9.7.12

Extinction, Denial and Adaptation: Towards Post-Nihilist Praxis?


"Man can build his greatness on the nothingness that crushes him." - André Malraux
Levi Bryant has another fantastic post up (here) discussing the aim of speculative realism in relation to nihilism and extinction more generally. I think Levi is on target with his comments about how North Americans seem to be working through our growing realization of the possibility (probability) of extinction in the face of ecological collapse (among other calamities). I believe this “awareness” is still mostly registering on subconscious levels - i.e., biologically as toxins, ecologically as climate, hurricanes, floods – and denied or obfuscated on political and ideological levels, but it is definitely becoming expressed.

The following are some key passages from Levi’s post:
Everything hinges on asking why the critique of correlationism– the most contentious and controversial dimension of SR –has arisen at this point in history. Why have so many suddenly become impassioned with the question of how it is possible to think a world without humans or being without thought? It is such a peculiar question, such a queer question, such a strange question. Why, after all, would we even be concerned with what the world might be apart from us when we are here and regard this world? There are, of course, all sorts of good ontological and epistemological reasons for raising these questions. Yet apart from immanent philosophical reasons, philosophy is always haunted by a shadow text, a different set of reasons that are not so much of the discursive order as of the order of the existential and historical situation and which thought finds itself immersed at a given point in history. Over and above– or perhaps below and behind –the strictly discursive philosophical necessity for a particular sort of thought, is the existential imperative to think something. Here the issue is not one of establishing how a certain philosophical imperative demands a response to a strictly philosophical question, but of addressing the question of why a particular question begins to resonate at all at this point in history and not in others…

…if I were to hazard a guess as to why the critique of correlationism, the thought of a world without humans, has suddenly become a burning one, then my suggestion would be that this is because we are facing the imminent possibility of a world that is truly without humans. If it has become necessary to think the possibility of a world without humans, then this is because we face a future– due to the coming climate apocalypse –of a world that truly is without humans…

Culture can be seen as a symptomatic thinking through– veiled and concealed, while nonetheless present and on the surface right there before our eyes –of the Real of its historical moment. This seems to be the case with apocalyptic films and movements in recent decades. What we seem to be thinking through is the possibility of our own extinction or, at the very least, the extinction of the world as we know it.
Speculative realism is important because several of the authors involved seem interested in operationalizing the need for novel understandings and engagements with the creeping potencies of the nonhuman and the precarious. SR offers widely dispersed possibilities for reconsidering human thought and behavior after the hideous yet enlightening realizations of being-in-a-material-world.

My sense is that North Americans currently tend to reject such realizations and then bury the accompanying dread of finitude and animality through consumption and/or fantasy - with T.V or crystal meth no less than simply commodities - in order to sooth the pain of their existential fears and resentments. To be sure, there are variances in the manner people respond but i believe the push and pull of consumption and distraction remain paramount.

I’m reminded of Ernest Becker’s work in this regard:
“Full humanness means full fear and trembling, at least some of the waking day. When you get a person to emerge into life, away from his dependencies, his automatic safety in the cloak of someone else's power, what joy can you promise him with the burden of his aloneness? When you get a person to look at the sun as it bakes down on the daily carnage taking place on earth, the ridiculous accidents, the utter fragility of life, the power¬lessness of those he thought most powerful—what comfort can you give him from a psychotherapeutic point of view? Luis Buimel likes to introduce a mad dog into his films as counterpoint to the secure daily routine of repressed living. The meaning of his symbolism is that no matter what men pretend, they are only one accidental bite away from utter fallibility. The artist disguises the incongruity that is the pulse-beat of madness but he is aware of it. What would the average man do with a full consciousness of ab-surdity? He has fashioned his character for the precise purpose of putting it between himself and the facts of life; it is his special tour-de-force that allows him to ignore incongruities, to nourish himself on impossibilities, to thrive on blindness. He accomplishes thereby a peculiarly human victory: the ability to be smug about terror. Sartre has called man a "useless passion" because he is so hopelessly bungled, so deluded about his true condition. He wants to be a god with only the equipment of an animal, and so he thrives on fantasies. As Ortega so well put it in the epigraph we have used for this chapter, man uses his ideas for the defense of his existence, to frighten away reality. This is a serious game, the defense of one's existence—how take it away from people and leave them joyous?” (Becker, The Denial of Death, p.58-59)
 As Heidegger argues with tremendous force in Being and Time, humans are fundamentally coping-beings. By composition and disposition we seek to make-sense and understand ourselves. We are the weirdo-beings that give a damn about being – creatures required by circumstance to adapt. But what adaptations are possible for us this late in the ‘game’?

