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Research output: Contribution to Journal/Magazine › Journal article › peer-review
Research output: Contribution to Journal/Magazine › Journal article › peer-review
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TY - JOUR
T1 - Towards a continuous-matter philosophy
AU - Szerszynski, Bronislaw
PY - 2021/7/29
Y1 - 2021/7/29
N2 - In this paper, I make a case for a philosophy of continuous matter, in dialogue with object-oriented ontology. A continuous-matter philosophy is one that focuses not on the identity, properties and relations of discrete, countable objects, but on the nature of extended substances, both in relation to human experience and in terms of their own ‘inner life’. I explore why and under what conditions humans might perceive the world as objects or as continuous substances, and the language that humans use for talking about both of them. I argue that approaching the world as continua requires the foregrounding of concepts that emphasise the immanent (internal to a region of space), the inclusive (with contrasting properties coexisting in the same substance), the gradual (manifesting differentially at different points) and the generative or virtual (involving the constant production of form and new gradients). I suggest that starting philosophy from continuous matter rather than objects also has wider implications for speculative thought.
AB - In this paper, I make a case for a philosophy of continuous matter, in dialogue with object-oriented ontology. A continuous-matter philosophy is one that focuses not on the identity, properties and relations of discrete, countable objects, but on the nature of extended substances, both in relation to human experience and in terms of their own ‘inner life’. I explore why and under what conditions humans might perceive the world as objects or as continuous substances, and the language that humans use for talking about both of them. I argue that approaching the world as continua requires the foregrounding of concepts that emphasise the immanent (internal to a region of space), the inclusive (with contrasting properties coexisting in the same substance), the gradual (manifesting differentially at different points) and the generative or virtual (involving the constant production of form and new gradients). I suggest that starting philosophy from continuous matter rather than objects also has wider implications for speculative thought.
KW - Object-oriented ontology
KW - speculative realism
KW - new materialism
KW - continuous matter
M3 - Journal article
VL - 11
JO - Stasis
JF - Stasis
SN - 2500-0721
IS - 1
ER -