same as what it logically means. If everything exists in the same way, that means that wholes exist in the same way as their parts, which means that there are always more parts than there is a whole - which means the whole is always less than the sum of its parts. It's childishly simple when you think of it this way. So how come it's so hard to accept?

Maybe because that explanation isn't very coherent? Surely the childishly simple implication is that a whole is equal to the sum of its parts, not less? This section is titled 'Not Your Grandaddy's Holism' which is cringeworthy. On pages 186 and 187, by which point I was really annoyed, Morton summarises his argument as 'it's fine not to give a shit and to leave your ways of thinking unchanged because you're already an ecological being'. I paraphrase, as it's articulated in a much more tiresomely whimsical way. The point is that Morton critiques the ways we talk about ecology in a straw-man fashion without providing anything useful to replace them with. This is all the more frustrating because he periodically makes a promising point like:


For example, the idea of sustainability implies that the system we have now is worth sustaining. It implies furthermore that 'continuing for a longer time' is a hallmark of success, which in turn implies a model of existing having to do with persisting, going on, being constantly present. But we've established that things aren't like that. So in the end the style of efficiency is going to be stifling and uncreative, not allowing for malfunctions and accidents, which are ironically more likely the way things actually are. It's not the case that things are just functioning smoothly until they don't. Smooth functioning is always a myth.


That is all very well, but I've read it before elsewhere actually used effectively in an argument. I'm really disappointed with Being Ecological. It provided me with no useful new ways of thinking about the environment, the style was deeply irritating, and I know Morton can do much better. I strongly recommend reading something else about ecological philosophy instead, such as The Nutmeg's Curse: Parables for a Planet in Crisis, The Progress of This Storm: Nature and Society in a Warming World, The Shock of the Anthropocene: The Earth, History and Us, or indeed Morton's The Ecological Thought.
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René Bloemink
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September 5, 2018
When I stumbled upon some lectures by Timothy Morton, I was intrigued by his prospect of a different kind of thinking about being human at the brink of grand planetary changes by global warming. In 'Being Ecological', Morton tries to disrupt our usual way of thinking about it: the difference between nature and culture is non-sensical; everything is connected in intricate ways; objects are fuzzy and aren't fixed; we can't have any oversight on planetary issues because we're deeply involved in it; everything is ecology, even thinking about ecology, so we're already ecological if we like it or not.

In the first half of the book I was not sure if it was all common sense to me or that I didn't understand it at all. Morton's way of writing seems to be directed at achieving exactly this. Creating confusion, because everything radiates confusion. Morton writes like he talks: babbling, referencing, using unorthodox ideas and underexplained aphorisms. As a reader I really had to engage in a dialogue with the book - which is always a good thing in my opinion - but in second half of the book I found myself barely listening to the book without the desire of talking back.

I guess my takeaway from Being Ecological is that things are more complex and more connected to other things than what seems on the surface. Seeming, appearing, is laden with conceptual baggage and we can learn to see through our usual way of looking at things. We can take up a phenomenological stance towards things where we do not think we can obtain any kind of practical or intellectual mastery over it, but instead letting the things appear to us, like looking at a piece of art. In that aesthetic dialogue the object can appear anew, just like a psychedelic experience could provide. By the way, sometimes I feel that Object Oriented Ontology is a kind of psychedelic experience in the clothes of academic 21th century philosophy.

In the end, I was hoping that Morton would provide something that would really help in gaining a new constructive perspective on being human in 2018. Instead, he left me with the feeling of wanting 'something more'.

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I would like to recommend The Spell of the Sensuous by David Abram in which he embraces a animistic/shamanistic/phenomenological perspective on what is to be ecological. It's about how the environment is always present in our experience, in who we are. That book is much more vivid and pronounced and maybe even accomplishes what this book by Morton is trying to achieve.

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Joris
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August 24, 2020
As a physicist and statistician, data and models are a natural way for me to understand climate change and the accompanying mass extinction of species. But I have had it all wrong, according to this book. Timothy Morton explains that it is unimportant and even dangerous to consume information if we don’t know how to think first (which we cannot). Knowing fact(oid)s such as the 1000 years it can take to decompose plastic in the ocean, or that we lose 13% of sea ice every decade are supposedly treacherous and distracting.

I agree with most of his ideas, such as the importance of understanding that humans are part of the biosphere, not ‘outside’ of it. Anthropocentric and monotheistic ways of thinking also do not help, they are part of the problem. However, these ideas are not new (to me at least?), and reading this book there wasn’t a moment I felt the paradigm shift in my thinking that I was hoping for. But maybe I was expecting too much after the pompous first chapters.

