Review
essay of: Bruno Latour (ed.), Reset
Modernity (2016). Cambridge:
MIT Press, 560 pp.
In 2013, French philosopher Bruno Latour baffled his growing audience with the publication of An Inquiry into the Modes of Existence (henceforth AIME), a 500-page tome containing Latour’s attempt at a systematic philosophy with the ambition and scale of Hegel’s Phenomenology, claiming that our modern world is best understood by delineating the fifteen “modes of existence” that make it up (Latour 2013a). Although this 500-page monster caused confusion even amongst his most seasoned readers, for Latour himself it was only the start. Simultaneously, Latour launched an interactive website through which fellow scholars could contribute to his study of those that give themselves the attribute of “modern”. While studying “the moderns”, as Latour would call these people, contributors to the website detracted or added from the “modes of existence” that made up the ontology of the moderns.1
The whole AIME-project (that is, the book, multiple workshops, lectures and online discussions) came to an end with an exhibition in the ZKM Center for Art and Media in Karlsruhe called Reset Modernity. In the past, Latour had already, together with Peter Weibel, director of ZKM, utilised exhibitions for exploring and investigating specific topics in his work, inviting many prominent scholars, curators and artists to reflect with him on these topics. This resulted in two large catalogues that also function as reference work for scholars interested in Latour’s work (Latour and Weibel 2002, 2005). And now his latest exhibition has produced again a sizable tome, simply named Reset Modernity (henceforth RM). Even if this catalogue is a bit shorter than his previous two, the volume is still full to the brim with articles of prominent scholars across many disciplines, such as anthropologist Philipe Descola, art historian Joseph Leo Koerner, philosopher Isabelle Stengers and intercut with essays and artworks by artists such as Armin Linke, Friedrich Casper David and Tomás Saraceno, to name but a few.
In RM Latour asks his readers to reset their sensing devices in order to render sensible to us the things that make us modern. Long-time readers notice that he is continuing his research into modernity as set out in his 1993 book We Have Never Been Modern, in which Latour argued that our conception of modernity came down to a rigid and unbridgeable distinction between subjects and objects, culture and nature. More shockingly, Latour argued that this great watershed between subject and object had never taken place as our practices showed that we constantly relied on entities that defied that categorisation, so-called quasi-objects (Latour 1993, 51–55). Only our thinking had been modern, our practices had never been. AIME was the answer to a question posed to Latour after finishing We Have Never Been Modern, namely “if we never were modern, what are we then?” (Latour 2013b). The somewhat paradoxical answer was that we are modern, albeit not in the sense that philosophers usually understood this condition. The problem for Latour was that since we understand the world through the Modern Constitution that divided subject and object we are not well equipped to understand quasi-objects , while a proliferation of quasi-objects is precisely what makes our society, or rather our collective, as Latour would say, modern (Latour 1993, 13–15; 88–90).2
RM promises
procedures through which we can rid ourselves of our ontological preconceptions
and truly start to understand ourselves as modern. A task which is, according
to Latour, very urgent in the age of large-scale environmental problems,
smartly captured in the notion of “the Anthropocene”. But what is precisely the
danger if we modern people cannot conceive of ourselves as modern? According to
Latour’s opening essay Let’s touch base,
the problems revolve around nihilism:
a politico-theological aspect of modernity. The introduction sees Latour at his
most ferocious, producing lines like “the modernizing frontier seems ready to
swallow humans and nonhumans alike, plunging all of them into the midst of a
general destruction of the conditions fit for life”, and “transcendence [has]
been transformed into the abandonment and condemnation of this world” (11).3
Here, the modernizing frontier and transcendence are used interchangeably.
Latour points out religious and economic wars as the source of the “general
destruction” and these events are cast as processes attracted by transcendent
goals. Both are attracted towards some beyond: “religious wars for the colonization of a nonexistent afterworld; […]
economic wars for territories that are equally insubstantial” (11).
Latour’s warnings of nihilism recall Nietzsche’s (anti-Christian) crusade
against nihilism. Nietzsche wrote against life-denying longings, and the acts
of self-flagellation and practices of punishment associated with it (See: Nietzsche 1998). Latour does something similar: in the
Anthropocene the viability of the planet is at stake, and the belief in some
transcendent beyond is causing the trouble.