As Levi states:
It is our circumstances themselves, the material reality of our world, that has become nihilistic, not the thought of this or that thinker. Indeed, I suspect that many of us are terrified and anguished by this objective nihilistic darkness that approaches and that may very well have happened, as Timothy Morton suggests. Perhaps we are already dead and we just don’t yet know it.
I believe the task of intellectuals (and not just philosophers) today is to indulge rather than mask the nihilistic forces of contemporary life – forces which manifest in both subjective and objective ways. Partaking in the dark revelations of current ecologies can only push us further towards more earthly, or creaturely, that is to say materialist modes of thinking and doing. Thinking the visceral and consequential facticity of intercorporeality entails thinking about our intimate connections as immanent achievements (our continuity with ‘nature’) and our vulnerability (or precarity with-in ‘nature’) simultaneously. We will have to effectively integrate the facticity of matter as matter in order to generate useful and mutually understandable expressions and sentiments among participants (or at least those of us left behind, so to speak). The practical motivations of material and speculative adaptation and communicability are at the core of any possible species of ecological and humanist thought.
"[T]he disenchantment of the world understood as a consequence of the process whereby the Enlightenment shattered the 'great chain of being' and defaced the 'book of the world' is a necessary consequence of the coruscating potency of reason, and hence an invigorating vector of intellectual discovery, rather than a calamitous diminishment" (Ray Brassier, Nihil Unbound, p. xi)
 Of course, we could take up the lines purposed by Brassier, or by Laruelle, or the eliminativists, or cleanse our phantasies in the rhetorical psychedelica of Timothy Morton, or even come up with our own codes and performances capable of limiting thought and opening us to the intercorporeal facticity of life - to Life as Flesh - but even this would be only a gesture. The important work to be done is decidedly practical. We must build new infrastructures.

24 comments:

Anonymous said...

very good except for the "denial" part, I think that if we take recent work on cognitive biases into account it becomes clearer that largely these are not matters which register and then are pushed away but instead never really make it thru the conditioning/expectations/screenings of the majority population, so the question, as Stengers and Morton have raised, is what powers of suggestion, what say amplification,contrast effect,or sleight of hand, is needed to jerry-rig the necessary gestalt switch to allow for these aspects to dawn?
-dmf

Unknown said...

Hey Dirk,

I think denial can be both conscious (an existential choice) and subconscious (as with cognitive biases), however I suspect that in most cases it is a combination of both - with the spectrum of conscious-ness complicated by personal experience (education, acquired schema, etc) and social setting.

I guess more in line with your point I suggest that "denial" here can simply be an aspect of a more general cognitive and affective blockage where people's ego-games take priority over wider, more species-relevant concerns. I believe there certainly is an existential aspect to mis-understanding finitude.

But I agree the question is how to tweek this existential-cognitive and institutional blockage in ways that amplify ecological awareness generally enough to affect changes in personality and fields action. My suggestion involves reconfigured infrastructures of material, energetic and existential relations. Maybe I’m a bit of a Marxist in this regard, minus the determinism?

Cheers-

PS_I revised the post so maybe another reading might make more sense to you...

Anonymous said...