Morton likes to say he is different and the readers are wrong, and all 'classical' environmentalists and eco-scientists with us. But I can't help but think that Morton too had to be swayed by facts (or factoids) before believing or understanding something as massive as climate change. Surely, facts are not everything, but they help with the puzzle. As Morton explains near the end, green energy is plentiful, and if all energy were renewable we could waste it without shame or guilt and party like there is no tomorrow (pun!). How can you come to that conclusion if not with facts on the consequences of different energy sources? This book is in fact full of facts, but they are all assumed, already in the mind of the readers thanks to other sources of information.

Morton employs a direct style, almost like a stream of consciousness, that is sometimes hard to follow. It is written with an air of superiority that made me angry at times like a nihilist teenager with a patronising teacher. I guess that was the whole point, but he didn’t do enough to redirect my anger to get me to a higher level of understanding. A missed opportunity, as I don’t get angry very easily. The name dropping of philosophers and pop culture references is just that, name dropping.

Overall an interesting book about how we should deconstruct the way we think before we can tackle climate change (or any other global threat), but it doesn’t deliver on its promises and left a bad taste in my mouth.
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Lillian
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November 12, 2018
Have you ever found a book so good you felt a premature grief for when it would be over?

This book was that for me.

I like a short book. I like a book that gets to the point. What the book sets out to do on the first page is what the book does. And the first page took me from "oh björk recommends it" to "I cannot leave without this buying this €11 book".

It took everything in my power to not highlight and scribble in every page. The accessible and casual language made me feel engaged and excited to read and have my mind blown each chapter.

Did I mention it was a short book? Not only short but POLITELY SIZED paper back with a sexy cover that could very easily be shoved into a generously sized pocket and POLITELY whipped out to read in public. Book function and aesthetic matters to me.


As a philosophy student reading this, it satisfied alot of unresolved feelings I have on problematic key philosophers. Morton was able to reference their ideas without ignoring their some of their yucky connotations or contexts.

This is my favourite book. I can't wait to read more of his works and will be enthusiastically enforcing my loved ones to flick through this.

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Sven Krook
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July 5, 2022
Het gezegde "veel geblaat, weinig wol" komt in me op. Hij gebruikt veel woorden en benoemt vaak wat hij niet wil schrijven of bereiken. Hij zegt echter weinig naar mijn mening. Het kan zijn dat de boodschap is achtergebleven in de vertaling of dat het aan mij ligt maar de boodschap komt volgens mij niet veel verder dan "we zijn al deel van alles om ons heel en dus ecologisch".

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Rik-Jan Veldhuijzen
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January 28, 2019
I gave up on this book after having read about two-thirds of it.
Although I might agree with the main thesis of the book - Object Oriented Ontology (OOO) - and think it is a really interesting philosophy, Morton was not the guy to sell it to me.

This book was one big word salad, and most of the time I had no idea where he was getting. Maybe this rhizomatic way of writing was done on purpose, to make us feel OOO. In that case, I might not like it after all. Admittedly, radically changing the way in which people approach the world is not an easy task, maybe a quit to easily on Morton.

Anyways, I still feel like I did not understand where he was after. I do not know whether my poor philosophical capabilities are the terrible writing style are the cause of that. In either case, I think, it is still hard to read. Do not recommend.

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Zachary
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February 4, 2019
Timothy Morton’s attitude toward environmentalism is both essential and rooted in reductionist assertions, which makes this book rather complicated. On the one hand, he creatively applies to environmental concerns his philosophical approach to how we interpret phenomena, how we understand wholes and parts, and how we differentiate existence from presence in an accessible and popular style; on the other hand, he romanticizes non-hierarchical, pre-Neolithic human existence and somehow attributes all injustice and oppression to civic monotheism which, for more than ten-thousand years, has evidently ensnared us in its tendrils and made it difficult to think in new, more innovative and more just ways. While it is hard to pin down Morton’s thesis (since this book, albeit slim, touches on so much), his main claim is that the most ubiquitous form of environmental discourse at present—wherein scientists, philosophers, politicians, and activists “dump” massive quantities of information on a relatively uninformed public in an effort to persuade us all to act quickly and definitively to avoid climate catastrophe—impedes the very outcomes we desire most. These immense data dumps both reinforce the myth that climate catastrophe is imminent, rather than presently upon us, and the myth that we still have time to remake our society or restructure our economic behaviors—colossal tasks that still perpetuate our human lust for domination and control. This type of data dump discourse, Morton writes, is “exactly the opposite of what we need in order to comprehend where we are and why—to start to live the data.” The question that everyone asks in this mode of discourse—“so what can we do?”—“wants to see ahead and anticipate and know what to do, in advance. That’s what we can’t do,” Morton insists. “That’s exactly why all this happened.”

