31.5.11

Reading Integral Ecology

In 1999 I read my first Ken Wilber book. I had never heard of Wilber before the day a surprisingly assertive old hippie struck a dialogue with me in my favorite reading nook at the local library. “You have to read this book son”, declared the bearded stranger. “It will change the way you exist.” Fantastic, I thought. I had been hunkered down with Alan Watts and D.T Suzuki for weeks and was certainly open to a good mind-thrashing alternative. So I accepted the slender paperback from the grinning coyote, asked a few utterly twenty-something questions, and then sat back to digest. I had no expectations.

Until I cracked the cover of The Marriage of Sense and Soul (1998) I had no idea of what to expect from the American philosopher. I hadn’t known at that point he’d written 12 previous volumes over 23 years, exploring everything from altered and mystical states of consciousness, to human development more broadly, to the evolution of the kosmos as such. I would soon learn all that and more.

Only a few pages into the book Wilber gives up the gambit completely: “Fools rush in where angles fear to tread; therefore, the integration of science and religion is the theme of this book.” (p.xi) In my opinion Wilber went a long way to fulfilling that aim. In the book he lays out a panoramic vision which arguably makes room for the co-existence of a wide range of “religious experiences” and practices, while honoring the achievements of human rationality and secular wisdom. Our world is composed of a wide spectrum of ways of being in the world, Wilber argues, and each offers us unique glimpses into the time-less and the developmental dimensions of human life. And for over 35 years Ken Wilber has been taking inventory of the key insights from both science and religion, East and West, and attempting to design tools with which to develop a more humane and sane worldview.

Did the book change the way I existed? Maybe a little. But, more importantly, it offered me an initial glimpse of what a truly synthetic narrative might look like. That first glimpse lead me on a path through all of Wilber’s previous books (including Sex, Ecology, Spirituality and A Brief History of Everything), and the handful he would publish afterwards (including my favorite Integral Psychology), and towards a deep and persistent appreciation for integrative thinking and research generally.

But this is not the place for an overview or critique of Ken Wilber’s work. I bring this anecdote up as a way to contextualize several posts forthcoming as part of a reading group for the book Integral Ecology: Uniting Multiple Perspectives on the Natural World, by Sean Esbjorn-Hargens and Michael Zimmerman. The authors use Wilber’s "integral" meta-framework (AQAL) to analysis dozens of ecological paradigms and case histories for the expressed purpose of extracting the core insights of each and reconfigure them together in such a way as to provide a more comprehensive view of the natural world than has yet been available. Do they succeed in bridging the gaps between scientific disciplines, eco-science literatures and research methodologies? That remains to be determined. But, no doubt, the journey of discovery that such a project and book entail will make for an exciting foray into the realm of environmental philosophy and ecological science.

The Integral Ecology Reading Group (IERG) will unfold between several blogs and will include a number of people intimately familiar with both Ken Wilber’s theory and environmental studies more generally. Each week a participating blog will review that week’s readings and host discussion for the larger group.

The schedule for the reading group is as follows:
June 1 – 7
Introduction/Chapter 1 - The Return of Interiority and Conceptual Framework of Integral Ecology
Host Blog: Knowledge Ecology (Adam Robbert)

June 8 – 14
Chapter 2 - It's All About Perspectives: The AQAL Model
Host Blog: Knowledge Ecology (Sam Mickey)

June 15 – 21
Chapter 3/4 - A Developing Kosmos/ Developing Interiors
Host Blog: Immanence (Adrian Ivakhiv)

June 22 – 28
Chapter 5 - Defining, Honoring, and Integrating the Multiple Approaches to Ecology
Host Blog: TBA

June 29 – July 5
Chapter 6 - Ecological Terrains: The What That Is Examined
Host Blog: Mediacology (Antonio Lopez)

July 6 – 12
Chapter 7 - Ecological Selves: The Who That Is Examining
Host Blog: Immanence (Adrian Ivakhiv)

July 13 – 19
Chapter 8 - Ecological Research: How We Examine
Host Blog: Integral Ecology Center (Nicholas Hedlund-de Witt)

July 20 – 26
Chapter 9 - Ecological Harmony and Environmental Crisis in a Post-Natural World
Host Blog: Ecology Without Nature (Tim Morton)

July 27 – Aug 2
Chapter 10/11 - Practices for Cultivating Integral Ecological Awareness/Integral Ecology in Action
Host Blog: Archive Fire (Michael)
It's a massive book at almost 800 pages, so it should make for interesting comments, divergencies and perspectives.  Anyone who wants to participate is more than welcome to post their comments or questions on individual host blogs. Also, a big thanks must go out to Adam Robbert for organizing and facilitating the group.  I’m very excited about having such knowledgeable participants as co-discussants, and hope some of you find the time share your thoughts.

