I had a look
at ‘speculative realism’, which itself seems to embody many
different approaches. Hard to understand if you haven’t studied
philosophy at all, but I cringed somewhat on reading this remark “All
four of the core thinkers within Speculative Realism work to overturn these
forms of philosophy which privilege the human being, favouring distinct forms
of realism against the dominant forms of idealism in much of contemporary
philosophy.” http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Speculative_realism
The four thinkers don’t actually seem to quite agree on the approach.
While it
still has ‘realism’ in the name, does SR take us down the
Latour route? His actor network theory seems particularly disabling
politically, and not very radical at all in terms of its normative stance and assistance
to political action on important matters of ethics and rights. Humans seem to
be just one actor in a network of connections. Researchers trace them. If SR
also embraces this view, how does it help?
In order to
get critical stuff done in the world – surely we are more important than ‘other’
objects? The bike rider is more important than her/his inner tubes, which
cannot affect infrastructure policy themselves. ‘Other’ objects don’t
have agency. While I can see that some objects have particular ‘power’
– viruses, guns, SUVs, the weather, etc and it is good to study them
(technography, by Paul Richards and his students at Wageningen, is a great
approach to that) – it’s the people that have the power to change their
effects and use. Especially the weather.
Back to
idealism, perhaps, and particularly Marx. Or even critical realism, which I
rather liked.
However on a
weekly basis, it’s what you do with your time that really matters for me,
rather than the philosophical approach you find interesting. A different point,
but I am sure this is the case for other readers too. That’s
perhaps a reactionary version of ‘critical human geography’ –
or – given the cuts facing universities right now – a pragmatic
personal strategy to get as much done before many of us lose our jobs (what is
happening in the UK – more Depts under threat?) or get sucked into other quotidian
things as we age!
S
Dr. Simon Batterbury, Director,
Office for Environmental Programs,
&
Associate Professor,
Dept. of Resource Management and Geography,
(rm L2.33,
simonpjb@ unimelb.edu.au http://www.simonbatterbury.net
From:
Stuart Elden [mailto:[log in to unmask]]
Sent: Monday, 2 August 2010 7:46
AM
Subject: Speculations Volume I now
published
The first volume of a new online journal,
Speculations, is now available.
“Speculations is a journal dedicated to research
into speculative realism and post-continental philosophy.