M, I'll leave the question of how much of death/extinction can really be grasped, or even really occurs, to people in a visceral enough way to agree that the desired ends are not just abstract/academic understandings but actually being grasped by these tensions in a way that motivates change, and in that sense are deeply existential.
We need some sense/manner of testing what works to bring about such changes in behavior and to be sure that we are working on ways for people to actualize these concerns/goals as they arise, otherwise we are just adding to the culture of entertainment.

Matt D Segall said...

I definitely agree that intellectuals and philosophers in particular need to engage head on with the sources of nihilism in human nature-cultures. Extinction is inevitable for every species, though humans are doing a great job speeding up the process (for ourselves and others). As I see it, philosophy's role at this historical moment is not to champion nihilism (as some eliminative materialists do), but to encourage the enactment of forms meaning more compatible with ecological reality. We need a new story, not the elimination of stories. Or rather, we need to reconnect with the oldest story of them all: the universe story. Incidentally, this is the title of a book by cultural historian Thomas Berry and cosmologist Brian Swimme. It's a great example of how this new mythos might be constructed.

Here is Swimme articulating what he calls "the new story": http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TRykk_0ovI0

Also, here are some reflections on meaninglessness written after the earthquake/tsunami in Japan last year: http://footnotes2plato.com/2011/03/13/the-meaning-of-disaster/

Anonymous said...

MDS, despite the political/economic dominance of cognitive-behavioral psychologies the "narrative" approach to human psychology isn't born out by recent developments in neuroscience, we are not primarily driven by overarching theories/stories and their ability to shape changes in our behavior are quite limited, as theologians and other spinners of grand theories often lament. We need to work on local and flexible modes of reflexive habit/practice formation/interactions.
-dmf

Anonymous said...

Hi, I am from Australia.

Following on from your quote from The Denial of Death please find two references which point out that right human life can only begin when one has fully understood the meaning and significance of death - until there is always only a hell-deep fear-and-trembling.

Arran James said...

Hi,

I have a short response to your post over at my blog. I also wonder if you've read Evan Calder William's 'Combined and uneven apocalypse'. He isn't in with the SR crowd, as far as I understand, but his project is also one of thinking in these dark terms.

The blog post is here, should you want to have a look: http://attemptsatliving.wordpress.com/2012/07/11/objective-nihilism-reprise/

Unknown said...

@Dirk

I believe most people try really hard to avoid all serious considerations of death and extinction. There seems to be a strong aversion in humans to thinking and feeling finitude. But again, much of this “denial” or “rejection” is subconscious operating via cognitive bias, as you pointed out, and a general aversion to the kinds of thought and sensory inputs that even hint at death and tragedy at a cosmic scale (e.g., ecological collapse) let alone confirm it.

Where I live I see this every day. So many people will avoid individuals and conversations that mention climate change, or the collapse of fish stocks, or deforestation, or water crisis, etc… People gravitate towards discussions of trivial political points or pop culture and blatantly avoid the symptoms, sensations and considerations of problems on a planetary scale. And it’s not just that people are underinformed because many people are very explicit that they have no interests in those supposed “abstract” and “speculative” concerns, choosing instead to background complex issues and adapt themselves to the requirements and commitments of conventional life. People simply have too much invested in their lives (jobs, pastimes, etc) and self-conceptions to be open to the sensations of the body (personal decay) and the environments (ecological degradation), or be sensitive to the mutual imperatives of the nonhuman realm. People defer grappling with the precarity of life and their current milieus by retreating into all sorts of “faith” (conventional cosmologies/ontologies) and focusing on maximizing pleasure through instant gratifications, passive entertainment and fetishized objects.