25.5.11

Documentary: WikiSecrets

In the documentary below FRONTLINE investigators attempted to reveal the 'inside story' of WikiLeaks, Julian Assange, Bradley Manning and the biggest intelligence breach in U.S. history. WikiLeaks has put out a statement on twitter saying PBS "distorts" the facts surrounding the Manning case and paints a superficial picture of the organization. I found the video interesting none-the-less. Duration: (53:40) - Premiere Date: 05/24/2011

Watch the full episode. See more


support WikiLeaks with your donations: here

Henry Rollins on Being Cynical

"Cynic, n. A blackguard whose faulty vision sees things as they are not as they ought to be." — Ambrose Bierce (The Devil's Dictionary)
There is so much superfluous pain and suffering that I struggle every day to keep from falling into the abyss of cynicism and nihilism. Cynicism breeds compartmentalization and apathy via our need to cope with the stress of this dark world. I can only distract myself by working both within and on the fringes of the dominant systems to catalyze a shift, but is such work making a difference at a systemic level? I’m not convinced it ever has.

So why not just give-in and give-up? Because I can’t. I’m but one tiny shard of impulse in a much greater process of life. Every part of me – every constituent particle and complex – is a riotous life-affirming force that refuses to be snuffed. For me resistance is therfore inevitable.

24.5.11

Of Force and Consequence

If we are to be proper ontographers, investigating the nature of beings in the light of being, then we must give things their proper due. That is to say, things in this world are not only ‘objects’ of our consciousness – they impinge, burst forth and make differences that directly affect us and other entities even when they are obscure, partial and mediated. This affective potency is what Jane Bennett calls “the force of things”.

I consider the force, power or efficacy of things as emanations (cf. Tom Sparrow) of an entity’s material-energetic properties expressed in relation. And pragmatically reckoned, the embodied, consequential force of things can provide us with guidance and primary significances that exceed our primate intentionalities. But in order to navigate these forces and consequences - to navigate, cope and find our way in the ecology of the real – we need to think and engage things as much as possible on their own terms.

As Levi Bryant recently put it:
“[T]hing thought” is absolutely crucial to ecological thought. As Morton reminds us in Ecology Without Nature and The Ecological Thought, ecology refers not to a thinking of “nature”. No, ecology is everywhere insofar as imbrications of objects take place everywhere. The anthropocentric index of contemporary thought has had the tendency of blinding us to ecology by locating all agency in human minds that project meanings, uses, and intentions on to objects. To investigate the world here amounts to investigating our externalized selves. As a result, we do not ask what things themselves do. Yet if it is true that being is characterized by immanence, this will not do. We need conceptual resources that will also draw our attention to what computers do to us, and not just how we use computers. We need conceptual resources that lead us to ask what chemical processes are taking place in landfills, and not just how landfills are effects of our consumption and the compulsion that arises under capital to perpetually consume new and different things. We need conceptual resources that expose thought to the differences that things themselves contribute. Thing thinking draws our attention to these strange strangers in our midst and helps us to avoid the habit of seeing them merely as vehicles of our intentions or societies intentions. [source]
Here Bryant captures the indispensible insight of the object-oriented lens: the irreducible determinations of pure difference. Every thing that makes a difference is a participant in the parliament of causal efficacy and meaningful action.

Such a ‘democratic’ consideration of temporal individuality (substantiality) opens us up to a dynamic cosmopolitics of force, affect and pervading consequences on all levels of operation and flow. The question of ‘what is to be done?’, then, becomes at once the central concern of all the sciences and humanities and their praxis.

20.5.11

The Shock Doctrine

Below is a powerful documentary adaptation of Naomi Klein's outstanding 2007 book The Shock Doctrine: The Rise of Disaster Capitalism. The book is an amazing example of journalism and social critique, and deserves to be widely read. If you haven't done so already please do.

Here is the official description of the film from the filmmakers:
Based on breakthrough historical research and four years of on-the-ground reporting in disaster zones, The Shock Doctrine vividly shows how disaster capitalism – the rapid-fire corporate re-engineering of societies still reeling from shock – did not begin with September 11, 2001.

The films traces its origins back fifty years, to the University of Chicago under Milton Friedman, which produced many of the leading neo-conservative and neo-liberal thinkers whose influence is still profound in Washington today.

New, surprising connections are drawn between economic policy, shock and awe warfare and covert CIA-funded experiments in electroshock and sensory deprivation in the 1950s, research that helped write the torture manuals used today in Guantanamo Bay.

The Shock Doctrine follows the application of these ideas through our contemporary history, showing in riveting detail how well-known events of the recent past have been deliberate, active theaters for the shock doctrine, among them: Pinochet’s coup in Chile in 1973, the Falklands War in 1982, the Tienanmen Square Massacre in 1989, the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, the Asian Financial crisis in 1997 and Hurricane Mitch in 1998.


