Philosophy, Emergence, and Simulation

Manuel DeLanda's New Book

Graham Harman mentions Manuel DeLanda’s new book, which boasts a title that should intrigue anyone reading this website: Philosophy, Emergence and Simulation. Here’s a three-minute video of DeLanda talking about it a bit more. It sounds like the book is mostly about animal intelligence, with the connection to simulation having to do with the way different intelligence other than the… read more

Meh and the Mundane Sublime

On Netflix, the Simpsons, and Jean-Luc Nancy

We just rejoined Netflix after several years away from it. While recreating preferences and ratings on a fresh account, we noticed something surprising: Netflix doesn’t allow a user to judge things as “just ok.” Take a look at the tool-tip explanations for their five-star ratings: Netflix’s recommendation system is generally considered its most valuable asset, so much so that the… read more

The Ontology of the Game of Life

On Levi Bryant on John Doyle on Levi Bryant on John Conway

Over at Larval Subjects, Levi Bryant discovered Conway’s Game of Life. Later, responding to John Doyle’s comments, Braynt reflected on the ontological status of the game and its objects. Says Levi: there are not two worldsâ?? one consisting of the really real or “mind-independent objects” and another consisting of mind and the social â??but rather only one world, the real,… read more

Another Heidegger Blog on Me

Interview with Paul Ennis

Paul Ennis has been publishing interviews with a number of contemporary thinkers working in and around the area of speculative realism, on his website Another Heidegger Blog. So far, participants have included Lee Braver, Graham Harman, Levi Bryant, Adrian Ivakhiv, with Jeffrey Malpas to come this week. I was honored to be included among the group, and Ennis has just… read more

The Metaphysics Videogame

Part 2: What Kind of Videogame?

In part 1 of this series, I introduced the idea of a metaphysics videogame and described why such a thing might be a good idea for philosophy. That was the easy part. In this post I’m going to explore what such a game might look like, in the abstract. The idea is not to suggest only the most viable approach,… read more

Harman on Constraint

Like a high-speed film of a horse running

Graham Harman has been posting a series of enlightening thoughts on writing as he races toward a book deadline, taking only two months from start to finish. The book in question has a word limit (a character limit, really) because it is destined for immediate translation, and the translation has to be done on a budget. The whole series is… read more

The Metaphysics Videogame

Part 1: Why a Videogame?

A brief history. Back in the late summer of 2006, a few months after the publication of Unit Operations, I exchanged a few emails with Graham Harman, whose book Tool-Being I had cited in the early pages of mine. We talked about a few things, including Leibniz, Badiou, Heidegger, Meillassoux, D.W. Griffith, and McLuhan. Sometime in early 2007, over a… read more

Media Studies and Realism

A response to Levi Bryant

In a lengthy comment on my pragmatic speculative realism post, philosopher Levi Bryant asks what issues in technology and media studies prompted my interest in object-oriented ontology. I’d like to try to answer the question for the benefit of readers finding their way here from sources in philosophy rather than game studies. In some ways, I think I was doing… read more

Object-Oriented P*

Philosophers vs. Programmers!

After my post of yesterday, Graham Harman made a few helpful observations about the term “object-oriented philosophy.” First Harman observed that the “parallels seem plenty apt,” that “terms can be borrowed freely across disciplines with slight changes of meaning” that “plenty of other names can be used,” and that “it doesn’t matter unless people have such strong preconceived notions of… read more

Pragmatic Speculative Realism

A stake in the ground

Even though we didn’t really talk much about philosophy, after visiting Graham Harman in Cairo two weeks ago, I was reenergized to think about philosophy in general and speculative realism in particular. In the short time since, a number of friendly bonfires have flared up around the web, most of them camps emanating from Graham’s blog and that of Levi… read more