I'm going to quote his swimming pool analogy from an earlier post just because I think it's so neat. I'm using in my Rice talk tomorrow. (Stay tuned.)
Morton’s hyperobjects are thus like our experience of a pool while swimming. Everywhere we are submersed within the pool, everywhere the cool water caresses our body as we move through it, yet we are nonetheless independent of the water. We produce effects in the water like diffraction patterns, causing it to ripple in particular ways, and it produces effects in us, causing our skin to get goosebumps and, if you’re a man, for parts of you to inconveniently shrink, yet the water and the body are nonetheless two objects withdrawn from one another interacting only vicariously.
2 comments:
idealism latent in Marx? yer killing me Tim. A doubly inverted Hegel I guess then? (360 back flip landed!) Now I’ve read everything… ;-)
"In this way Levi avoids the idealism latent in (yes I'm going to say it) Marx."
I am also curious here as to what this means. Partly because of the context (Marx surely treats class as an actual object, yeah?) but just generally.
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