But what is Latour’s alternative? He contrasts nihilism with the earthly (which we interpret as a term for the immanence of actants), the secular and the material as better dwellings for thought and practice. Latour’s goal this time around seems to be: offering procedures for discovering our Earth anew, not as a place to realise a transcendent beyond that calls upon us, but as a place in which we need to learn how to survive or prevent the looming environmental catastrophes by moving “neither up nor down, but within and along the world” (20). Ridding ourselves of the old “modernizing frontier” by resetting our modern sensibilities would thus help us to find the Earth again.
Resetting
however, Latour is quick to stress, should not be understood as the act of
rebooting our electronic devices (e.g. resetting my mobile phone), a simple
push on a button. Instead Latour alludes to how technical instruments are
reset, by recalibration. For example, recalibrating measuring instruments in
such a way that they are able to detect the modern entities and value them
appropriately; but also the recalibration of navigation instruments, seeking
for new points that can help to orient the moderns. An urgent issue since the older horizons that we
used to navigate modernity (e.g. secularization, liberal democracy,
civilisation, rationalisation, etc.) are either under pressure all over the
world, or have proven to be problematic.
The reset
procedures are invitations for the reader to develop new ontologies that escape
the Modern Constitution. Their outcome is uncertain: although Latour has his
ontologies already mapped out, it is clear that his collaborators are not
convinced yet and want to find their own ways; what’s more, whether these
procedures render new ontologies at all is questioned by some contributors.
This gives the procedures offered an experimental character. Thus for the
remainder of this essay, we take this experimental route and see what the
possible outcome of following Latour’s procedures can be, reviewing the volume
in the process.
Procedures 1 & 2: Relocalizing the
Global; Without the World or Within
For those who are familiar with Latour’s output before AIME, procedures 1 & 2 are familiar territory. Just as in Science in Action (Latour 1988a) or The Pasteurization of France (Latour 1988b) Latour asks us to look beyond ready-made knowledge and see the messy practices that purify scientific results bringing the quasi-objects that underpin the workings of modern science into view. The novelty is that Latour does not concentrate on knowledge but on our practices of making pictures of the world (cf. Heidegger 1977a). Following Peter Sloterdijk, Latour considers that the predominant modern way of picturing the world is globular (see: Sloterdijk 2014). Globes are not only a representation of all earth’s land and seas as an interconnected whole; in the modern perception it is also that in which or on which we reside. Slogans as “think globally, act locally” seem to suggest that the image of the globe is essential to understand the impact humans have on the earth in the Anthropocene. Yet, as Latour remarks in his book Facing Gaia: “the danger is always the same: the figure of the Globe authorizes a premature leap to a higher level by confusing the figures of connection with those of totality” (Latour 2017, 130). As Latour explains, the globe is an abstraction but is confused for the totality; the result, all the practices and materials involved into making this abstraction disappear from the totality.
In RM
Latour explains this mistake of the image of the globe by discussing Charles
and Ray Eames’ 1977 short film Powers of
Ten (53). What seems at first an educational film about what science can
tell us about the largest and smallest possible scales, turns out to be riddled
with “globes”; their integration provides a perfect antithesis to what Latour
tries to achieve in his first procedure in particular, and RM in general. Effortlessly, the
film’s camera travels from the sphere of the galaxy to the sphere of our
DNA-structure. But that one
camera does not exist. Multiple
recording devices were needed to produce the pictures we see. All the pictures
are stylized in order to let us grasp the information in them more easily.
Others, such as those of a carbon nucleus, could more accurately be described
as an artist’s impression. The smooth transition the film gives us would have
taken, in reality, complicated travels among laboratories and artist’s studios
around the world.
Not only
does Latour invite us to imagine the travels between the laboratories but also
to take a look inside them. If we would, for example, visit NASA’s research
division, we would learn that the famous Blue
Marble picture from 1972, which features in the Powers of Ten, is
actually made up of large datasets of photos stitched together, removing a lot
of cloud formations in the process. Not only are the jumps between the spheres
not smooth, closer scrutiny proves that the spheres do not even hold together.
By thinking
through such examples Latour helps to rid us of those totalising world
pictures, which were according to Martin Heidegger so fundamental to our modern
way of thinking. Without the globe, Latour asserts, we are “able to follow
connections without jumping […] to the ‘big picture’” (54). Ridding ourselves
of the “big pictures”, the second procedure neatly connects by ridding
ourselves of another major framework that guides our understanding, the already
mentioned subject-object scheme, more specifically, the positioning of object
and subject as always face-to-face. Knowledge must be understood to never rely
“on such a face-to-face of object and subject and a
subject-with-nothing-else-to-do-but-gazing-on-an-object” (93). Latour proposes
that instead of imagining the production of knowledge to be this vertical
relation, we should “shift direction sideways by ninety degrees” (93): knower
and known are now on the same plane (‘within” the world; a plane of immanence).4
Latour”s final word on the matter is that we must move away from the vertical
scenography, and should replace our faulty self-understanding with
“[registrations of] the experience of dealing with the world” (93).