As an activist I have also felt the extreme intensity and resistance of certain peoples desire to avoid confronting death and finitude when attempting to challenge their worldviews/blockages. Many people become violently reactive to the suggestion that their way of life has objectively negative consequences and may result in collective self-destruction. The firmness of their beliefs reassure them that staying the course and maintaining their habits will somehow shelter them from death and calamity, or at least more calamity than they are already subject to. What is most disconcerting is that such beliefs - and the aversions that structure them – can prevent people from developing the competencies necessary for understanding complex causality and thus the consequences of their mode of existence. For the most part humans accumulate and assemble such maladaptive belief-systems (BS) in order to manage their immediate needs and desires. These systemic cognitions and habits become conditioned patterns of linking disparate beliefs and manners of behavior, all in the service of local adapting and minimizing anxiety and uncertainty and bolstering their self-assuring conceptual defenses and narratives. For example, the belief that we possess an ‘immortal soul’ is very much hooked into beliefs which support the ‘infinite growth’ paradigm in economics. And both flow from the base rejection of finitude.

So these are not strictly academic concerns but deep psychological and cultural structures. The human psyche seems set up to protect (cope) the ego from the dark realizations of the nonhuman within and existing in an elemental, fleshy and wildly indifferent cosmos. Indifferent in the sense that the cosmos cares nothing for our stories and aspirations, instead unfolding according to inherent physical and biological tendencies.

As an alternative to this collective psychosis I suggest that we seek ways of embracing finitude, death and the death of God in order to begin rebuilding our motivations, meanings, habits and habitats in direct acknowledgement of the material-energetic and animal nature of our existence. Until we “get Real” about all that we cannot hope to mobilize our energies and move forward towards restructuring the field of action and consequence. Ultimately, our success as a species can only be measured by how well we adapt to our general circumstances.

Unknown said...

@Dirk

But i do acknowledge that change is never a simple process. Change-work has to operate on different levels on different scales, and is always more of a 'mangle' or mixed affair, involving gradual movements as well as intense shifts – and requiring complex activations and resonances among various elements.

Unknown said...

@Matt

I think the goal should be to first embrace nihilism so that we may truly learn the lessons that follow from an awareness of and engagement with ancestrality, death, extinction and materiality. Nietzsche looms large here: our culture still has not yet heard that the Gods, the dictators of logos, the nightmarish super-human father above, is dead. Until we truly and reflexively understand the nature of our projections and fantasies and come to know ourselves as thoroughly embodied, mortal and ecological beings we will never be able to operate in any other way than what is dictated by those fantasies and projections. We envelop ourselves in ideological-religious (onto-theological) kludges and surrogate symbolic wombs to protect ourselves from the naked truth of finitude and animality without ever thinking about how giving up those fantasies might mean taking a step towards more authentic and experimental (adventurous) modes of being. Nihilism is a beginning in this regard not an end.

That is, I don’t think it beneficial to simply move from one religion/fantasy to the next. We cannot skip the step of nihilism as letting go to go directly to “new stories” without compromising all of our opportunities for developing a deep awareness of those primordial structures which shape, limit but yet afford our existences. We must evolve the basis on which story-making occurs before erecting the new shrines for worshiping our dreams and fears. Destruction, destruktion, deconstruction and an-nihilation must precede our reconstructions and re-formations. The phoenix rises from the ashes not the slightly singed. Coming into maturity means letting go of the past, evolving and moving forward.

That said, after nihilism we will want to create new stories, new shrines. Humans are narratologic animals. Berry and Swimme are good resources for this because they embrace the ‘hard’ sciences (as part of our general ontographic efforts). Scientific methodology and processes are among the most important sources of information to be considered in fashioning any new metanarrative or vision of the cosmos. We will always need our stories. My point is simply that the collapse of faith/fantasy and unjustified self-confidence/arrogance (in our aversions, institutions and ideologies) opens several speculative and existential opportunities for evolving the species. Hence my desire for post-nihilism.

Anonymous said...

ok since you bring it back up I'll just put out there that in general abstract/speculative events like death are not real to people in the ways in which their embodied/affected connections to life are, I have done a good deal of hospice work and the habitual force of the il y a has more gravitas than ideas, even really well researched/supported ones, so how to make what is coming as real/resonant as what is?
-dmf

Unknown said...

“We need to work on local and flexible modes of reflexive habit/practice formation/interactions.” = the practical work…

Unknown said...