19.5.11

The Dynamics of Affective Objects

First: all objects are affective. To be an object is to be capable of affecting - of making a difference in the world.[1] Objects are coalesced assemblages of differential capacity. It is by virtue of their actual existence that objects affect things and are vulnerable to the affective forces which exceed them. This much should be obvious.

Why bring it up then? Well, because even if we agree that objects are compositions with affective force what remains to be understood in detail is exactly how such entities come to operate in a world that is perpetually in motion. That is, what is perhaps the most interesting but least understood characteristic of objects is their affect dynamics.

In a recent post (here) Levi Bryant lays out quite nicely some definitions of the notion of ‘affect’, and discusses how such a concept might be used to understand the nature of objects and their relations.

Here are a two key statements from Levi’s post:
  • “…all objects are defined by their affects or capacities to act or be acted upon.”[2] 
  • “Affects refer to the powers or capacities of an object, and define the relational dimension of substances or how they interface or port with other objects in the world.”[3]
I couldn’t agree with Levi more. Objects, or what I prefer to call assemblages, must be defined by their capacities to affect and be affected in the world. And the manner in which an object’s capacities or powers are unleashed is determined by both its constituent properties and the capacities of other entities and systems in which it is in constant relation. To put it another way, an object’s defining powers emerge from both the capacities inherent to its assembled properties – its unique and partially withdrawn material and expressive qualities - as well as the affordances given up to it in its interactions with the capacities and properties of other objects and environments. This co-manifestation of capacities or potencies is a co-local catalytic event brought forth via the affect dynamics of the actual onto-specific assemblages involved (as opposed to general patters or virtual potentials).

And, to be sure, every assembled object is in perpetual relation with a myriad of objects and processes at various scales. In fact, the achievement of a temporal object’s individuality (‘individuation’) is only ever possible through the intensive territorializing and assembling forces at work at the outer edges of various chaotic energectic-material flows. This relational ‘coming into being’ and maintenance of object assemblages is co-extensive with the functional and operational onto-specific efficacies (powers, capacities, potencies) inherent within the actual properties and intensities of individual compositions, assemblages and objects.

In addition, I agree with Gregory Seigworth and Melissa Gregg (as Levi quotes them) when they wrote:
Affect arises in the midst of in-between-ness: in the capacities to act and be acted upon. Affect is an impingement or extrusion of a momentary or sometimes more stained state of relation as well as the passage (and the duration of passage) of forces or intensities. That is, affect is found in those intensities that pass body to body (human, nonhuman, part-body, and otherwise), in those resonances that circulate about, between, and sometimes stick to bodies and worlds, and in the very passage or variations between these intensities and resonances. (The Affect Theory Reader)
Affect dynamics among and between objects involve impingements, extrusions, transmissions (e.g., bosons), intrusions and direct but partial contact between objects in ways that augment, extend or limit the capacities of particular objects and assemblages as they exist in relation. This is why all events and situations are never simply local manifestations, but rather co-local manifestations distributed across time and space, evoking, aligning, or sometime parasitically drawing upon the capacities and agencies of various extensive and intensive actually existing properties. And it is the historical/cosmological particularities of this “in-between-ness” of things that has given us the associations and realities we now exist within.

Without going too much into it here, it is this fundamental compositional, association and (extended?) differential character of assemblages and objects which affords novel alliances between properties and powers, and therefore the emergence of new forces, affects and capacities. The open-ended, never complete, partially withdrawn nature of “in-between-ness” is an anarchic, pure difference at core of Being which allows for the possibility of new arrangements, or what Levi calls “regimes of attraction”.  
"Everything which happens and everything which appears is correlated with orders of differences: differences of level, temperature, pressure, tension, potential, difference of intensity".[Deleuze 1994:222]
However, it must be noted that specificity is the twin nature of cosmic differentiality. It is the specific constitution of particular objects which allow for particular changes in relations of force and affect – because capacities to affect and be affected are, again, embodied powers inherent in the properties of the entities and assemblages involved. For example a military-industrial-complex has an onto-specific capacity to affect based on the various properties it holds, evokes, extends, extracts, etc..[4] Whereas a basketball team, or an ant colony, or a dvd player have a very different capacity to affect based on their particular onto-specific constitution, in addition to the contexts in which they exist.

Why “onto-specificity”? Because, I argue, it is the cosmological-contextual unfolding of specific energetic-material properties of entities that make them fundamentally unique and irreducibly emergent. By referring to the ‘onto-specific’ properties of assembled objects I’m signaling that ontologically there is nothing more to know about a particular entity outside its specific compositional ontic characteristics. Everything we need to know about particular things is embodied in their specific properties and relations within the world. Ontological claims are therefore derivative of ontic encounters.