In the first half of the book, Morton takes pains to defend this thesis. He sketches why any so-called objective notion of truth is suspicious and, with a nod toward Stephen Colbert, defends a notion of truthiness. This may strike some readers as peculiar—why, when so many climate deniers impede efforts to address climate justice, should we rely less on facts?—yet Morton’s point is philosophical, and spot on. We can never entirely know an object: when we see or touch or bite into an apple, we access apple data, never the apple itself. We have no idea what it is like for a worm to tunnel into the apple, for instance, nor do we know each and every scientific property of any apple we eat. And even if we did have this data, we would still never know the essence of the apple, the apple itself. For Morton, there are other, less obvious objects that exist and are not entirely present to us: these he calls “hyper-objects,” such as climate, evolution, and the biosphere. He meticulously explains—in rather quirky, non-philosophical prose—why hyper-objects exist in the same way as apples, even if such objects contain many parts. One could think that the biosphere, for instance, insofar as it contains all lifeforms (Morton’s preferred term), is a whole, and that this whole exceeds the sum of its parts. People, apples, trees, rocks, etc. are all parts of the biosphere, yet the biosphere outstrips them all in its very existence. This, Morton persuasively demonstrates, is profoundly mistaken: the biosphere is an object like any other object, a phenomenon like any other phenomenon, and it exists in the same way and on the same level as any one of its smaller parts. While hyper-objects are massive in scope and thus distributed across vast time and space, they elude our efforts to know them fully for the same reason the apple eludes our attempts to know it and therefore control it. We can never access the biosphere or the climate fully, we are in fact parts of the biosphere and the climate, and yet the biosphere and climate are each smaller than the sum total of their respective parts. Once we have a handle on this, Morton believes, we can start to think and act in a more environmentally-conscious manner.

Part and parcel of Morton’s effort to reorient how we think about our relationship with what we call Nature (a term Morton in fact wants to dismiss, since it implies a radical distance between us humans and the environment in which we live, as if we could neatly separate those interconnected “realms” of existence), is his attempt to show how radically interrelated all objects are. He is up-front about the fact that such “web of life” discourse is ubiquitous and cliché, yet he aptly observes how so few people can explain what they mean when they repeat such platitudes. Morton nonetheless defends this rather kitsch axiom with recourse to thinkers like Immanuel Kant and Edmund Husserl. When we apprehend an object, he explains, there is never just the I, the subject, and the object, which passively awaits my contemplation. Each object is part of a manifold, a complex context or interpretive system wherein the object has various connotations and denotations and is used in a myriad of ways by countless different lifeforms. So while I, a human eater of apples, eat the apple, the worm, a tunneler of apples, tunnels into it, and the scientist, an observer of apples, observes its skin underneath a microscope. To push this further, whereas the apple is a source of nourishment and enjoyment for me, the forbidden fruit also exerts powerful symbolism in some people’s recollection of Genesis (nota bene: Genesis never states that the fruit is in fact an apple). Every object is a manifold, no object is just itself, and thus each object resists our anthropocentric efforts to manipulate it at will. We can never fully possess an object since an object always exists in a different way or for a different purpose in another context. With respect to environmental issues, the upshot of such manifold ubiquity is “explosive” interconnectedness that, in Morton’s view, levels out some “monotheistic” hierarchy of existence (a reductionist characterization, more on this later). To echo an earlier point, once we appreciate this “context explosion,” Morton believes, we can more successfully avoid the pitfalls of data-dump environmentalism mode and better appreciate the serious issues we face.

For all his deconstructive efforts, Morton’s project is ultimately constructive as well. He is, as noted, deeply suspicious of our “constant and very particular orientation to the future—what needs to be done. . . . You think future and you think radically different than the present.” Yet Morton wants to drive at a more fundamental, more existential, and less utilitarian reorientation toward the world that involves what he calls attunement, rather than plans for revolutions to remake society. When we are attuned to our environment, to creatures both biotic and abiotic, we relate to such creatures for “no particular reason.” This is a rather indistinct notion that Morton develops for most of the book; the essential point is, however, that each and every object and lifeform we encounter can speak to us, as it were, and that we should attend to this expression, relate to it, and let it determine us and our actions. In effect, Morton refutes the supremacy of Kant’s transcendental subject and re-enchants the nonhuman environment with the power to meet and confront us from a place of real, non-illusory alterity.