Giving this
procedure more colour than the usual Latourian fare is the addition of essays
by critical Latour interlocutors Pablo Jensen, Philippe Descola and Graham
Harman, amongst others, who shed new light on what it means to go beyond the
subject-object scheme. For example, in his essay How We Became Modern: a
View from Afar Descola equally sets out the procedure(s) Latour prescribes,
where he understands them as “considering the conditions that made them [the
moderns] modern” (122). Remarkably enough, Descola arrives at different results
than those of Latour. Noteworthy of Descola’s identification of the moderns is
that it helps to fulfil two tasks in the procedure. Firstly, a historical
investigation and corroboration of the production of hybrids veiled by the
moderns’ cosmological dichotomy; secondly, more importantly, Descola’s
anthropological work allows us to see the modern’s cosmology/ontology alongside
(rather than above) “premodern” cosmologies, persuading us that throwing
out subject and object does not make for an inhospitable world, and encourages
one to experiment with nonmodern thought. As such, Descola adds to the
procedure and helps us in considering our place on earth together with other
collectives.
Procedure 3: Sharing Responsibilities:
Farewell to the Sublime
Procedures
1 and 2 brought our own modern collective
of quasi-objects in view, in contrast with the exclusive human “society”, and
made us aware that there are other collectives on the earth who may not share
our “cosmology”. But how is it possible to direct our attention and action with
regard to environmental problems without a globe? And with multiple collectives
inhabiting the Earth, what is responsible for these problems if not “humanity”?
The third procedure asks us to conceive of new ways of how to share
responsibilities, while being wary of the temptation of another big Western
concept, the sublime.
Traditionally,
the moderns considered responsibility as reserved for their individual actions.
In extension, responsibility was also something that was felt towards a
community, and later on towards society. In the seemingly modern times a new
responsibility was added: that for humanity as a whole. In short, the limits of
their feeling of responsibility are always formed by the limits of their
(collective) subjectivity: from the individual to the community, to a universal
idea of humanity. In contrast, one seldom feels responsibility for nature, nor
was nature ever a moral agent. But in the Anthropocene, it seems that nature’s
catastrophes are at least partly co-produced by humans. Thus one can ask if we
are to blame when another hurricane hits the coast.
Our first response may be to morally perfect ourselves and include nature in the moral realm. But then we run into trouble since the Anthropocene not only questions our responsibilities, it also asks “who is this humanity?” Is the whole of humanity responsible for climate change, including residents of Indian slums, and the Amerindians of the Amazon forest? Surely not. For this reason some criticasters of the term Anthropocene have proposed the alternative Capitalocene, identifying Capitalism and capitalist powers as those who are (or should be held) responsible. Dipesh Chakrabarty’s contribution to RM lists all new proposals for new “-cenes”, including their pros and cons (189-99; cf. Moore 2017). Still, with no common human responsibility, how can we account for the fact that the very existence of humanity is potentially threatened by climate change, a fate the moderns share with the Indian Slums, and Amazon Amerindians?
Latour’s
answer to these questions (what is
humanity in the Anthropocene? and what
is its responsibility?) uses an idea developed by the inventor James
Lovelock and biologist Lynn Margulis, known as the Gaia-hypothesis. In an
interview with Hans Ulrich Obrist, reprinted in RM (200-4), Lovelock explains
the following about the origins of this hypothesis:
[I]n marches another
astronomer […] who announces that a complete analysis had been made of the
Martian and Venusian atmospheres, and that they are nearly all carbon-dioxide
with just traces of other things. I knew instantly that there was almost
certain no life on either planet, and that suddenly made me think, well, what
about Earth? Why does it have an atmosphere so different […]? And then, it
came to my mind as a flash of enlightenment: we must be regulating the
atmosphere. And then I thought, again almost instantly, where do the gases come
from? We know oxygen comes from plants, and methane, which it reacts with,
comes from bacteria. Those are both living things. Carl Sagan’s first remark
was “O Jim, it’s nonsense to think that the Earth can regulate itself. […]”
But then he said, “Hold on a minute, there is one thing that has puzzled us
astronomers, and that is the “cool sun problem.” At the Earth’s birth, the sun
was 30% cooler than it is now, so why aren’t we boiling?” […] I thought, if
that’s true, then all the biota have to do is regulate the CO2 and
they control the temperature. (203-4).