@Dirk

I think that is my point too. People use their own schema to cope with the felt presence and specter of finitude in their bodies and in the environment. Dying as gradual weakening and decay is a living experience. So is environmental degradation. I’m not championing a ‘philosophy of post-nihilism’ as simply some intellectual exercise, but supporting a return to flesh and blood of life via a harsh epistemic nihilism (something close to what Derrida seems to be after) that collapses thought back into the visceral experience of being and becoming, reconfiguring our habits, intentions, motivations and behaviors. This epistemic nihilism is also a cultural response to the objective nihilism generated by war, disease, ecological degradation and the havoc consumption-based economics has wrought upon communities and ecosystems. It is also a response to the effects of the Enlightenment and rationality on traditional belief systems. In short, nihilism is the way forward towards new materialisms and praxis.

But I realize we can’t hit people over the head with theory and expect a certain realization to take hold and spread. People are too entrenched in the current regimes for us to expect them to voluntarily make the shift. However I believe we will see various shifts nonetheless. First, planetary systems are going to continue to become more volatile and force people to lose faith and reconsider their place in the cosmos. Also, societal forces (biotechnology, new class cleavages, mandatory austerity and medical interventions, etc.) will generate a crisis of identity and a rethinking of the human, complete with radically new survivalist (primal) alliances and projects. Both of these strains entail intense disruptions of conventional fields of practice and understanding. Then we will have no choice but to adapt.

We have never been modern because we (as a cultural assemblage) have never actually been nihilists.

Unknown said...

@Arran James

I really enjoyed your post, and with a few minor adjustments would completely argee with your view.

I'm going to try to follow you up with another post, but we'll see how the week shapes up!

Anonymous said...

very good except that with issues like climate change I'm afraid that after the fact/event reactions will come too late, plus outside of movies/novels peoples' reactions to traumas is not usually to reconfigure their lives in constructive ways, so we have to manufacture art-ifical means which can come close enough to the real things to generate a response, maybe by scaring folks, maybe by inspiring/training them, or various combinations as needed.
We have a lot of data from college grads to see what doesn't work so lets try something else...

Unknown said...

Frodo: I wish the ring had never come to me. I wish none of this had happened.

Gandalf: So do all who live to see such times. But that is not for them to decide. All we have to decide is what to do with the time that is given to us. There are other forces at work in this world...

From JRR Tolkien, The Lord of the Rings - Fellowship of the Ring

Anonymous said...

http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b01kknzh

Anonymous said...

http://www.abc.net.au/religion/articles/2012/07/11/3543824.htm

Matt D Segall said...

DMF- I'm not so sure neuroscientific studies are the best way to gauge the role of cosmic mythopoeia on human society and individuality. Just because grand narrative doesn't show up on the neural level doesn't mean it isn't operative on other levels. Whatever makes us conscious moral agents cannot be simply located inside the skull. Conscious agency and the sense of self is extended and distributed through networks of people, artifacts, practices, institutions, etc. We definitely do need to focus on changing local habits, but to do so will also require changing national and global institutions, which means transforming the value scheme and cosmology underlying them. I'd take the both/and approach here...

Garth said...

"It is unnecessary to admit to that which we deny so avidly - western culture has built (on all levels personal and political) a padded wall between itself and the acknowlegement of the possibity of non-existence. Our denial is constantly reinforce with the distractive spectacles of scandal and sport." ~ Pisces Iscariot

Unknown said...

Garth, Yes! Exactly.

Unknown said...

“The truth of a man is first and foremost what he hides.” -Andre Malraux

“[W]here, I ask you, can a man escape to, when he hasn’t enough madness left inside him? The truth is an endless death agony. The truth is death. You have to choose: death or lies. I’ve never been able to kill myself.” - Louis-Ferdinand Céline

Anonymous said...

MDS, as I think you know neurophenomenology is not limited to what is "in" our brains/bodies but extends with our various related processes, where do you look for concrete/pragmatic (off the page) signs of your thesis?
-dmf

Anonymous said...

http://vimeo.com/17879220

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