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Speculative realism

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objective position, he proceeds to redevelop a metaphysics for science and technology which recovers what he calls ancestral events: materially real events which occur outside of phenomenological subjectivity. He claims that without the objectivity of contingency, a philosopher of metaphysics should reject that such events like the Big Bang are legitimate. Although, some have argued that the problem is not that these ancestral events are outside of human notions of time, since many such examples of these events in fact do have materially sensible data which places them in terms of human interpretations of time, but rather it applies more strongly to real things which are not empirically observable: e.g. quarks or genetic information. While not committed entirely to speculative materialism,
355:, Harman maintains that no two objects can ever interact save through the mediation of a "sensual vicar". There are two types of objects, then, for Harman: real objects and the sensual objects that allow for interaction. The former are the things of everyday life, while the latter are the caricatures that mediate interaction. For example, when fire burns cotton, Harman argues that the fire does not touch the essence of that cotton which is inexhaustible by any relation, but that the interaction is mediated by a caricature of the cotton which causes it to burn. 409:, life as form in biopolitical thought, life as spirit in post-secular philosophies of religion). Thacker examines the relation of speculative realism to the ontology of life, arguing for a "vitalist correlation": "Let us say that a vitalist correlation is one that fails to conserve the correlationist dual necessity of the separation and inseparability of thought and object, self and world, and which does so based on some ontologized notion of 'life'.''. Ultimately Thacker argues for a skepticism regarding "life": "Life is not only a problem 193:. Many critiquing correlationism and philosophies of access typically are critiquing the excessive association of ontology with human-centric phenomenology. New Realism, ultimately is critiquing thinking and being's association, and as such is within the same conversation. However, Ferraris approaches this problem slightly differently than Meillassoux. Ferraris structures his critique of the "thinking and being" association in relation to the areas of epistemology and ontology respectively instead of phenomenology and ontology. 154:, contemporary writings in "new realism" are thematically parallel to speculative realism, sharing common themes and interests. Harman states that it was an "inadvertent injustice" to not include Ferraris' ideas among contemporary continental realists, as he had held this philosophical position earlier than speculative realists at a time when realism in the continental tradition was a "lonelier" commitment. However, despite analogous interests, the two perspectives of realism remain mostly separate conversations. In 533:. I don't believe the internet is an appropriate medium for serious philosophical debate; nor do I believe it is acceptable to try to concoct a philosophical movement online by using blogs to exploit the misguided enthusiasm of impressionable graduate students. I agree with Deleuze's remark that ultimately the most basic task of philosophy is to impede stupidity, so I see little philosophical merit in a "movement" whose most signal achievement thus far is to have generated an online orgy of stupidity. 344:, for whom there were both substances and aggregates, Harman maintains that when objects combine, they create new objects. In this way, he defends an a priori metaphysics that claims that reality is made up only of objects and that there is no "bottom" to the series of objects. For Harman, an object is in itself an infinite recess, unknowable and inaccessible by any other thing. This leads to his account of what he terms "vicarious causality". Inspired by the 508:, Brassier embraces it as the truth of reality. Brassier concludes from his readings of Badiou and Laruelle that the universe is founded on the nothing, but also that philosophy is the "organon of extinction," that it is only because life is conditioned by its own extinction that there is thought at all. Brassier then defends a radically anti-correlationist philosophy proposing that Thought is conjoined not with Being, but with Non-Being. 401:
something-other-than-life...that something-other-than-life is most often a metaphysical concept, such as time and temporality, form and causality, or spirit and immanence" Thacker traces this theme from Aristotle, to Scholasticism and mysticism/negative theology, to Spinoza and Kant, showing how this three-fold displacement is also alive in philosophy today (life as time in
189:, Meillassoux defines correlationism as "the idea according to which we only ever have access to the correlation between thinking and being, and never to either term considered apart from the other." Philosophies of access are any of those philosophies which privilege the human being over other entities. For speculative realists, both ideas represent forms of 546:, rethinks what OOO phenomenology would be while others argue OOO rejects phenomenology outright. Similarly, Steven Shaviro actively endorses panpsychism and reaffirms his earlier endorsement of process philosophy, rejecting certain aspects of Harmon's work and Brassier's criticisms about the existence of a movement. Additionally Jane Bennett's 309:(OOO) is that objects have been neglected in philosophy in favor of a "radical philosophy" that tries to "undermine" objects by saying that objects are the crusts to a deeper underlying reality, either in the form of monism or a perpetual flux, or those that try to "overmine" objects by saying that the idea of a whole object is a form of folk 390:, claiming that the distinction between Matter as substantive versus useful fiction persists to this day and that we should end our attempts to overturn Plato and instead attempt to overturn Kant and return to "speculative physics" in the Platonic tradition, that is, not a physics of bodies, but a "physics of the All". 554:
As such, one of the fundamental controversies within Speculative Realism is less agreement or disagreement about correlationism as a problem, but instead is a discussion of the feasibility or need of philosophies of phenomenology and cognition after being separated from philosophies of ontology. On
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Meillassoux follows the opposite tactic in rejecting the principle of correlation for the sake of a bolstered principle of factiality in his post-Kantian return to Hume. By arguing in favour of such a principle, Meillassoux is led to reject the necessity not only of all physical laws of nature, but
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onward based on the definition of matter. Aristotle distinguished between Form and Matter in such a way that Matter was invisible to philosophy, whereas Grant argues for a return to the Platonic Matter as not only the basic building blocks of reality, but the forces and powers that govern our
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The primary foundation from which Meillassoux extends the rest of his theory by arguing for a principle: the necessity of contingency itself. That is, the only thing objectively necessary is that no thing/object is necessary to every subject. Thus, all things are contingent. Using this as an
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Further Brassier suggests that a philosophical movement cannot believably be bound to merely anti-correlationism. Despite this, many of those who discuss different approaches to escape Meillassoux's correlationist cycle, suggesting active philosophical discourse on a particular topic.
444:, which argues for a process-based approach that entails panpsychism as much as it does vitalism or animism. For Shaviro, it is Whitehead's philosophy of prehensions and nexus that offers the best combination of continental and analytical philosophy. Another recent example is found in 400:
shows how the ontology of life operates by way of a split between "Life" and "the living," making possible a "metaphysical displacement" in which life is thought via another metaphysical term, such as time, form, or spirit: "Every ontology of life thinks of life in terms of
640:. Websites have formed as resources for essays, lectures, and planned future books by those within the speculative realist movement. Many other blogs, as well as podcasts, have emerged with original material on speculative realism or expanding on its themes and ideas. 182:". All four of the core thinkers within speculative realism work to overturn these forms of philosophy which privilege the human being, favouring distinct forms of realism against the dominant forms of idealism in much of contemporary Continental philosophy. 1676: 570:. Additionally Brassier's statements above suggest he rejects the association. However, between Shaviro, Strengers, and many others, the association of Whitehead is largely consistent with anti-correlationism and thus remains a valuable inspiration. 484:, instead attempting to find meaning in a world conditioned by the very idea of its own annihilation. Thus Brassier critiques both the phenomenological and hermeneutic strands of continental philosophy as well as the vitality of thinkers like 555:
this debate Harmon and Meillassoux suggest there is no need for phenomenology while Shaviro, Bennett, and Bogost suggest a separation of anti-correlation of ontology and phenomenology does not render either to be empty philosophical topics.
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In an interview with Kronos magazine published in March 2011, Ray Brassier denied that there is any such thing as a "speculative realist movement" and firmly distanced himself from those who continue to attach themselves to the brand name:
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as unknowable but imaginable. We can imagine reality as being fundamentally different even if we never know such a reality. According to Meillassoux, the defence of both principles leads to "weak" correlationism (such as those of Kant and
158:, a book published in Edinburgh's Speculative Realism series, Ferraris positioned his thoughts more explicitly in relation to the works of many of the names previously mentioned. He fashions a critique similar to Meillassoux's of Kant. 333:, Harman proposes a new philosophical discipline called "speculative psychology" dedicated to investigating the "cosmic layers of psyche" and "ferreting out the specific psychic reality of earthworms, dust, armies, chalk, and stone". 107:
on Friday 24 April 2009, two years after the original event at Goldsmiths. The line-up consisted of Ray Brassier, Iain Hamilton Grant, Graham Harman, and (in place of Meillassoux, who was unable to attend) Alberto Toscano.
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also enables forms of phenomenology as she exemplifies through several chapters. In doing so, these authors suggest some form of phenomenology in speculative realism despite the rejection of correlationist philosophy.