The
Gaia-hypothesis states that life on Earth is not simply the result of the right
conditions, but that living beings play an active role in stabilizing these
conditions. As such, all the organisms of Earth cooperate in order to regulate
the temperatures on Earth. This cooperation, as one ecosystem as it were, is
what Lovelock and Margulis called Gaia. When adapting this hypothesis for his
own philosophy Latour is wary of its holistic overtones. Gaia, in Latour’s
interpretation, is not simply a large self-regulating thermostat-system in
which all life on Earth has to participate. Nor is it a super-organism, of
which all other organisms are merely a part. Such thinking invokes Gaia as an
ancient Goddess, whose divine providence rules over all mortals, such as us
humans.
Latour robs
Gaia of her divine providence in order not to go back to the Romantic idea of
the sublime, a terrifying nature in which man’s existence is insignificant. But
he keeps some of her godly features. She announces herself to the people,
undertakes action by raising the temperature on Earth, and it’s the people who
invoke her when they take action for the well-being of all the Earth. Since not
all collectives are called upon by Gaia in the same manner, nor invoke her in
the same way, not all peoples share the same responsibility. And indeed the
call of Gaia may sound the loudest for those capitalist powers. Mediated by
Gaia, the peoples of the Earth no longer have a need for an overreaching
humanity to understand their actions as bearing responsibility for all life on
the planet. Going through procedure 3 gives us the first contours of the new
horizon for us moderns, a non-totalizing entity in which we share our existence
with nonhumans.
Procedures 4 & 5: From Lands to
Disputed Territories; Innovation not Hype
The
unfortunate reality of modern political discourse is that the interests of Gaia
are measured against the interest of “the economy”. In AIME, Latour has called
the economy a meta-dispatcher, a container in which all social relations are
reduced to one particular set of forces: in the economic case, social relations
are expressed by monetary values and individual preferences (Latour 2013a, 401–2). The problem of the economic reduction is
twofold: first, caring for Gaia most likely involves a reduction of consumption
and emission, and thus a restraint on the growth of the economy as such.
Secondly, economic values and relations are given excessive attention, while
those values which are not easily transformed into monetary value and
individual preferences remain out of sight. This puts heavy constraints on what
us moderns can value, especially now we obviously share our life-world with
nonhumans.
The fourth
procedure thus turns attention to how we could improve on the way we do
economics and how we can account for what we hold dear. In RM the attempts to undertake such
endeavours are somewhat disappointing. Martin Giraudeau, Antoine Hennion,
Vincent-Antonin Lépinay, Cormac O’Keeffe and Consuelo Vásques make preliminary
sketches of how to improve economics. Their motto seems to be: localise as much
as possible (260-271). In other words: economics should engage in real-world
experiments wherever it can, and refrain from making law-like claims on the
functioning of an overall system. Sometimes they cite the writings of the
neoliberal Friedrich Hayek, and one is tempted to think that we’re dealing with
a free-market proposal in disguise. But the authors defend themselves, saying
they are not the “aggressive Darwinist”
Hayek was (266), and they propose circumstances under which market-forces could
be commanded to halt. If the economy is not an overreaching system, but a
collection of local sites, then there is more space for social democracy to exist
outside of economic needs, and truly provide a protection against the excesses
of market forces. A social democracy outside of the economy is a tempting
vision but does not yet connect to any real-world situation. Moreover, all
essays, Latour’s included, in this procedure give no clue whatsoever on what
kind of institutions could guarantee the limits of market forces.