Getting back to the topic at hand, I enjoyed how Levi goes on to discuss the important distinction between active and passive affects, and then hints at some very interesting lines of thought he develops in his highly anticipated book, The Democracy of Objects:
Affects are always structured around channels (in The Democracy of Objects I theorize channels as “distinctions”) which delimit fields of possible action and receptivity. These are what Jakob von Uexkull seeks to theorize in his writings on ethology. Electric eels are able to sense their world in terms of the electric signatures that I am not, yet they have very little in the way of vision. So too in the case of sharks. Bees might sense electro-magnetic fields. Bodies of a specific type are only capable of particular types of actions.[5]
I like how he puts this: “[b]odies of a specific type are only capable of particular types of actions.” I would mutate this somewhat by saying that objects (including bodies) are both capable of and vulnerable to particular types of affects as a result of the particular relationships between actually existing onto-specific properties. I’m not sure if Levi would agree to this revision, but in effect I think we are saying very similar things: capacity is about specificity.

It must be said that for me the specific capacities to affect and be affected are what I think of as an entity’s potency. The term ‘potency’ here evokes connotations from the visceral plane (such as emanation, flavor, effervescence) that a more cerebral or abstract word like ‘capacity’ doesn’t seem to carry. Thus, an object’s particular potencies can be said to affect or be affected in variety of ways – depending on the materialities, expressions, properties and affect dynamics at play in particular circumstances.

What is more important, however, is for us to begin to understand better how the potencies or force of things – or, what some might call their ‘agencies’ – are often accumulations or compounds. Even human agents are compositions of the properties and capacities of so many sub-assemblages and seemingly ‘external’ forces and affordances. From the molecules in our bodies, to the cellular assemblages of our organs, to the symbolic resources of our social groups, and technological extensions of our memories by smartphones, we are composite beings making our way among matrices of affects and dynamic forces, accumulating and augmenting our unique potencies in relation and always in context. Thus ‘agency’ is a social and individual affair. That is to say, ‘mind’, agency, etc., is an utterly co-local event.

Fundamentally, this is why I prefer the term ‘assemblage’ to the term ‘object’. The term object signifies, at least to me, a unity that is temporary, tentative and precarious at best, whereas the notion of assemblage calls attention to the compositional, multidimensional, associational, entangled and co-implicated nature of things. Objects as assemblages are always relational as well as being uniquely efficacious: they depend and attend at the same time. And I suggest it is this dynamical nature of objects that we ought to appreciate most if we are to learn to affect more positive and practical change in a multi-agentic and complex world.

Forest of Dragonflies

by Hayv Kahraman

18.5.11

New York State Attorney General Set To Take On Wall Street

I’m pleasantly surprised by the news that current New York State Attorney General Eric Schneiderman has launched what looks to be a major investigation into the systemic corruption that led to the 2008 global financial crisis.

The investigation was revealed yesterday in a piece by New York Times reporter Gretchen Morgenson. Morgenson reported that Schneiderman’s key focus will be on the banks’ mortgage securitization process, and will target major players in at least three companies: Morgan Stanley, Bank of America, and the enormously influential Goldman, Sachs. [source]

Schneiderman’s probe might be the first authentic attempt at a criminal prosecution of the world’s most elite financial predators since the 2008 crisis which nearly brought down the global economy and plunged capitalist governments everywhere into massive state debt.

Eric T. Schneiderman, a Democrat, and former state senator from the Upper West Side of Manhattan, was elected New York’s 65th attorney general in November 2010. Schneiderman formally requested information and documents from the three major Wall Street banks about their mortgage securities operations in April 2011. [source]

I hope Schneiderman understands the pressure he will face and the danger this enquiry will place on his career and his family. The world’s top financial oligarchs aren’t going to treat his actions lightly, so we can expect a ruthless campaign to discredit the former senator at the very least.

Good luck Eric.

17.5.11

The Rising Culture and Worldview of Contemporary Spirituality

Spirituality as an expression and extension of the human capacity for wonder is a healthy and thought provoking activity. Beyond belief and prior to religious dogma is a reverence for being alive in a cosmic event. And any approach to social development and sustainability must recognize the deep human needs, values and resiliencies at the heart of the spiritual life.  We are in many ways spiritual animals.