261:, there can be no justification for the necessity of physical laws, meaning that while the universe may be ordered in such and such a way, there is no reason it could not be otherwise. Meillassoux rejects the Kantian 249:, for whom it makes no sense to suppose that there is anything outside of the correlate of Thought and Being, and so the principle of factiality is eliminated in favour of a strengthened principle of correlation. 166:
While often in disagreement over basic philosophical issues, the speculative realist thinkers have a shared resistance to what they interpret as philosophies of human finitude inspired by the tradition of
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and speculative philosophy are to anti-correlationism. While Meillassoux associates anti-correlationism to "speculative materialism," he does not cite Whitehead in association in the development of
452:, which argues for a shift from human relations to things, to a "vibrant matter" that cuts across the living and non-living, human bodies and non-human bodies. Leon Niemoczynski, in his book 584:, which published the proceedings of the inaugural conference at Goldsmiths and has featured numerous other articles by 'Speculative Realist' thinkers; as has the academic journal 456:, invokes what he calls "speculative naturalism" so as to argue that nature can afford lines of insight into its own infinitely productive "vibrant" ground, which he identifies as 228:
itself, which claims essentially that we can only know the correlate of Thought and Being; what lies outside that correlate is unknowable. The second is termed by Meillassoux the
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While speculative realism's status has gained significant popularity, there are philosophical positions which some consider analogous. According to Graham Harman's forward in
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has examined how the concept of "life itself" is both determined within regional philosophy and also how "life itself" comes to acquire metaphysical properties. His book
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Other thinkers have emerged within this group, united in their allegiance to what has been known as "process philosophy", rallying around such thinkers as
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The "speculative realist movement" exists only in the imaginations of a group of bloggers promoting an agenda for which I have no sympathy whatsoever:
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in Paris. Credit for the name "speculative realism" is generally ascribed to Brassier, though Meillassoux had already used the term "
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philosophy, there are important differences separating the core members of the speculative realist movement and their followers.
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which states that things could be otherwise than what they are. This principle is upheld by Kant in his defence of the
1557:"No. 2 (2013): Ontological Anarché: Beyond Materialism and Idealism | Anarchist Developments in Cultural Studies" 1355: 920: 445: 77: 1267: 1646: 2584: 1694: 258: 254: 2620: 1936: 1178:"Science, Realism and Correlationism. A Phenomenological Critique of Meillassoux' Argument from Ancestrality" 741: 93: 65: 2476: 85: 2610: 2431: 2234: 1657: 119:(now the School of Literature, Media, and Communication) on April 23, 2010. This symposium was hosted by 860: 590:, which is edited and produced by members of the Graduate School of the Department of Philosophy at the 2446: 2386: 2239: 1664:– recording of Quentin Meillassoux's lecture in English at the inaugural Speculative Realism conference 603: 241:), while the rejection of the thing-in-itself leads to the "strong" correlationism of thinkers such as 504:, Brassier defends a view of the world as inherently devoid of meaning. That is, rather than avoiding 2521: 2451: 2312: 699: 694: 341: 314: 2501: 2307: 669: 306: 242: 221:
to describe his position) finds two principles as the focus of Kant's philosophy. The first is the
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Brassier, Ray (October 8, 2014). "Postscript: Speculative Autopsy". In Wolfendale, Peter (ed.).
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in his development of cosmotechnics, and actively works within similar philosophical lineages.
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A second conference, entitled "Speculative Realism/Speculative Materialism", took place at the
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While sharing in the goal of overturning the dominant strands of post-Kantian thought in
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What unites the four core members of the movement is an attempt to overcome both "
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A third conference, entitled "Object Oriented Ontology: A Symposium", was held at
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published three special issues on object-oriented ontology and its critics.
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journal published a special issue on the topic in relation to anarchism.
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Bryant, Levi; Bryant, Levi R.; Srnicek, Nick; Harman, Graham (2011).
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the same cause may actually bring about 'a hundred different events'
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Quentin Meillassoux in English at the Speculative Realism Conference
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Ferraris, Maurizio; Sanctis, Sarah De; Harman, Graham (2014-12-01).
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Speculative realism is notable for its fast expansion via the
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defends what Michael Austin, Paul Ennis, Fabio Gironi term as
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Speculative realism takes its name from a conference held at
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Charles Sanders Peirce and a Religious Metaphysics of Nature
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Between 2019 and 2021, the De Gruyter Open Access journal,
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Without Criteria: Kant, Whitehead, Deleuze, and Aesthetics
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reality. He traces this same argument to the post-Kantian
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The Speculative Turn: Continental Materialism and Realism
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The Speculative Turn: Continental Materialism and Realism
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Movement in contemporary Continental-inspired philosophy
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Harman defends a version of the Aristotelian notion of
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Object-Oriented Philosophy: The Noumenon's New Clothes
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references and uses an analogous line of reasoning in
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of Goldsmiths College, and featured presentations by
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Whitehead, Alfred North; Griffin, David Ray (1985).