Procedure 5 zooms in further on the relation between us moderns and the entities making up their collective. The classic tale we find in Max Horkheimer and Theodor Adorno, Heidegger, or Carolyn Merchant, is that with the advent of modernity our relationship with nature becomes mediated by technology and becomes one of instrumental rationality, being enframed or undergoing violent domination (Horkheimer and Adorno 2002; Heidegger 1977b; Merchant 1980). These descriptions are neither adequate to describe our relation to technology and nature, nor desirable, but the hype has us in its grip when a seemingly major technological step has been taken (a computer defeating a Go master, for example) which shows we have not yet rid ourselves of thinking in these modern constellations. Latour suggests that we should conceive of our relationship with technological entities not in terms of instrumentality, but in terms of care. Even the most freighting technology, such as, for example, military drones who are able to kill people on the other side of the world, should not be seen as the inevitable new stage of warfare due to technological change, but as problem children. In not caring for these technologies, we would miss how drones being piloted from great distances completely rewrite sovereign law.5
This is
what Latour takes from Mary Shelly’s Frankenstein (1831) in his play Gaia:
Global Climate Tragi-Comedy (328-36). Here it becomes clear that
Frankenstein’s fault is not
that he created his creature, but that he abandons it because it isn’t as
beautiful as he had hoped. Frankenstein’s author asks her own creature
Viktor why he has imitated the vengeful God that drowned the Earth to rid
himself of his sinful creations. “No
Mary. I didn’t imitate him since I ran away. It’s not creating that is a crime,
it’s abandoning one’s Creation” Viktor replies (335).
Procedure 6: Secular at Last
The most puzzling is the sixth procedure. Harking back to his opening statement against nihilism and restating the immanence of being, Latour has to find a different place for religion than the one usually given it in Western philosophy. Moreover, in reference to the works of Eric Voegelin, Latour is keen to stress that, even in a secular age, transcendence has not left politics (Voegelin 1987). Therefore Latour asks: what are we to do to make politics and religion earthly? In asking this question Latour gives a new twist to the notions of secular and secularization. With these terms Latour means disentangling the political and the religious from transcendence (364); from attractors that do not take into account what tethers these practices to “the collective,” downgrading religion and politics to the driving forces behind wars.
Latour’s line of thought seems to be that to make politics or religion earthly, one has to discern what specifically political or religious skills and actions amount to. Once we discern these, we might be “freed from the strange idea that there is an activity whereby a human could master mastery so thoroughly that it no longer depends on any other source of power” (365), that the political or the religious could make an entire future happen. But, as Latour is keen to stress, they cannot: they share this earth with other beings. Denying that is nihilistic.
Picking one
essay to demonstrate how to view politics in an earthly fashion, we will read
Gerard de Vries’s answer to the question: What are Politicians for? He
argues that the political should be a practice in which one bears a
responsibility to one’s constituency. Politicians are preoccupied with “the
defense of the decisions the assembly will make”; whether the outcome of the
political process is “good enough […]” knowing that “[t]here will never be
general approval. [The politicians] are preparing for what comes next” (391).
By contrast, sometimes the political and the religious, especially in
conjunction, amount to perversions of these practices. The game of
responsibility (a specifically political skill) that De Vries describes
is not wrong in itself, and the positive result of this “procedure” is that one
might engage with politics without feeling as if one is subjecting oneself to
mere power-games – “A good site to
open up the possibility of diplomacy” (365) indeed, because if we
are to engage with other collectives in a diplomatic way we need to trade our
supposed mastery of the world for a particular kind of weakness.
Procedure 7: In Search of a Diplomatic
Middle Ground
As has become clear in the previous procedures, Latour is looking for a reorientation of the project of modernity, but it is essential that this new front of modernisation cannot become the measuring rod by which we judge the non-moderns, as for example happened when Canada’s governments falsely blamed the First-nation hunters for the declining Caribou population, applying the new rules of the Anthropocene to all people equally (Parlee, Sandlos, and Natcher 2018). Moreover, in so far as we are modern, we cannot expect the non-modern to follow the same path of modernisation. Still, given the redistribution of responsibilities in the Anthropocene, all the collectives of the earth are forced to interact and to coordinate their actions. These actions cannot be given shape by a similar horizon of modernity, and thus we should instead have recourse to the act of diplomacy for our coordination with other collectives.
Enter
diplomacy. Diplomacy must take place in an encounter between different
collectives, between which lies a “middle
ground” (405). Rather than a fierce show-down between cultures (Latour
mentions the colonization of the Americas), “middle ground” designates the possibility of genuine
epistemo-cultural recalibration. The Other
then is no longer a mere premodern, or a nonhuman that cannot speak the
modern as no longer superior.6 Rather, again annulling the binary, “we are all beginning to be equally amodern”,
which means that the affairs of us moderns, too, (including the
scientific – think of particular methods or distinctions) “are open to ridicule in the face of the
others who, themselves in their turn, don’t know how to address them” (407-8).
Discovering of the practices hidden by modern definitions already changes “the very idea of what a science is” (405),
but this idea is on the diplomatic middle ground up for more scrutiny:
comparing, for example, our value of objectivity with the values within other
collectives. In a bilateral exchange there are chances of epistemological and
existential transformation: “what you
encounter can jeopardize the solidity of the epistemological framework that
sent you into the field. […] You are never sure to survive the encounter”
(405).