From the Integral Ecology Center:
The Rising Culture and Worldview of Contemporary Spirituality: A Sociological Study of Potentials and Pitfalls for Sustainable Development

by Annick Hedlund-de Witt

Several social scientists claim that the rise of the culture of contemporary spirituality is a pivotal part of the gradual but profound change taking place in the Western worldview, both reflecting the larger cultural development, as well as giving shape and direction to it. Its emergence is therefore not to be neglected in attempts to create a more sustainable society. The aim of this study is to generate insight into the culture and worldview of contemporary spirituality and explore its potentials and pitfalls for sustainable development. An investigation of the sociological literature on the so-called “New Age” phenomenon results in a delineation and overview of these and shows that this culture is both a potentially promising force, as well as a phenomenon posing specific risks. A structural–developmental understanding is introduced in order to be able to distinguish between regressive and progressive tendencies in this culture, and comprehend the deeper logic behind the observed potentials and pitfalls. This may serve to facilitate the actualization of the culture's potentials while mitigating its pitfalls, and in that way contribute to the timely challenge of creating a more sustainable society.
Read More: Here

Annick Hedlund-de Witt is presently a PhD researcher at the Institute for Environmental Studies at the Vrije Universiteit in Amsterdam. In her work she explores the relationship between ‘worldviews’ (or: ‘philosophies of life’) and the ways these relate to goals and issues of sustainable development, including social-cultural change, individual environmental behaviour and policy attempts to influence these.

13.5.11

Wealth, Taxes and The Elite Agenda

Some very clear and simple facts about the class war waged by corporate and wealthy elites:


U.S President Obama's amazing speech on the 2012 budget (April 13, 2011). Let us demand that he backs up this rhetoric with action:

12.5.11

Michel Foucault - The Culture of the Self

The audio below presents the first in a series of three recorded lectures in which French philosopher Michel Foucault examines Western culture's conceptual development of individual subjectivity. Foucault gave these lectures, in English, at UC Berkeley, beginning on April 12, 1983, roughly a year before he died. There are some negligable distortions in the recordings:




Listen to Parts 4-7: Here

Original Source: Apolloxias

10.5.11

Whitehead as Correlationist?

“The mind in apprehending also experience sensations which, properly speaking, are qualities of the mind alone. These sensations are projected by the mind so as to clothe appropriate bodies in external nature. Thus the bodies are perceived as which qualities which in reality do not belong to them, qualities which in fact are purely the offspring of the mind. Thus nature gets credit which should in truth be reserved for ourselves: the rose for its scent: the nightingale for his song: and the sun for his radiance. The poets are entirely mistaken. They should address their lyrics to themselves, and should turn them into odes of self-congratulation on the excellence of the human mind. Nature is a dully affair, soundless, scentless, colourless: merely the hurrying of material, endlessly, meaninglessly.”
-- Alfred North Whitehead, from Science and the Modern World (New York: Free Press, 1967), pg 54.

Qualities of the mind alone? I think not. Honestly, I don’t know Whitehead well enough to comment on the merits of his 'theory of mind', but in reading this passage I feel compelled to argue and suggest that ‘mind’ is not a thing at all, and therefore incapable of creating some conjured plasma of “sensation” which it then thrusts upon a formless world. 'Sensation' is a precondition for mind. 'Mind' is that captured illusion excreted by memory which takes itself for some-thing, while always actually being the flux and the temporary conjuction of body and context and the resulting flows. Consciousness, from this view, is a mind-ing of particular kinds of sensual beings; it is simply one property and co-local event within an ecology of flesh, sensuality, networks, flows and objects.

Yet objects, entities and assemblages have their own vibrancy, force or efficacy that is not entirely given to them by hominid appending faculties. Of course we humans form and project interpretations and filter experience (translate) in our encounters with the world of things via our nervous systems, but in the confrontation between nervous systems and entities each assemblage brings with them a certain potency or capacity which is inherent to each. This embodied, contextual, constituent capacity is an entity’s substantiality.

And indeed such ‘substances’ are never outside of their relations and the flows and forces of their maintenance - as each temporal substantiality is implicated, involved and generated in process – but, as the object-oriented remind us, there is an excess, or irreducible efficacy to individualized things which bursts forth in affective flurries of limited (partial) interaction.

“Nature”, then, is not devoid of qualities, it overflows with them. Every-thing and process that makes up a world has contributing properties. Thus we live in an entirely sensual world - a raging symphony of dynamic properties and novel assemblies, of saturated beings generated out of difference and collaboration, mixing and mingling at their edges, but ever participating from the rich depths of their constitution. 

Therefore when we assume too much about the hominid capacity for importing meaning and character we narcissistically turn inward, forming an imaginal hall of mirrors blocking any possibility for a deeper appreciation for the things themselves, while also stunting the development of more potent modes of self-understanding that such an appreciation might engender. The cosmos persists within and beyond us, and always in addition to our speculations.

UPDATE:

With a little help from my friends (in the comments below), I just found out that this quote is taken out of context. I’m told that Whitehead is actually being sarcastic here in depicting John Locke's theory of primary and secondary qualities. In other words, this is not Whitehead's position but rather the one he is arguing against.