Morton does this with philosophical dexterity; for all his apparent mysticism, Morton is not a mystic, and the case he presents in this book is scrupulously philosophical. In attunement, we are “tuned” by what we encounter insofar as we can never, via our own efforts at perception, interpretation, etc., impose an exhaustive identity on an object, just as we can never determine its essence with any certainty. It exists outside of us and actively exerts power over us: art, for example, draws us in, captures our attention, reorients the way we approach other objects. “Art is telepathic—it’s spooky action at a distance,” Morton writes. He even wants to say that art and other objects temporalize us—that is, they literally provide us with time, albeit a more fundamental time than clock-time. “How it looks, how it feels . . . its mass, its shape—all that, which we could call appearance, is the past.” How the art will affect me, how it will prompt certain reflections and projections in me, how it shapes the way I look at it and other objects hereafter, when I see in some other object that which I see now, in this object—all this is the future. The present is “a sort of train-station” wherein past and future meet, “a kind of relative motion between . . . past and future. I call it nowness to differentiate it from a reified atomic ‘present’ that I actually don’t think truly exists,” Morton explains. To the correlationists—such as the post-structuralists, who maintain that what we say objects are are in fact cultural constructs, “discursive products of epistemic formations” or “concepts we project onto certain lumps of matter”—Morton responds that “there has to be a correlatee as well as a correlator: there is a violin sonata, not just a violinist.” To be sure, we do decide what is real to a certain extent, yet this does not also mean that the correlator, be it the Kantian subject, the Nietzschean will to power, or Dasein, is more real than the objects we encounter. We do not simply determine them; they too, speak to us and consequently determine themselves.

Morton seeks to rediscover and recover the non-violent, non-dominant attunement he believes pre-Neolithic peoples practiced in accordance with their environment, and herein lies one of the book’s major flaws. Not unlike some of the thinkers he admires, Morton paints with an unfathomably broad brush; it is not hyperbolic to say that he attributes most, if not all of our modern woes, and most certainly climate catastrophe, to Neolithic domestication and concomitant monotheism. When humans started to farm, they were subsequently forced to continue to farm in order to stay alive, and the institutional structures that materialized as part of this revolution in human history were hierarchical, oppressive, and rooted in systematic domination. Humans came to see the environment as mere mindless, plastic stuff upon which they could act unilaterally, heedless to how and whether matter could speak to them, summon them, and transform them, as it had in the pre-Neolithic era. Fortunately, the philosophies of Immanuel Kant, Edmund Husserl, and subsequent twentieth century thinkers rediscovered how objects are both what they are and how they appear to us, and particularly that how they appear to us betrays some sense of what they actually are. This development, coupled with deconstructive efforts from the likes of Jacques Derrida and others, upended the traditional, static-substance metaphysics that arose when Neolithic humans started to farm; deconstruction has thus helped us rethink dichotomies between the human and non-human, the conscious and non-conscious, the sentient and non-sentient. As per this narrative, Morton contends, a new, leveled-out metaphysics has resurfaced, one which resembles the pre-Neolithic attunement practiced by earlier humans. Morton calls this metaphysics the spectral plain, and a less violent, more playful, perhaps even more indifferent posture toward the lifeforms that inhabit this spectral plain is the mode in which we should attend to climate catastrophe and the earth system more broadly.

There are numerous elements of this narrative that are both historically accurate and philosophically persuasive. The metaphysics toward which Morton alludes is the best defense of non-anthropocentric eco-centrism that I have thus far encountered. And his analysis of care is, albeit unintuitive and at first ostensibly unethical, much needed at a time when “what to do” dominates and actively undermines our conversations about the climate crisis. Yet Morton’s story weirdly romanticizes pre-Neolithic humans and pretends as if no other humans for more than ten-thousand years have also practiced what he calls attunement. Moreover, Morton unpersuasively maintains that Christianity particularly excludes such an attitude and its concomitant metaphysics, which is patently not the case. The monolithic narrative wherein Christian philosophers inherited from Plato a stark mind-body dualism and an otherworldly metaphysical orientation is reductionist and historically imprecise, and Morton simply seems to accept this narrative rather than provide evidence to justify his wholesale rejection of Christian or any other “monotheistic” philosophy. One need only read Thomas Aquinas and other medieval thinkers to see how important sense-perception is in their metaphysics, and one need only peruse Book XIV of City of God for an explicit patristic rejection of the mind-body dualism purportedly apparent in Platonism (which, for some philosophers, is not so obvious even in Plato).