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Bryant, Levi; Harman, Graham; Srnicek, Nick (2011).
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Alien Phenomenology, or What It's Like to Be a Thing
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against its interpretation of the dominant forms of
1265: 578:Speculative realism has close ties to the journal 1382:Michael Austin, Paul Ennis, Fabio Gironi (2012), 1350: 1348: 2602: 1635:– a concise introduction to Speculative Realism. 1494: 1423:I am a nihilist because I still believe in truth 1075:, University of Minnesota Press, pp. 1–34, 705: 374:, Grant tells a new history of philosophy from 117:School of Literature, Communication and Culture 56:in April 2007. The conference was moderated by 33:) that defines itself loosely in its stance of 1345: 1275:. Melbourne, Australia: re.press. p. 82. 135:, Hugh Crawford, Carl DiSalvo, John Johnston, 1702: 1360:Vibrant Matter: A Political Ecology of Things 964: 813: 436:, among others. A recent example is found in 358: 161: 1421:Ray Brassier interviewed by Marcin Rychter " 1252:Graham Harman, "On Vicarious Causality," in 802:Post-continental Voices: Selected Interviews 512:Controversy about a "philosophical movement" 97: 1144:Journals, Ruth at EUP (December 12, 2014). 470:Nihil Unbound: Enlightenment and Extinction 292: 1716: 1709: 1695: 1497:Process and reality: an essay in cosmology 855: 853: 851: 615:Anarchist Developments in Cultural Studies 463: 208: 1671:(eds.), issue "RĂ©alisme spĂ©culatif", in 1593:Fabio Gironi, "Science-Laden Theory" in 1472:10.5749/minnesota/9780816689248.001.0001 1434: 1175: 1143: 1081:10.5749/minnesota/9780816678976.003.0001 937: 911:Harman, Graham (2014-12-01), "Forward", 870: 868: 1459: 1354: 1038: 1003: 848: 2603: 1675:, No. 255, winter 2016 – introduction 1176:Wiltsche, Harald A. (September 2017). 1066: 910: 372:Philosophies of Nature After Schelling 2507:Violence § Philosophical perspectives 1690: 1062: 1060: 999: 997: 865: 655:New realism (contemporary philosophy) 558:Another controversy is how important 1618:Speculative Realism: An Introduction 933: 931: 890:"Object Oriented Ontology Symposium" 804:, John Hunt Publishing, 2010, p. 18. 627: 29:-inspired philosophy (also known as 1214: 876:"Speculative Realism | Frieze" 213:In his critique of correlationism, 13: 1682:The Speculative Realism Pathfinder 1571:"Open Philosophy Volume 2 Issue 1" 1057: 994: 388:Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph Schelling 14: 2632: 1624: 1466:. University of Minnesota Press. 1362:. Durham: Duke University Press. 938:Ferraris, Maurizio (2024-02-08). 928: 78:University of the West of England 915:, SUNY Press, pp. iv–xiii, 100:" to describe his own position. 1632:Speculative Realism: An Epitome 1587: 1563: 1549: 1513: 1488: 1453: 1428: 1415: 1402: 1389: 1376: 1332: 1289: 1259: 1246: 1233: 1208: 1169: 1156: 1150:Edinburgh University Press Blog 1137: 1110: 1032: 981: 606:publishes a book series called 598:, founded in 2010 published by 573: 113:Georgia Institute of Technology 1620:, John Wiley & Sons, 2018. 1460:Shaviro, Steven (2014-10-01). 1182:European Journal of Philosophy 1016:10.7551/mitpress/7870.001.0001 958: 944:. Edinburgh University Press. 