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.
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:
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.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).
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.
10 comments:
there is a lot here and I hope to come back to it sooner than later, but in brief we need to also re-cognize suffering (including stress), especially in relation to socialization/adaptation, many/most people are in over their heads, as this is a major factor in life that seems outside of the existing formalized realms of public health-care.
-dmf
http://rauli.cbs.dk/index.php/foucault-studies/article/view/3202/3415
in his recent turn deonto is also heading down at least a parallel road tho where he sees depression I see anxiety.
http://deontologistics.wordpress.com/2011/04/22/comments-on-capitalist-realism-part-1/#more-366
"we need to also re-cognize suffering (including stress)..."
Yes, this is an important issue. I really like the way Dylan Trigg is moving in directions that shed light on various primary moods.
A theory of suffering, for me, begins with an understanding of flesh; the flesh of the world. If we are enfolded and unfolding complexes of vibrant flesh, what in the way we live causes or facilitates suffering?
Being a lapse Buddhist I of course have some very old notions of the origins of suffering, but I totally agree with you that we need to "re-cognize" it in terms of our contemporary conditions.
"anxiety" as a primary hominid condition (and perhaps a general feature of sentient beings of all sorts) is not necessarily synonymous with suffering in my opinion.
of course there is a lot to say on these topics as well...
As for Pete's work, I must admit I haven't read too much, but what I have read I like. I'm not a transcendentalist per se, and don't like the kinds of language games that kind of thinking gets into, but Pete is a brilliant thinker by any estimation.
I'll have to read that post you link to find out more.
have you read Rabinow's
Marking Time: On the Anthropology of the Contemporary (2007) or Anthropos Today: Reflections on Modern Equipment (2003)?
I have found Buddhism/zazen wonderful
for learning to pay attention but pretty limited in terms of thinking beyond that vital experience/practice.
http://www.philosophy.uncc.edu/mleldrid/SAAP/USC/DP17.html
Yeah i read Rabinow's 'Marking Time' when it came out - but it was not a slow or deep reading. I remember being bogged down and reading most of it on the transit, which, in my case, does not lend itself to increased comprehension. I should return to it though, since, as I recall, It aligned quite nicely with my own rejection (for the most part) of current disciplinary discourse, categories and practices, as well as my own desire to rethink the ontology of public infrastructures.
Of course this is not surprising given Rabinow's relationship to Foucault and my own secret love affair with Foucault’s work.
I particularly liked how Rabinow identifies the temporal and ontological non-linear “problem-space” of the contemporary as “a moving ratio”. The resonances here with both Heidegger’s notion of the ‘clearing’ and Deleuze and DeLanda’s assemblage theory are well-received as well.
Thank you for foregrounding Rabinow for me. Bringing all this up now makes me want to dive right back into that work.
Where do you situate your own thinking among all this?
I think for the kind of work we are doing with actual/particular people (and not just in terms of reading and writing about) that Rabinow is heading in the right direction of thinking through how to be response-able in relation to complexity/singularity/emergence/process/contextual-situated/etc. I like his sense of reflexive practices/experimentation (he reminds me of Andy Pickering). He is lacking much in terms of fleshing out human-beings but those resources can be found elsewhere.
I'm a bit tired but I'll give it more thought later.
http://rauli.cbs.dk/index.php/foucault-studies/article/viewFile/3202/3415
http://openwetware.org/images/7/7a/SB1.0_Rabinow.pdf
ps I really struggle with writing so don't have a blog.
thanks for your input!
I agree that the "applied" work we are doing is important.What good is an academic book that 100 people read and ponder in relation to the 1000s directly affected by social-work and related engagements?
If you ever want to throw down a longer post on related topics (or any topics) let me know and i'll invite you to guest blog here. Any time actually, just let me know.
I continue to enjoy all your links and comments scattered through the blogosphere...
cheers-
thanks for the kind words and most generous offer, for me folks like Rabinow go beyond the idea of "applied" knowledge/theory to an existential recognition that the work has to lead one beyond the limits/forms/practices of the academy and into new ways/modes of in(ter)vention. In some ways perhaps we need to revisit Jane Addams and the creation of disciplines/lives of working-things-through-with-people-in-community.
http://www.kqed.org/a/forum/R201105171000
http://itc.conversationsnetwork.org/shows/detail4858.html
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