To be sure, orthodox Christian metaphysics is hierarchical, yet hierarchy need not entail domination and, properly conceived, can more appropriately attend to relationality between different types of creatures and objects. Humans are, after all, profoundly different than prokaryotes, which is not to necessarily say we are better than them, or that our interests should always come first; nevertheless, it is to say that I have a metaphysically different sort of responsibility to other humans than I do to the bacteria that cover my skin and live inside my intestines, with whom I do, as Morton wants to stress, collaborate on a daily basis. Moreover, it is just not true that a Christian hierarchical view of the creation is at its core otherworldly. When Morton cherry-picks a quote from Jesus in the Gospel of Matthew—“Store up your treasure in heaven”—then explains that this “means you don’t need to worry so much about what happens down here, because it’s less real and less important,” he betrays a remarkably uncharitable and poor comprehension of creation metaphysics. As someone like Rowan Williams could inform Morton, an orthodox Christian view of the creation cultivates what Williams calls “a solidarity in creatureliness” that rejects the myth of self-creation and therefore dominance, which Morton likewise wants to unsettle. On a Christian view, the creation is not mindless, plastic stuff, even if, at the same time, it alone cannot provide the metaphysical fulfillment we all seek. Yet this latter accession need not—or rather should not, not ever—allay any Christian’s anxiety about what happens here, on earth, to the earth system. Just as God is utterly for the world—“God desires to be God for what is not God,” which is to be God, Williams explains—then we, in openness to the divine action, likewise strive to be for the world in the same way.

Consequently, monotheistic traditions—or at least the one with which I am most familiar—do not fit so neatly into the narrative Morton presents here; more importantly, they are not so hostile to his ultimate project as he seems to think. If we are to embody the non-calculative, non-dominant praxis that attunement reflects, we should attend to how other traditions and worldviews can inform, correct, or make more persuasive the case for such praxis. Grand, reductionist (and rather caustic) narratives of the history of “Neolithic” philosophy can only undermine this effort. Thus, while Morton adds so much to our impoverished environmental discourse, he needlessly excludes a whole host of helpful voices from such discourse. And this ultimately makes this book poorer than it otherwise could have been.
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Ben Thurley
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April 22, 2020
Morton's one big idea in this book (that we're already "ecological" just by "being") is wrapped in one philosophical framework (object oriented ontology - OOO) inflected with a slightly coy (at least in this work) Buddhist temperament and he'll be damned (or you will) if he's not going to drag you across a landscape of cool and coruscating philosophy/cultural studies to get that across. "You don't have to be ecological", he says in the book's final sentences (...spoilers...). "Because you are ecological."

His opening chapter, "Not Another Information Dump" is outstanding. He nails a mode of knowledge and communication – driven by anxiety and a sadly misinformed epistemology – that too often characterises environmental campaigning and discourse:
Ecological information delivery mode in the media seems most often to consist of what we could call an information dump.leading to what Morton refers to as a sort of "ecological PTSD."

Morton helpfully aims to take a step back and asks how is this discourse intended to be received? What kind of response is it aiming to generate? Are those responses desirable, or even possible? His OOO helps us see that the "factoids" this discourse generates cannot possibly help us to grasp a thing (any thing) in itself - let alone something as all-encompassing and all-consuming as "ecology" and its current crisis, "climate change". The truth of our ecological existence, he rightly says, is fundamentally ungraspable and never separable from our inherently contingent, subjective, partial realities.

I didn't find all the writing as accessible and there's much I disagree with. Maybe I'm just not cool enough, but I tuned out of a lot of his over-long chapter "Tuning"and though I thought his analysis of the ecological styles of immersion, authenticity, religion and efficiency was stimulating, by the time of the final chapter I was already tired of yet more references to The Simpsons and deconstructions of the concept of genre on iTunes. Oh, and a small side-note: Morton's contention that "free will is overrated" is based on a widely misinterpreted experiment.

Morton helpfully identifies and critiques the either-or/black-or-white thinking that generates notions of individual guilt in our current ecological crisis. He is, of course, right to point out that no one person caused the climate crisis and any individual's actions make only an infinitesimal contribution to our current disrupted and dangerous ecological state. Although, in an almost perfect encapsulation of his black andwhite (not black-or-white) thinking, he also – correctly – notes that "whatever evil is, it is an intrinsic aspect of oneself." It is, Morton declares, "the human species", not "sea turtles" or "the octopus species", that caused global warming.

It is in this dual performance of liberation from, and liturgy of, (a somewhat dispassionate sense of) personal guilt that I dramatically part ways with Morton. Certainly he attempts to defend himself from the charge of quietism or political indifference – though, to my mind, unsuccessfully. He identifies my urge to name a culprit or identify avenues for action to repair the world as part, if not the sum total, of the problem when it comes to thinking and acting ecologically. He is repeatedly scornful or dismissive of well-meaning but misguided attempts to ask "so what should we do?" at the end of every conference or discussion about ecology.