904: 882: 830: 807: 794: 259:Principle of Sufficient Reason 255:Principle of Non-Contradiction 1: 1607: 196: 66:American University of Beirut 1667:Pierre-Alexandre Fradet and 1162:Quentin Meillassoux (2008), 987:Quentin Meillassoux (2008), 965:Mackay, Robin (March 2007). 814:Mackay, Robin (March 2007). 706:Notable speculative realists 366:defends a position he calls 253:all logical laws except the 86:American University in Cairo 7: 2432:Interpellation (philosophy) 2235:Non-representational theory 1412:, pp. 223–226, pp. 234–238. 1217:Recursivity and contingency 643: 529:metaphysics and morsels of 287:Recursivity and Contingency 31:post-Continental philosophy 10: 2637: 2387:Existence precedes essence 1533:10.5040/9781350252059.0005 1067:Bogost, Ian (2012-04-01), 1043:. London: Repeater Books. 604:Edinburgh University Press 413:philosophy, but a problem 368:transcendental materialism 359:Transcendental materialism 162:Critique of correlationism 2580: 2522:Hermeneutics of suspicion 2285: 2160: 1724: 1425:", Kronos, March 4, 2011. 700:Transcendental nominalism 695:Transcendental empiricism 315:electromagnetic radiation 2502:Transvaluation of values 2308:Apollonian and Dionysian 1604:Note Thanapong Jantanam 1386:, Punctum Books, p. 257. 1302:. re.press. p. 28. 1120:Manifesto of New Realism 1039:Shaviro, Steven (2016). 1004:Shaviro, Steven (2009). 967:"Editorial Introduction" 913:Manifesto of New Realism 861:"brief SR/OOO tutorial." 816:"Editorial Introduction" 787: 670:Object-oriented ontology 307:object-oriented ontology 293:Object-oriented ontology 277:(and even many more)." 243:late Ludwig Wittgenstein 230:principle of factiality, 152:Manifesto of New Realism 94:École Normale SupĂ©rieure 1640:Post-Continental Voices 1338:Eugene Thacker (2010), 1325:Eugene Thacker (2010), 680:Postanalytic philosophy 478:transcendental nihilism 464:Transcendental nihilism 323:Commonwealth of Nations 219:speculative materialism 209:Speculative materialism 98:speculative materialism 39:post-Kantian philosophy 2572:Philosophy of language 2537:Linguistic determinism 2447:Master–slave dialectic 2422:Historical materialism 1718:Continental philosophy 1463:The Universe of Things 1239:Graham Harman (2009), 560:Alfred North Whitehead 535: 384:Johann Gottlieb Fichte 327:propositional attitude 265:in favour of a Humean 180:philosophies of access 137:Barbara Maria Stafford 2452:Master–slave morality 2260:Psychoanalytic theory 1408:Ray Brassier (2007), 1395:Ray Brassier (2007), 1069:"Alien Phenomenology" 592:University of Warwick 519: 297:The central tenet of 247:late Martin Heidegger 2621:Metaphysical realism 685:Speculative idealism 523:actor-network theory 70:Middlesex University 54:University of London 35:metaphysical realism 2272:Speculative realism 757:Quentin Meillassoux 732:Iain Hamilton Grant 608:Speculative Realism 544:Alien Phenomenology 364:Iain Hamilton Grant 217:(who uses the term 215:Quentin Meillassoux 90:Quentin Meillassoux 74:Iain Hamilton Grant 41:(or what it terms " 20:Speculative realism 2611:2007 introductions 2392:Existential crisis 2323:Binary oppositions 2250:Post-structuralism 1660:2012-03-24 at the 1241:Prince of Networks 1194:10.1111/ejop.12159 650:Kantian empiricism 564:process philosophy 531:process philosophy 403:process philosophy 353:Islamic philosophy 50:Goldsmiths College 2598: 2597: 2532:Linguistic theory 2437:Intersubjectivity 1542:978-1-350-25205-9 1506:978-0-02-934570-2 1481:978-0-8166-8924-8 1446:978-0-9575295-9-5 1369:978-0-8223-4619-7 1309:978-0-9806683-4-6 1282:978-0-9806683-4-6 1226:978-1-78660-052-3 1215:Hui, Yuk (2019). 