Reading Nigel Clark and Bron Szerszynski’s just published Planetary Social Thought: The Anthropocene Challenge to the Social Sciences is helping me think through what I see as perhaps the key philosophical debate of the current time. That debate is over the “ontological politics” of the difference between science in its theory and practice — including […]
Posts Tagged ‘Nigel Clark’
New Earths to come
Posted in GeoPhilosophy, tagged Bron Szerszynski, cosmopolitics, critical realism, Elizabeth Povinelli, enactive cognition, geontologies, geontology, indigenous cosmovisions, metaphysics, Nigel Clark, ontological politics, ontology, ontopolitics, phenomenology, Planetary Social Thought, pragmatism, science, science and religion, social constructionism on March 15, 2021 | 2 Comments »
Kant’s quaking subject
Posted in AnthropoScene, GeoPhilosophy, tagged Anthropocene, Nigel Clark on March 13, 2014 | Leave a Comment »
Emil plunges us further into the inhuman nature of tsunamis, earthquakes, ethics, and modern subjectivity, over at A(S)CENE.
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