However, it is a matter of empirical analysis – which Morton largely eschews – to attempt to trace our current crisis to the actors and networks and processes that wield disproportionate power and influence in our fossil-fueled wealth-dream. It is not merely "the human species" – an abstraction Morton has already helpfully deconstructed – as opposed to "the octopus species" that has caused global warming. The vast majority of human beings who have ever lived and who currently live bear no responsibility whatsover for our current ecological crisis. There are corporations with names and CEOs and boards and marketing teams and scientists on retainer – along with politicians and governments which are beholden to them – that have caused the crisis. But you will not read about them in Being Ecological.

I guess, I'd like to affirm Morton's holistic disengagement from, and critique of, the urgency of knowing certain kinds of things in certain kinds of ways. It is helpful to think about the ways that our embodied existence is already an ecological one and admit that "we" (people like me) can unnecessarily create barriers to people recognising this for themselves. However, the question remains, if I can be ecological just by being, how am I to act ecologically in light of the actual ecology I exist within.

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Pen Bay Person
5.0 out of 5 stars Five Stars
Reviewed in the United States on July 28, 2018
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A must read for every rational, thoughtful person in the world!
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Joshua Chavanne
5.0 out of 5 stars We are all Ecological
Reviewed in the United States on August 19, 2018
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Worthwhile and thought-provoking.
Kind of inarguable
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Laura
5.0 out of 5 stars A must read!
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on November 5, 2020
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My lecturer recommended this book to me and it was definitely a wonderful read! Morton explores very deep topics in an accessible way so if you’re worried that philosophy isn’t your thing or don’t want to waste your time reading complicated philosophical texts, you honestly have nothing to worry about!! Don’t get me wrong, this is still a deeply fascinating philosophical text but everything is written in a very inclusive way and all topics are explained very well. Morton manages to be funny while also teaching us about climate change etc, which I imagine isn’t an easy task at all! Also the music/pop culture references make it so much more fun/enthralling to read. Overall, I recommend it to anyone :)
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Duncan Spence
5.0 out of 5 stars A must for anybody who thinks about ecology
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on February 12, 2020
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Most philosophy in English is translated out of German, French, Italian, Latin, Arabic, Greek and so forth. Morton's is possibly the best philosophy written in English since Wm James or maybe even Adam Smith and David Hume. The analysis spans twelve and a half thousand years, extending the origins of the current crisis of western intellectualising to the first domestic enclosures of Mesopotamia, to the moment when human beings turned from hunting and gathering to building fences round fields and manipulating crop production. Everybody should read this book.
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Dominikus Heil
5.0 out of 5 stars This book is a ‚must read‘!!!!!
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on February 20, 2021
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This book is a game changer in the ecological discourse. I do not understand why there is not more of a public discussion about this groundbreaking work. If you want to really understand the issue at stake with this central issue of our time, buy this book!
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José Macaya
1.0 out of 5 stars En ningún momento entendí dónde quería llegar o cuál era su mensaje
Reviewed in Spain on November 20, 2021
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Sin duda me equivoqué al comprar este libro. Pensé que contenía algún enfoque novedoso sobre el tema ecológico, pero no tiene nada que ver con eso. Es un libro de filosofía, pero lo encontré deslavazado y sin rumbo. En ningún momento entendí dónde quería llegar o cuál era su mensaje. Veo que otros lectores lo apreciaron más, pero imagino que es porque no buscaban lo que yo esperaba encontrar, y se sintieron cómodos con el estilo divagante del autor
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Emilio Portal
5.0 out of 5 stars melting your phenomenological reconfiguration
Reviewed in Canada on October 22, 2018
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this book goes deep into the constructs that brought us to this catastrophe: the 6th mass extinction. morton provides a new and radical ontology and phenomenology that deconstructs notions of self and other, knowledge, property, politics, art and ecology. poetic and sublime.
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Libra
1.0 out of 5 stars What is this?
Reviewed in Canada on June 21, 2019
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I get that Tim Morton is knowledgeable, and wants to add to the plethora of books out there about global warming and ecological devastation. However, it would help if the reader could make sense of what he is writing.
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Shedman
5.0 out of 5 stars Veer your brain in new directions
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on February 4, 2018
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Wonderfully challenging. Full of fascinating insights and concepts as slippery as fish. But a welcome change to so much ‘nature writing’ and very enjoyable.
2 people found this helpful
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Margery Een
5.0 out of 5 stars Stunning, cosy and uncanny. Morton is a genius.
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on February 24, 2018
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Stunning, cosy and uncanny. Morton is a genius. And it's short. Just go and read it. Then dissolve.
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Chi: Discovering Your Life Energy - by Liao, Waysun.

Chi: Discovering Your Life Energy - Kindle edition by Liao, Waysun. Religion & Spirituality Kindle eBooks @ Amazon.com.