1130:978-1-4384-5379-8 1090:978-0-8166-7897-6 1050:978-1-910924-06-8 1025:978-0-262-25516-5 1010:. The MIT Press. 951:978-1-4744-7850-2 800:Paul John Ennis, 777:Isabelle Stengers 747:Katerina Kolozova 628:Internet presence 494:François Laruelle 148:Maurizio Ferraris 22:is a movement in 2628: 2188:Frankfurt School 1711: 1704: 1697: 1688: 1687: 1598: 1591: 1585: 1584: 1582: 1581: 1567: 1561: 1560: 1553: 1547: 1546: 1517: 1511: 1510: 1492: 1486: 1485: 1457: 1451: 1450: 1432: 1426: 1419: 1413: 1406: 1400: 1393: 1387: 1384:Speculations III 1380: 1374: 1373: 1352: 1343: 1336: 1330: 1323: 1314: 1313: 1293: 1287: 1286: 1274: 1263: 1257: 1250: 1244: 1237: 1231: 1230: 1212: 1206: 1205: 1173: 1167: 1160: 1154: 1153: 1141: 1135: 1134: 1114: 1108: 1107: 1106: 1105: 1064: 1055: 1054: 1036: 1030: 1029: 1007:Without Criteria 1001: 992: 985: 979: 978: 962: 956: 955: 935: 926: 925: 908: 902: 901: 886: 880: 879: 872: 863: 857: 846: 845: 834: 828: 827: 811: 805: 798: 762:Reza Negarestani 660:New materialisms 622:Open Philosophy, 502:Thomas Metzinger 381:German idealists 191:anthropocentrism 2636: 2635: 2631: 2630: 2629: 2627: 2626: 2625: 2601: 2600: 2599: 2594: 2576: 2567:Postcolonialism 2562:Linguistic turn 2492:Totalitarianism 2457:Oedipus complex 2318:Being in itself 2281: 2193:German idealism 2173:Critical theory 2156: 2072:Ortega y Gasset 1720: 1715: 1662:Wayback Machine 1627: 1610: 1602: 1601: 1592: 1588: 1579: 1577: 1569: 1568: 1564: 1555: 1554: 1550: 1543: 1519: 1518: 1514: 1507: 1493: 1489: 1482: 1458: 1454: 1447: 1433: 1429: 1420: 1416: 1407: 1403: 1394: 1390: 1381: 1377: 1370: 1353: 1346: 1337: 1333: 1324: 1317: 1310: 1294: 1290: 1283: 1272: 1264: 1260: 1256:(1997), p. 201. 1251: 1247: 1238: 1234: 1227: 1213: 1209: 1174: 1170: 1161: 1157: 1142: 1138: 1131: 1115: 1111: 1103: 1101: 1091: 1065: 1058: 1051: 1037: 1033: 1026: 1002: 995: 986: 982: 963: 959: 952: 936: 929: 923: 909: 905: 888: 887: 883: 874: 873: 866: 859:Graham Harman, 858: 849: 836: 835: 831: 812: 808: 799: 795: 790: 742:Adrian Johnston 708: 665:Accelerationism 646: 636:in the form of 630: 576: 514: 498:Paul Churchland 466: 458:natura naturans 361: 295: 234:thing-in-itself 211: 199: 164: 58:Alberto Toscano 17: 12: 11: 5: 2634: 2624: 2623: 2618: 2613: 2596: 2595: 2593: 2592: 2587: 2581: 2578: 2577: 2575: 2574: 2569: 2564: 2559: 2554: 2549: 2544: 2539: 2534: 2529: 2524: 2519: 2514: 2509: 2504: 2499: 2494: 2489: 2487:Self-deception 2484: 2479: 2474: 2469: 2464: 2459: 2454: 2449: 2444: 2439: 2434: 2429: 2424: 2419: 2414: 2409: 2404: 2399: 2394: 2389: 2384: 2379: 2374: 2369: 2364: 2357: 2356: 2355: 2350: 2345: 2335: 2333:Class struggle 2330: 2325: 2320: 2315: 2310: 2305: 2300: 2298:Always already 2295: 2289: 2287: 2283: 2282: 2280: 2279: 2274: 2269: 2264: 2263: 2262: 2255:Psychoanalysis 2252: 2247: 2242: 2237: 2232: 2230:Non-philosophy 2227: 2225:Neo-Kantianism 2222: 2221: 2220: 