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A thought on OOO and Aristotle

I have been following Graham Harman’s blog of late, and one of his repeated refrains is that we must recover the Aristotelian concept of “substance” — the common dismissal of the concept among contemporary philosophers is short-sighted and doesn’t adequately reflect the richness, weirdness, and appeal of Aristotle’s notion of “substance.”

Fair enough! It does seem to be the case that many people who would reject a substance metaphysics, myself included, do not engage in detail with Aristotle’s development of the concept of “substance.” There may be a reason for that, however. People have been working through Aristotle’s thought for well over two milennia at this point, including many centuries when he was the single most dominant intellectual influence in both Europe and the Islamic world. Many of the greatest minds in history — Maimonides, Avicenna, Aquinas, etc. — basically devoted their lives to understanding and applying his philosophy.

If after all that work it turns out that we don’t understand the concept of substance, maybe it’s because it just doesn’t make sense. If people grappled with it for milennia and then the whole thing fell apart after the rise of modern science, maybe it’s because it’s not compatible with what science tells us about nature. It’s not like we just dug up some manuscripts of this guy named Aristotle a few weeks ago, after all. There’s been plenty of time to think things through, and on the question of “substance,” there’s an amazingly broad concensus that Aristotle’s concept is lacking. I don’t see why anyone needs to relitigate this.

A question on correlationism: Or, Why I am not really into OOO

I will openly admit that I have not read very much on Object-Oriented Ontology, and that’s because I feel as though I have a very basic objection that isn’t the kind of thing further study or nuance would fix: the whole critique of correlationism basically makes no sense to me. From what I understand, correlationism seems to take the Kantian position that we can’t get at the things themselves apart from our human filters (the a priori structure of human experience) and then takes the next step and says that the only thing that’s important or even really real about things is what they are for us. So far, so good — I’m not 100% sure any major philosopher has actually held a correlationist position as described (though in practice obviously capitalism presupposes such an attitude), but I can agree that it’s a bad thing.

For me, the most intuitive next step to take is the Hegelian one: the apparent obstacle keeping us from the things is in fact inherent to the things themselves. Read the rest of this entry »

Ontology of the boudoir

Dominic Fox’s Twitter feed is quickly establishing itself as one of the most important philosophical documents of our era. Recent selections: Read the rest of this entry »

Robustitude

The final chapter of my dissertation will require me to briefly sketch out an ontology. Naturally, I’m worried that it will not be robust enough, and I will be subjected to the ridicule of my Radical Orthodox peers. (Speaking of which, is there any way we could start a movement whose name incorporates “tubular,” “cowabunga,” or both?)

The first step in achieving robustitosity is of course knowing what “robust” means in connection with ontology. Sadly, I have looked up “robustness” on Wikipedia and do not find a ready-made answer. Surely there are Radical Orthodox people — perhaps among the large youth contingent belonging to that movement, tendency, sensibility, or whatever it is — who feel comfortable editing Wikipedia, but I suspect that this omission is actually intentional: it forces me to reason by analogy.

I’m not yet participating in the truth of robustitude, however, and I need my readers’ help. What is meant by a robust ontology? How does one go about articulating an ontology that displays a suitable level of robustitude? In what specific ways is, for example, the Radical Orthodox ontology of Christianized Neoplatonism robust? Why do other ontologies fail to meet that high standard? For instance, what is non-robust about Deleuze’s ontology?

CFP: Ontology and Politics

One of my correspondents forwarded me the following call for papers:

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Further Thoughts on Ontology

I have commented here before on what one might call my “methodological” objection to the Radical Orthodox ontology — namely, the fact that the Radox authors baldly assert their Neoplatonic ontology of hierarchical participation because of its supposedly benificent moral effects. I suggested that perhaps ontology, which at least etymologically is supposed to have some relation to how things “are,” should take science seriously. At the same time, I don’t think that ontology has to be the slave of science, which in practice would mean embracing the ontology of mechanical determinism.

I maintain that the trick the Radox authors attempt to pull would never have been able to succeed if the dominant strains of postwar philosophy had not fallen asleep at the ontological wheel. Analytic philosophy’s prohibition of ontological or metaphysical reflection system-building is well-known, and the dominance of Heidegger and his successors in continental philosophy (in its various institutional incarnations) led to a similar suspicion of metaphysical claims — most often quasi-moral objections to metaphysics as a “totalizing discourse” that is somehow directly oppressive (“Hegel caused the Holocaust,” etc.). Jean-Luc Nancy has undertaken to do a kind of post-Heideggerian ontology over the past couple decades, though I’m not sure he’s really “taking off” among Americans; there may also be someone in the analytic camp pursuing something along these lines, though I’ve not heard of it.

The shame here, though, is that during the prewar period, there was a real flowering of ontologies of the exact kind that I advocate — perhaps the biggest names there are Henri Bergson, Alfred North Whitehead, and William James. In each case, there is a recognition that the mechanical determinism (largely unconsciously) assumed by scientists is not adequately accounting to experience, and so the attempt is made to develop a more inclusive and realistic ontology.

Then in the postwar period, the whole thing apparently just shuts down in America, in both the analytic and continental traditions — the latter of which also spread to many other disciplines in the humanities where ontological reflection may have found a place. Certain contemporary developments — the rediscovery of Deleuze as a “real philospher,” the surprising prominence of Badiou in certain American circles, the aforementioned work of Nancy, Zizek’s more recent work — point toward the potential for a renewed interest in a truly contemporary ontology. The shame, however, is that in so many ways we in America at least have to reinvent the wheel because the prewar developments wound up getting prematurely cut off in our context.