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Waysun Liao
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Chi: Discovering Your Life Energy Kindle Edition
by Waysun Liao (Author) Format: Kindle Edition


4.5 4.5 out of 5 stars 260 ratings







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Chi is the invisibleenergy of life that flows in and around us throughout the universe. Usedskillfully, it can have a remarkable effect on health and vitality—to thedegree that you’d be tempted to call it magical, if it weren’t so completelynatural. Here is a perfect introduction to chi that explains in a direct andsimple way what it is and why it is essential to a healthy and vital life. It providesan easy-to-understand explanation of chi, and then helps readers recognize,develop, and strengthen their own chi through specific breathing techniques andbasic exercises, all demonstrated by the author.

Thereare many books on chi development through t’ai chi and qigong practice, but thisone goes deeper to enable you to understand the fundamental principles as youcultivate it. This book is a reference for alternative health professionalssuch as acupuncturists and shiatsu therapists and their patients, as well asfor anyone who practices t’ai chi, qigong, aikido, and other chi-based martialarts.
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Print length

127 pages
Language
July 14, 2009

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About the Author
From the age of twelve, Master Waysun Liao studied with a wandering Taoist and in a Taoist temple in Taiwan until he became a full Taichi and Tao master. Considered one of the world's foremost authorities on traditional Taoist wisdom and Chi arts, he is the founder and master of one of the oldest Taichi centers in North America. The Taichi Tao Center, founded in 1971, remains the worldwide teaching headquarters for Master Waysun Liao and is located in Oak Park, Illinois.

Master Waysun Liao is the last of a heritage of Tao masters carrying and transmitting the ancient oral traditions concerning the nature and the power of Tao. He shares his wisdom with students across the world. Other Taichi instructors, learning centers, martial arts masters, spiritual teachers, and Taichi group leaders around the world today learned Taichi from the Taichi Tao Center, and call him "Grandmaster Waysun Liao." It means that they see the unlimited potential within this wisdom and the amazing benefits in learning Taichi through Master Liao, and want to claim a part of that powerful legacy!

The good news is that now everyone can learn from Waysun Liao as their own grandmaster!

In addition to several leading books on Taichi, Chi and Tao, he has compiled a complete Taichi learning system on streaming online video, preserving the ancient temple teachings on moving meditation, the Tao, and internal energy development.

Product details
ASIN ‏ : ‎ B006L8SC7S
Publisher ‏ : ‎ Shambhala; Original edition (July 14, 2009)
Publication date ‏ : ‎ July 14, 2009
Language ‏ : ‎ English
File size ‏ : ‎ 1432 KB
Text-to-Speech ‏ : ‎ Enabled
Screen Reader ‏ : ‎ Supported
Enhanced typesetting ‏ : ‎ Enabled
X-Ray ‏ : ‎ Enabled
Word Wise ‏ : ‎ Enabled
Sticky notes ‏ : ‎ On Kindle Scribe
Print length ‏ : ‎ 127 pagesBest Sellers Rank: #431,661 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)#250 in Energy Healing (Kindle Store)
#293 in Tai Chi & Qi Gong
#330 in Eastern Philosophy (Kindle Store)Customer Reviews:
4.5 4.5 out of 5 stars 260 ratings


Waysun Liao



From the age of twelve, Master Waysun Liao studied with a wandering Taoist and in a Taoist temple in Taiwan until he became a full Taichi and Tao master. Considered one of the world's foremost authorities on traditional Taoist wisdom and Chi arts, he is the founder and master of one of the oldest Taichi centers in North America. The Taichi Tao Center, founded in 1971, remains the worldwide teaching headquarters for Master Waysun Liao and is located in Oak Park, Illinois.

Master Waysun Liao represents the heritage of Tao masters carrying and transmitting the ancient oral traditions concerning the nature and the power of Tao. He shares his wisdom with students across the world. Other Taichi instructors, learning centers, martial arts masters, spiritual teachers, and Taichi group leaders around the world today learned Taichi and Tao teaching from him and call him “Grandmaster Waysun Liao.” This reference means that they see the unlimited potential within this wisdom and the amazing benefits in learning Taichi through Master Liao, and want to claim a part of that powerful legacy.

The good news is that now everyone can learn from Waysun Liao as their own grandmaster.

In addition to several leading books on Taichi, Chi and Tao, he has compiled a complete Taichi learning system on streaming online video at Taichitao.tv. The videos preserve the ancient temple teachings on moving meditation, the Tao, and internal energy development.

Top reviews from the United States


DeeCee

5.0 out of 5 stars Great informationReviewed in the United States on March 7, 2023
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Explains what Chi is and where it comes from. Information on how to feel and develop your Chi. And help to maintain balance between the yin and yang.

