Speculative Realism
Speculative Realism
Speculative Realism
2 Variations
A second conference, entitled Speculative Realism/Speculative Materialism, took place at the UWE
Bristol on Friday 24 April 2009, two years after the
original event at Goldsmiths.[5] The line-up consisted of
Ray Brassier, Iain Hamilton Grant, Graham Harman,
and (in place of Meillassoux who was unable to attend)
Alberto Toscano.[6]
Critique of correlationism
While often in disagreement over basic philosophical issues, the speculative realist thinkers have a shared resis- Meillassoux follows the opposite tactic in rejecting the
tance to philosophies of human nitude inspired by the Principle of Correlation for the sake of a bolstered Principle of Factiality in his post-Kantian return to Hume.
tradition of Immanuel Kant.
By arguing in favour of such a principle, Meillassoux
What unites the four core members of the movement is is led to reject the necessity not only of all physical
an attempt to overcome both "correlationism"[7] as well as laws of nature, but all logical laws with the exception
"philosophies of access". In After Finitude, Meillassoux of the Principle of Non-Contradiction (since eliminating
denes correlationism as the idea according to which we the Principle of Non-Contradiction would undermine the
only ever have access to the correlation between think- Principle of Factiality which claims that things can aling and being, and never to either term considered apart ways be otherwise than what they are). By rejecting the
from the other.[8] Philosophies of access are any of those Principle of Sucient Reason, there can be no justicaphilosophies which privilege the human being over other tion for the necessity of physical laws, meaning that while
entities. Both ideas represent forms of anthropocentrism. the universe may be ordered in such and such a way, there
All four of the core thinkers within Speculative Realism is no reason it could not be otherwise. Meillassoux rework to overturn these forms of philosophy which privi- jects the Kantian a priori in favour of a Humean a priori,
lege the human being, favouring distinct forms of realism claiming that the lesson to be learned from Hume on the
against the dominant forms of idealism in much of con- subject of causality is that "the same cause may actually
bring about 'a hundred dierent events (and even many
temporary philosophy.
1
2 VARIATIONS
more).[9]
2.2
Object-oriented philosophy
3
out Criteria: Kant, Whitehead, Deleuze, and Aesthetics,
which argues for a process-based approach that entails
panpsychism as much as it does vitalism or animism. For
Shaviro, it is Whiteheads philosophy of prehensions and
nexus that oers the best combination of continental and
analytical philosophy. Another recent example is found
in Jane Bennetts book Vibrant Matter,[15] which argues
for a shift from human relations to things, to a vibrant
matter that cuts across the living and non-living, human
bodies and non-human bodies. Leon Niemoczynski, in
his book 'Charles Sanders Peirce and a Religious Metaphysics of Nature,' invokes what he calls speculative naturalism so as to argue that nature can aord lines of insight into its own innitely productive vibrant ground,
which he identies as natura naturans.
4 Publications
2.4
Transcendental nihilism / methodologSpeculative Realism has close ties to the journal Collapse,
ical naturalism
which published the proceedings of the inaugural conference at Goldsmiths and has featured numerous other
articles by 'speculative realist' thinkers; as has the academic journal Pli, which is edited and produced by
members of the Graduate School of the Department of
Philosophy at the University of Warwick. The journal Speculations, founded in 2010 published by Punctum
books, regularly features articles related to Speculative
Realism. Edinburgh University Press publishes a book
series called Speculative Realism.
7
Ennis, Paul J. 2010. Post-Continental Voice: Selected
Interviews. Winchester, UK: Zero Books.
REFERENCES
5 Internet presence
Grant, Iain Hamilton. 2008. Philosophies of Nature Speculative Realism is notable for its fast expansion via
the Internet in the form of blogs.[19] Web sites have
After Schelling. London: Continuum.
formed as resources for essays, lectures, and planned fu Grant, Iain Hamilton. 2008. Being and Slime: ture books by those within the Speculative Realist moveThe Mathematics of Protoplasm in Lorenz Okens ment. Many other blogs have emerged with original ma'Physio-Philosophy'" in Collapse IV: Concept- terial on Speculative realism or expanding on its themes
Horror. London: Urbanomic.
and ideas, and podcasts featuring various speculative re Grant, Iain Hamilton. 2005. The 'Eternal and Nec- alists have also appeared online.
essary Bond Between Philosophy and Physics" in
Angelaki 10.1.
Grant, Iain Hamilton. 2000. The Chemistry of
Darkness in Pli 9: Science.
Harman, Graham. 2011, 2015. Quentin Meillassoux: Philosophy in the Making. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press.
Harman, Graham. 2011. The Quadruple Object.
Winchester, UK: Zero Books.
Harman, Graham. 2010. Circus Philosophicus.
Winchester, UK: Zero Books.
Harman, Graham. 2010. Towards Speculative Realism: Essays and Lectures. Winchester, UK: Zero
Books.
Harman, Graham. 2009. Prince of Networks: Bruno
Latour and Metaphysics. Melbourne: Re.Press.
Harman, Graham. 2008. On the Horror of Phenomenology: Lovecraft and Husserl in Collapse IV:
Concept-Horror. London: Urbanomic.
Harman, Graham. 2007. On Vicarious Causation
in Collapse II: Speculative Realism. London: Urbanomic.
Harman, Graham. 2005. Guerilla Metaphysics:
Phenomenology and the Carpentry of Things.
Chicago: Open Court.
6 See also
7 References
[1] Mackay, Robin (March 2007). Editorial Introduction.
Collapse. 2 (1): 313.
[2] Brassier, Ray, Iain Hamilton Grant, Graham Harman, and
Quentin Meillassoux. 2007. Speculative Realism in
Collapse III: Unknown Deleuze. London: Urbanomic.
[3] Graham Harman, brief SR/OOO tutorial.
[4] Graham Harman, brief SR/OOO tutorial.
[5] Mark Fisher, Speculative Realism, Frieze.
[6] Mark Fisher, Speculative Realism, Frieze.
[7] Mackay, Robin (March 2007). Editorial Introduction.
Collapse. 2 (1): 313.
[8] Quentin Meillassoux, After Finitude, 5.
[9] Quentin Meillassoux, After Finitude, 90.
[10] Graham Harman, Prince of Networks, 95.
[11] Graham Harman, Prince of Networks, 213.
Meillassoux, Quentin. 2007. Potentiality and Virtuality in Collapse II: Speculative Realism. London: [19] Fabio Gironi, 'Science-Laden Theory, Speculations 1, p.
21.
Urbanomic.
External links
Pierre-Alexandre Fradet and Tristan Garcia
(eds.), issue Ralisme spculatif, in Spirale, no 255, winter 2016 -- introduction
here :
"https://www.academia.edu/20381265/
With_Tristan_Garcia_Petit_panorama_
du_ralisme_spculatif_in_Spirale_num.
_255_winter_2016_p._27-30_online_http_
magazine-spirale.com_dossier-magazine_
petit-panorama-du-realisme-speculatif
Collapse a journal featuring contributions by
speculative realists
Quentin Meillassoux in English at the Speculative
Realism Conference Recording of Quentin Meillassouxs lecture in English at the inaugural Speculative
Realism conference
The Speculative Realism Pathnder
Post-Continental Voices - an edited collection of interviews that contains interviews with speculative realists.
9.1
Text
9.2
Images
9.3
Content license