To put the quote in its immediate context, the very next lines read as follows:
"However you disguise it, this is the practical outcome of the characteristic scientific philosophy which closed the seventeenth century. In the first place, we must note its astounding efficiency as a system of concepts for the organisation of scientific research. In this respect, it is fully worthy of the genius of the century which produced it. It has held its own as the guiding principle of scientific studies ever since. It is still reigning. Every university in the world organises itself in accordance with it. No alternative system of organising the pursuit of scientific truth has been suggested. It is not only reigning, but it is without a rival. And yet it is quite unbelievable."
And a little later in the book:
"Thereby, modern philosophy has been ruined. It has oscillated in a complex manner between three extremes. There are the dualists, who accept matter and mind as on equal basis, and the two varieties of monists, those who put mind inside matter, and those who put matter inside mind. But this juggling with abstractions can never overcome the inherent confusion introduced by the ascription of misplaced concreteness to the scientific scheme of the seventeenth century."
When I first encountered this quote I immediately thought something was askew. I’ve never read anything like that from Whitehead before, and was taken aback by what I perceive as a very ill-informed understanding of how (I believe) perception and consciousness actually works. I obviously need to read more Whitehead.

And, for the record, I also take issue with Locke’s model. I think the primary/secondary divide is artificial and based on a very incomplete (non-empirical) position in comparison with what we now know about embodied cognitive faculties. Perception is far more sensuous and intrinsic to the nature of embodied entities.

“…we have mistaken our abstractions for concrete realities." Indeed we have.

9.5.11

Ivakhiv on the Idea of Nature and its Dichotomies

Over at Immanence Adrian Ivakhiv has recently taken up the question of the usefulness (or not) of the ancient concept of ‘Nature’ (here). As usual, Adrian’s post is a whirlwind of intelligence and nuance which creates a space for open consideration of various views on the topic.

In addition to some fantastic quotes from A.N Whitehead Adrian brings in Robert Corrington and C.S Peirce to begin tracing out ways to rethink the conception of Nature along the lines of an ontological and epistemological praxis.

My favorite passage is this:
There are many related ways of defining nature. Robert Corrington, for instance, calls nature “the sheer availability of whatever is” (fn. 1). The nature of nature, then, would be the availability of this availability — its coming-into-availability, its suchness (which I take to be a verb, not a quality belonging to something).

Since nothing merely is — everything is always in the process of becoming both itself and extending beyond itself, all things being self-transcending — the nature of nature is open-ended. Nature could thus be called immanent self-transcendence: immanent in that it is generative of itself, conditioning its own realization, and self-transcendent in its creativity.

Rethought along these kinds of lines (and there are many variations thereof), the idea of Nature shifts from being a particular idea that works its way historically into discourses of what is right (or wrong), what is good (or bad), how we should act (and shouldn’t), and so on, to becoming part of a practice of ontology and epistemology. What is this world (or universe, or pluriverse) we are part of? How are we part of it, and distinct from it? This is something that every entity answers in its own way, to its own (more or less) satisfaction.
In my view, a basic understanding of the cosmos as a transcending immanence, or creative emergent process capable of generating physical, biological as well as symbolic and existential ‘natures’ is the beginning of post-formal (non dogmatic) inquiry – a kind of explicit reasoning which allows raw experience (awareness) and the facticity that affords it to temper the excesses of all human knowledge (translation). Such an animalistic or brute appreciation for the terrain of Being and its vicissitudes fosters a playful theoretic attitude, perpetually driving us to think beyond such cumbersome intellectualizations as ‘Nature’ and ‘Culture’.

In his post Adrian articulates a vision of the cosmos that is open enough to obviate the need for the dichotomy of Nature/Culture while, perhaps, not abandoning the concept of Nature itself. As Adrian suggests :
“…the idea of Nature can get us into some grave conceptual cul-de-sacs. (I’ve argued that before myself.) I’m just interested in reframing the conversation by sliding the idea of nature out of the vice-grip of nature-culture dualism.”
My gut-reaction here is to suggest that a liberated notion of Nature might still be useful – or, perhaps more accurately, be able to continue to generate certain aesthetic and psychological (spiritual?) resonances we might wish to retain.

I too appreciate the critical reflections of Slavoj Žižek and Tim Morton on the ideology of Nature, and accept that its current use does serve as a barrier to deeper ontological realizations of natural phenomena, but are we to abandon such a long-standing idea without first trying to rehabilitate those aspects of the term which have given rise to so much naturalistic thinking and resulting ‘environmental’ politics? I’m not entirely sure.