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K

5.0 out of 5 stars WowReviewed in the United States on December 28, 2020
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This book is awesome. I am a christian who just starting to learn taoism. This books explains Chi and toism so well that i start to understand christianity and taoism are basically talking about the same thing. One-Chi which nurtures the cosmo, is really one and only one GOD. Christianity and Taoism really just use different language to talk about the same thing. Wow. My mind is open.

19 people found this helpful
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Alexei Goncharenko

5.0 out of 5 stars now anybody who has been mean or did anything bad in life can be explained in 2 wordsReviewed in the United States on February 5, 2016
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Ya, now anybody who has been mean or did anything bad in life can be explained in 2 words : CHI BLOCKAGE. With chi blockage you do not judge but just know that if you unblock his chi, a douchbag can become harmonious human being. It is a book worthwhile having in your library. Harness the qi to the point where you can see Light in the most darkest places on earth, well that is what jedies from starwars achieved :D.

There is no emotion, there is peace.
There is no ignorance, there is knowledge.
There is no passion, there is serenity.
There is no chaos, there is harmony.
There is no death, there is the Force (QI).

4 people found this helpful
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Modern Audiology

5.0 out of 5 stars Very ThoroughReviewed in the United States on April 6, 2021
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For one who is only beginning to discover Tai Chi, this book is an excellent guide. I look forward to a life of continued learning.

2 people found this helpful
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Fadrizle

5.0 out of 5 stars Beautiful BookReviewed in the United States on October 14, 2011
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This is one of those books that you will want to read again, or just open up and start reading from any point. It is a very relaxing book to read and teaches you how to understand your life energy and how day to day life can drain it into non-existence. Then Waysun Liao teaches ways to feel and preserve your chi in a very simplistic way. It is a great book for setting the basics. It made me want to search out other books to further explore life energy.

26 people found this helpful
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Aida A.

5.0 out of 5 stars ExcellentReviewed in the United States on October 13, 2020
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Excellent read. Easy, captivating, fascinating. Thank you, master Liao!

One person found this helpful
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Dom D. Salcido

5.0 out of 5 stars Simple BeautyReviewed in the United States on January 17, 2017
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This book is incredibly appealing in terms of aesthetics! It is small, compact, and written in a way that lets you understand its concepts without overwhelming you with bulky, futile information. I would consider it a very strong component in the core curriculum for anyone who is interested in learning about life energy.

15 people found this helpful
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Stewart Chalamidas M.D. a humble Student of the Course in Miracles.

4.0 out of 5 stars I use chi for my bowel movements, when pills ...Reviewed in the United States on October 11, 2015
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I use chi for my bowel movements, when pills get stuck just behind my uvula, heartburn ,etc. I definitely can move my chi and it is phenomenal!

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Top reviews from other countries

Don Thompson
4.0 out of 5 stars easy read with actual exerciseReviewed in Canada on April 29, 2019
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This is worth reading and trying.
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Jonathan
5.0 out of 5 stars What you need to know about ChiReviewed in Canada on January 3, 2020
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I love this book! Written by a true master.
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raz
5.0 out of 5 stars the book is easy to read and understand and brought joy into myReviewed in Canada on November 26, 2017
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Bought this after watching iron fist lol.

the book is easy to read and understand and brought joy into my life
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bobby
5.0 out of 5 stars Great resource explaining chi and how to develop greater chiReviewed in Canada on December 13, 2017
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as described. Great resource explaining chi and how to develop greater chi.
destined to be a life long resource Thankyou
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Dr. Dan
5.0 out of 5 stars a good readReviewed in Canada on January 1, 2014
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Very easy to read and I think the most enlightening discussion of Chi I have encountered in reading about Chi Gong and Tai Chi.

One person found this helpfulReport

Internet Archive: Yuasa, Yasuo 3 books

Internet Archive: Digital Library of Free & Borrowable Books, Movies, Music & Wayback Machine








Overcoming modernity : synchronicity and image-thinking


By: Yuasa, Yasuo
Published: 2008
Views: 13
Topics: Jung, C. G. (Carl Gustav), 1875-1961, Philosophy, Comparative
vii, 247 pages : 24 cm





The body : toward an Eastern mind-body theory


By: Yuasa, Yasuo
Published: 1987
Views: 292
Topics: Body, Human (Philosophy), Mind and body, Philosophy, Japanese
vii, 256 p. : 24 cm. --





The body, self-cultivation, and ki-energy


By: Yuasa, Yasuo
Published: 1993
Views: 73
Topics: Qi (Chinese philosophy), Human body (Philosophy),
Self-actualization (Psychology), Philosophy and science, Philosophy, Comparative
xxxvi, 229 p. : 24 cm