2215: 2205: 2200: 2195: 2190: 2185: 2183:Existentialism 2180: 2178:Deconstruction 2175: 2170: 2164: 2162: 2158: 2157: 2155: 2154: 2149: 2144: 2139: 2134: 2129: 2124: 2119: 2114: 2109: 2104: 2099: 2094: 2089: 2084: 2079: 2074: 2069: 2064: 2059: 2054: 2049: 2044: 2039: 2034: 2029: 2024: 2019: 2014: 2009: 2004: 1999: 1994: 1989: 1984: 1979: 1974: 1969: 1964: 1959: 1954: 1949: 1944: 1939: 1934: 1929: 1924: 1919: 1914: 1909: 1904: 1899: 1894: 1889: 1884: 1879: 1874: 1869: 1864: 1859: 1854: 1849: 1844: 1839: 1834: 1829: 1824: 1819: 1814: 1809: 1804: 1799: 1794: 1789: 1784: 1779: 1774: 1769: 1764: 1759: 1754: 1749: 1744: 1739: 1734: 1728: 1726: 1722: 1721: 1714: 1713: 1706: 1699: 1691: 1685: 1684: 1679: 1669:Tristan Garcia 1665: 1652: 1644: 1636: 1626: 1625:External links 1623: 1622: 1621: 1609: 1606: 1600: 1599: 1597:(2010), p. 21. 1595:Speculations 1 1586: 1562: 1548: 1541: 1525:After Finitude 1521:"Bibliography" 1512: 1505: 1487: 1480: 1452: 1445: 1427: 1414: 1401: 1399:, pp. 148–149. 1388: 1375: 1368: 1344: 1331: 1315: 1308: 1288: 1281: 1258: 1245: 1232: 1225: 1207: 1188:(3): 808–832. 1168: 1164:After Finitude 1155: 1136: 1129: 1123:. 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2353:Postcritique 2313:Authenticity 2271: 2203:Hermeneutics 2107:Schopenhauer 2012:LĂ©vi-Strauss 1725:Philosophers 1672: 1647: 1639: 1630: 1617: 1603: 1594: 1589: 1578:. Retrieved 1574: 1565: 1551: 1524: 1515: 1496: 1490: 1462: 1455: 1436: 1430: 1417: 1409: 1404: 1396: 1391: 1383: 1378: 1359: 1339: 1334: 1326: 1298: 1291: 1268: 1261: 1253: 1248: 1240: 1235: 1216: 1210: 1185: 1181: 1171: 1163: 1158: 1149: 1139: 1119: 1112: 1102:, retrieved 1072: 1041:Discognition 1040: 1034: 1006: 988: 983: 974: 970: 960: 940: 912: 906: 884: 841: 832: 823: 819: 809: 801: 796: 772:Nick Srnicek 631: 621: 619: 612: 607: 596:Speculations 595: 586: 580: 577: 574:Publications 567: 557: 553: 547: 543: 536: 527:pan-psychist 525:spiced with 520: 515: 490:Alain Badiou 477: 474:Ray Brassier 469: 467: 457: 453: 449: 441: 419: 414: 410: 407:Deleuzianism 397: 392: 371: 367: 362: 335: 296: 286: 279: 274: 266: 262: 251: 229: 222: 218: 212: 200: 186: 184: 173: 165: 155: 151: 145: 110: 102: 62:Ray Brassier 47: 30: 24:contemporary 19: 18: 2557:Film theory 2467:Ontopoetics 2372:Death drive 2348:Ideological 2267:Romanticism 2198:Hegelianism 1972:Kierkegaard 1832:Castoriadis 1792:de Beauvoir 1777:Baudrillard 1254:Collapse II 717:Levi Bryant 675:Objectivity 331:panpsychism 303:Levi Bryant 225:correlation 203:Continental 125:Levi Bryant 105:UWE Bristol 27:Continental 2616:Kantianism 2605:Categories 2512:Wertkritik 2417:Hauntology 2382:Difference 2377:DiffĂ©rance 2117:Sloterdijk 1987:KoĹ‚akowski 1608:References 1580:2022-01-06 1575:De Gruyter 1340:After Life 1327:After Life 1104:2024-02-08 977:(1): 3–13. 941:Hysteresis 898:1853/70942 826:(1): 3–13. 712:Ian Bogost 540:Ian Bogost 482:extinction 398:After Life 197:Variations 156:Hysteresis 121:Ian Bogost 2547:Semiotics 2542:Semantics 2527:Discourse 2407:Genealogy 2397:Facticity 2168:Absurdism 2097:Schelling 2067:Nietzsche 1942:Heidegger 1757:Bachelard 1742:Althusser 1342:, p. 254. 1243:, p. 213. 