Adrian has also written an excellent paper in which he reviews Noel Castree’s Nature, Bruno Latour’s Reassembling the Social and John Law’s After Method. In the paper Adrian discusses key insights of these authors while arguing for a dynamic and open-ended view of the natural world. If you are at all interested in Latour, John Law, ANT and/or the falsity of the nature/culture conceptual divide this paper is definitely well worth the read:
Social Nature: Collapsing Dichotomies Without Unraveling The Fabric Of Things   by Adrian Ivakhiv

The world might be imagined as a web held together through oppositions, force fields of tension overlaid against each other into a delicate network that holds everything we know in the elastic space stretched between the opposable thumbs of multiple, invisible hands. By the world, I don‟t necessarily mean atoms, photons and light rays, proteins and cells, bodies, structures, systems, planets. I mean the world as an experienced, interpreted, storied, affective domain of relations, identifications, and involvements. In that world, or worlds (since they are differently experienced and conceived by every world-bearing being), meanings and values are conferred through distinction and differentiation: this is better than that, we do this and they do that, once upon a time things were this way but now they’re much worse (or better), and so on. We organize the patterns and regularities we see, over time, into categories such as darkness and light, earth and sky, cold and warm, raw and cooked, male and female, and then stitch these categories into bundles: dark-earth-female versus light-sky-male, or variations along these lines. These categories become the ways we make sense of our experience, which as always is imbued with feeling, desire, sensations experienced collectively and individually.

So it is with the categories nature and culture, or nature and society. Or wilderness and civilization, by which are generally meant something like nature at its utmost and society at its best (or worst). The terms change over time and under the influence of social, political, and scientific developments (as Raymond Williams and other historians of ideas have shown), and they don‟t necessarily translate between cultural milieus. If structuralist anthropology showed that each society configures its own overlaid sets of binaries by which to organize its conceptual world, post-structuralists, in their turn, have demonstrated that any such binaries are subject to the ravages of time and space, their meanings slipping and sliding from the grips of their users, and that they are always co-implicated with power, desire, and other such forces.
Read More: Here

6.5.11

Lawrence Cahoone on Heidegger's Being and Time

I don't read Heidegger this way but I see why one might do so:


Towards An Ontography of Public Health - Part 1: Possibilities

One aspect I enjoy at this stage of my career is developing tools (training algorithms, materials, procedures) that demand and instantiate more practical complex-ecological thinking among those I work with, and at all levels of decision-making and practice. I consider this at the core of public-health assemblage design. And in the context of the work I do I suggest that we desperately need to enact more ecological modes of thinking, representing and health-relating if we are to cultivate more eudemonic public education, health-care and prevention systems.

And this is where my interest in ‘speculative realism’ meets my everyday work. Contemporary public health and education systems are pervaded by what Mark Fisher has called “capitalist realism”. This pernicious ethos and regime of practice often preempts crucial insights and innovations from flowing into public life from various sources viz. both representation (knowledge expression) and application.

By taking an ontographic approach to health and education systems I suggest a rethinking of the foundations of our public health assumptions and a mapping out of inherently subversive trajectories for community design and re-assembly relative to the dominant admixtures of capitalist realism currently at work. 

Philosophy broadly conceived is an important resource for just such a rethinking and redesign. So for me speculative realism is a particular set of strange attractors which help confront crucial questions. Therein we are cued to consider what kinds of speculation might be required to move into more participatory, ecological or truth-full conceptual spaces? What kind of “realisms” can we co-create that might enact more equitable, just and sustainable ways of being in the world?

In brief, I argue that many Western health-care cultures still sorely lack an attention to several critical factors impacting communal and individual life. For starters:
1. There is still an under appreciation for the ever-present qualitative (sensual, psycho-aesthetic, symbolic, experiential) aspects of public health. The existentiality of health-care and education - including its developmental dimensions – is institutionally excluded from systems design (even in the domain “mental health” services in my opinion).

2. A far-reaching inability to implement (or generate) a deeper appreciation of the particular ‘agencies’ or efficacy (duration, intensity, affect) of the myriad of sub-personal and non-human materials/properties which compose any particular community matrix. As an example I would simply point to asbestos in school construction, pesticide in public parks, or fluoride in community water supplies. At the level of the clinic we can see aspartame in use in the lobby, improper use of antibiotics and much more.

3. The implicit (subconscious and nonconscious) and pathological assumptions coded into contemporary health practices (interrogated along the lines initiated by Michel Foucault, R.D Lang, Arthur Kleinman, Paul Farmer and others).
These are only three strains of consideration we might entertain, but I would suggest that the basic deficiency of current education and health-care assemblages is an inability to enact modes of participation and operation which address the imperatives of various biophysical, existential, semiotic and ecological aspects concurrently.