Latour
makes a remark specifically meant for philosophers: “diplomatic encounters have a strange capacity to modify the way
philosophers define their task” (407). Engaging in diplomacy should
prompt us to pay closer attention to what we actually do, because we will have
to explain it to others. The task of non-modern thinkers will come to include
careful acts of description, as Jamie Allen, Claudia Mareis and Johannes Bruder
write: “[t]he “reset” […] cracks our
modern imaginaries, all the while attempting to log the enunciations of our
archival world, dragging along with it an earthly historical ballast, never
naively trying to escape [modernity]” (505), and it certainly seems to
us that the prospect of diplomacy, an immanent goal for thought to work
towards, and keeping on this earthly path with its historical ballast, would certainly
make for interesting philosophy, as the essays in this volume demonstrate.
Conclusion
In an interview with Les Temps Modernes Latour was critically asked about the apparent systematic nature of his AIMEproject: “[Why] counter a metaphysical machine with a bigger metaphysical machine?” (Marinda 2015). This question is raised again in the last procedure of RM: is the systematic nature of the AIME project not too closed off in order to be truly diplomatic? Many of the philosophers who contributed to the book are willing to engage with the modes of existence that Latour has proposed, yet few of them accept the systematic ontological classification of these modes, and which is reprinted again at the end of RM (543-6). If even the AIME contributors reject the systematic classification, what then is the upshot of the whole project? Reading through RM provides an answer.
The issues
posed by the advent of the Anthropocene ask for a new way of thinking about our
relation to the world and a new form of collective action, actions for which
our current institutions fall hopelessly short. In lectures given surrounding
the Reset Modernity exhibition and thereafter, Latour has sketched a new
framework for understanding our current political affairs with regard to what
he calls The New Climate Regime.7 Here, Latour presents the Earth as
the new horizon that could be used to coordinate political action. But what is
this Earth, what does it mean to be a horizon for actions? The resetting
procedures of RM help us to conceive what this new horizon can look like.
From
procedures 1 and 2 it is clear that Earth cannot be a totalising picture, or a
frontier that divides the people into modern and premodern. As with Gaia in
procedure 3, Earth shows us the kind of responsibilities we have together with
other collectives for the place we inhabit (the Earth itself). Consequently, it
does not presuppose a shared humanity (identity for the Earth dweller) just the
simple fact that we (who/whatever) are all in this together. Furthermore, the
Earth has no transcendence, no meaning in the depths of her cave: we cannot die
in the name of the Earth in the hope of gaining a better Earth (procedure 6).
Similarly,
the Earth is no utopia guiding our politics, and it is a far cry from the
techno-inflated visions of the future that Silicon Valley provides us with:
technology is not here to save us, but we have to learn to live with technology
(procedure 5). Lastly, the Earth is rich in resources, but ultimately limited.
And given that there is not one collective that inhabits the Earth, this means
we have to reconsider how much of Earth’s resources we have to use, in order to
leave enough for other collectives. What do we value in our modern lifestyles
and what do we need to sustain them (procedure 4)? If we gain that knowledge,
we can negotiate with the other collectives how to make use of Earth’s
resources. This negotiation should be an act of diplomacy (procedure 7), in
which the only common ground between the parties is the one beneath their feet,
the Earth. The Earth is in a sense a political fiction, a way of imagining
politics, perhaps just as the Leviathan pictured on the front piece of
Hobbes’ famous book was a fiction. On the other hand, the Earth is very
mundane, very concrete, very tangible.
RM perhaps does not reach a complete doctrine of how Earth should feature in politics, nor of how politics oriented towards the Earth should concretely take place. But RM gives us something other which is important, namely a set of terms (Earth, Gaia, Diplomacy, Collectives) that can replace our previously held dear “grand narratives” of the globe, humanity, the free market, etc., which used to navigate our moral and political action, without becoming totalizing. Concluding, RM does not yet yield concrete answers or lasting ontologies, but as the procedures for calibrating our scientific measuring instruments have become more refined over the centuries, so too, we hope, may the procedures that help us to understand our modernity become better over time.
Acknowledgements
Sigmund
Bruno Schilpzand wrote portions of this review whilst on the Better
Understanding the Metaphysics of Pregnancy project, receiving funding from
the European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union’s Horizon 2020
research and innovation programme (grant agreement No 679586).