1202:0966-8373 1099:250398654 752:Nick Land 613:In 2013, 542:'s work, 430:Whitehead 422:Schelling 340:. Unlike 338:substance 319:spacetime 317:, curved 273:is that " 271:causality 68:(then at 2585:Category 2427:Ideology 2343:Immanent 2338:Critique 2293:Alterity 2286:Concepts 2161:Theories 2147:Williams 2122:Spengler 2077:Rancière 2007:Lefebvre 1992:Kristeva 1957:Irigaray 1952:Ingarden 1932:Habermas 1922:Guattari 1907:Foucault 1882:Eagleton 1827:Cassirer 1807:Bourdieu 1802:Blanchot 1787:Benjamin 1772:Bataille 1658:Archived 1648:Collapse 1527:. 2008. 1358:(2010). 1166:, p. 90. 971:Collapse 820:Collapse 644:See also 634:Internet 581:Collapse 506:nihilism 440:'s book 350:medieval 311:ontology 267:a priori 263:a priori 2412:Habitus 2328:Boredom 2218:Freudo- 2213:Western 2208:Marxism 2132:Strauss 2102:Schmitt 2042:Marcuse 2032:Lyotard 2022:Luhmann 2017:Levinas 1967:Jaspers 1962:Jameson 1947:Husserl 1927:Gramsci 1917:Gentile 1912:Gadamer 1872:Dilthey 1867:Derrida 1862:Deleuze 1797:Bergson 1767:Barthes 1737:Agamben 1673:Spirale 1329:, p. x. 991:, p. 5. 434:Deleuze 426:Bergson 342:Leibniz 325:, or a 283:Yuk Hui 239:Husserl 178:" and " 92:of the 84:of the 76:of the 2361:Dasein 2112:Serres 2092:Sartre 2082:RicĹ“ur 2037:Marcel 2027:Lukács 2002:Latour 1977:Kojève 1902:Fisher 1897:Fichte 1887:Engels 1857:Debord 1852:de Man 1842:Cixous 1837:Cioran 1817:Butler 1782:Bauman 1762:Badiou 1747:Arendt 1732:Adorno 1539:  1503:  1478:  1443:  1366:  1306:  1279:  1223:  1200:  1127:  1097:  1087:  1047:  1022:  948:  919:  432:, and 321:, the 139:, and 88:, and 2590:Index 2497:Trace 2477:Power 2472:Other 2462:Ontic 2303:Angst 2152:Ĺ˝iĹľek 2137:Weber 2127:Stein 2062:Negri 2057:Nancy 1997:Lacan 1982:KoyrĂ© 1937:Hegel 1892:Fanon 1847:Croce 1822:Camus 1812:Buber 1273:(PDF) 1095:S2CID 788:Notes 638:blogs 448:book 376:Plato 45:"). 2402:Gaze 2142:Weil 2087:Said 2047:Marx 1752:Aron 1677:here 1537:ISBN 1501:ISBN 1476:ISBN 1441:ISBN 1364:ISBN 1304:ISBN 1277:ISBN 1221:ISBN 1198:ISSN 1125:ISBN 1085:ISBN 1045:ISBN 1020:ISBN 946:ISBN 917:ISBN 500:and 405:and 386:and 301:and 245:and 1877:Eco 1529:doi 1468:doi 1190:doi 1077:doi 1012:doi 894:hdl 587:Pli 562:'s 468:In 415:for 348:of 305:'s 185:In 115:'s 72:), 64:of 2607:: 1616:, 1573:. 1535:. 1523:. 1474:. 1347:^ 1318:^ 1196:. 1186:25 1184:. 1180:. 1148:. 1093:, 1083:, 1071:, 1059:^ 1018:. 996:^ 973:. 969:. 930:^ 867:^ 850:^ 840:. 822:. 818:. 610:. 496:, 492:, 472:, 460:. 428:, 424:, 411:of 171:. 150:' 143:. 131:, 127:, 80:, 52:, 1710:e 1703:t 1696:v 1583:. 1559:. 1545:. 1531:: 1509:. 1484:. 1470:: 1449:. 1372:. 1312:. 1285:. 1229:. 1204:. 1192:: 1152:. 1133:. 1079:: 1053:. 1028:. 1014:: 975:2 954:. 900:. 896:: 844:. 824:2

Index

contemporary
Continental
metaphysical realism
post-Kantian philosophy
correlationism
Goldsmiths College
University of London
Alberto Toscano
Ray Brassier
American University of Beirut
Middlesex University
Iain Hamilton Grant
University of the West of England
Graham Harman
American University in Cairo
Quentin Meillassoux
École Normale Supérieure
speculative materialism
UWE Bristol
Georgia Institute of Technology
School of Literature, Communication and Culture
Ian Bogost
Levi Bryant
Graham Harman
Steven Shaviro
Barbara Maria Stafford
Eugene Thacker
Maurizio Ferraris
Immanuel Kant
correlationism

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