What interests me in the short-term, then, is exploring the possibilities for moving towards an ontography of public health that offers up our most basic metaphysical assumptions for scrutiny.

Starting seemingly arbitrarily from Heidegger’s questioning of the meaning of Being we can then plunge full-bodied into the cave of experience and interrogate the appearance of objects and relations, events and procedures, assemblages and flows, and trace them back to their ancestral roots within the dark ecology of matter and intensity. In this subterranean infrastructure we find ourselves among all sorts of uncanny processes, flows, entities and meshworks capable of forcing us into novel negotiations with reality and perhaps prompting us to build our habitats in ways that better sustain and nourish the life-tide of our own being and becoming in addition to the achievements of other materials. 

Can we have a general theory of objects that enriches civilizational design? Can we have a model of dynamic process that appreciates the pure difference and individuation of things? What is the essential nature of reality upon which any infrastructure of public health is built? And will these most basic ontological inquires move us and affect us enough to become more authentic and creative beings? I hope to find out.

5.5.11

Obama Plans Corporate Tax Cuts In Year Of Record Profits

From The Nation:
As nationwide budget protests continue this week, Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner is prepared to unveil the Obama administration’s plan to lower the top corporate tax rate from the current 35 percent to less than 30 percent, and as low as 26 percent.

In order to pay for the cuts, the proposal calls for closing loopholes and slashing exemptions. Politico reports that Geithner has already begun meeting privately with CEOs, academics, labor unions, and liberal and conservative think tanks, and his aides say he is “encouraged by the response.”

Part of that optimism stems from the fact that Democrats and Republicans are both allies of the business world [reports a top Washington corporate lobbyist].
Read More: Here

To be fair, if Barak actually closes the numerous loopholes and exemptions in existence for corporations and the hyper-wealthy it would make for a much more equitable tax system overall despite any decrease in the percentage of tax for those parties, because more companies and elites would actually be required to pay instead of continuing to shirk their social responsibilities and pay no taxes at all. So, on the one hand, he looks like a friend to the corporate masters by formally lowering taxes, while actually increasing tax revenues by preempting those same moneyed oligarchs from worming their way out of contributing to the running of the democracy they so love to exploit. Slick move if done right.

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Speculations II

“To paraphrase a traditional Zen saying, before philosophy there are mountains and rivers, whilst doing philosophy mountains and rivers disappear, but when philosophical dogmatism is replaced by speculation the mountains are once again mountains and the rivers once again rivers.” - from the editors
The unofficial journal of Speculative Realism has now released its second collection of articles and reviews from and about the usual suspects. Therein you will find Tim Morton waxing sublime, Levi Bryant conjuring Marx’s ghost and Nicola Masciandaro reposing ‘the question of the animal’, and much more.

Check out the entire edition (PDF): Here.

4.5.11

Toxic Alberta: Oil Spill Poisoning Wetlands and Cree Communities

Although mainstream media coverage is limited and unsubstantial local residents are reporting tonight that emergency clean-up crews in Little Buffalo, Alberta continue to work day and night to mitigate the massive ecological damage being caused by the worst oil spill in the Canadian province since 1975.

The oil leak was discovered in the early morning of April 29, 2011 after a drop in pressure was detected along the “Rainbow” pipeline, which runs about 770 kilometres from Zama, Alberta to refineries in Edmonton. It’s the biggest spill in the province in 35 years, and substantially larger than the Enbridge Inc. leak in Michigan last summer that has cost that company $550-million (U.S.). The 220,000 barrel-a-day “Rainbow” pipeline is owned by a Canadian subsidiary of Houston-based Plains All American Pipeline L.P.

The leak was stopped later that day, but not before 4.5 million litres of oil, or 28,000 barrels, leaked into a wetland area near Little Buffalo, about 460 kilometres northwest of Edmonton. The oil spill was allegedly contained by a large beaver dam, which prevented it from spreading through the entire region. Alberta Environment officials have confirmed that six beavers and 10 ducks died or had to be euthanized after the spill. [source]
 
Wetlands overflowing with crude oil from April 29, 2011 spill.

Nearby residents from the Lubicon Cree Nation are already reporting serious illness related to the spill, and local officials have indefinitely closed a school near the affected area after numerous health complaints by children and staff. A Lubicon spokesman reported that the communities affected are deeply worried and are calling for a general evacuation of the entire area. [source]

The province’s energy “regulator” is warning that it will not authorize a restart of the Rainbow pipeline, which sprang another substantial leak five years ago, until it is satisfied the line is not plagued with systemic problems. [source]

Honestly, I’m surprised provincial “regulators” are even paying attention to the spill since the Conservative government’s public record indicates quite clearly the low priority they place on the health of native populations and the region’s increasingly degenerating ecosystems.
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