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Ontology and Closeness in Human-Nature Relationships - Beyond Dualisms, Materialism and Posthumanism (Paperback, Softcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 2019)
Loot Price: R2,808
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Ontology and Closeness in Human-Nature Relationships - Beyond Dualisms, Materialism and Posthumanism (Paperback, Softcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 2019)
Series: AESS Interdisciplinary Environmental Studies and Sciences Series
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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In Ontology and Closeness in Human-Nature Relationships, Neil H.
Kessler identifies the preconceptions which can keep the modern
human mind in the dark about what is happening relationally between
humans and the more-than-human world. He has written an accessible
work of environmental philosophy, with a focus on the ontology of
human-nature relationships. In it, he contends that large-scale
environmental problems are intimate and relational in origin. He
also challenges the deeply embedded, modernist assumptions about
the relational limitations of more-than-human beings, ones which
place erroneous limitations on the possibilities for
human/more-than-human closeness. Diverging from the posthumanist
literature and its frequent reliance on new materialist ontology,
the arguments in the book attempt to sweep away what ecofeminists
call "human/nature dualisms. In doing so, conceptual avenues open
up that have the power to radically alter how we engage in our
daily interactions with the more-than-human world all around us.
Given the diversity of fields and disciplines focused on the
human-nature relationship, the topics of this book vary quite
broadly, but always converge at the nexus of what is possible
between humans and more-than-human beings. The discussion
interweaves the influence of human/nature dualisms with the
limitations of Deleuzian becoming and posthumanism's new
materialism and agential realism. It leverages interhuman
interdependence theory, Charles Peirce's synechism of feeling and
various treatments of Theory of Mind while exploring the influence
of human/nature dualisms on sustainability, place attachment,
common worlds pedagogy, emergence, and critical animal studies. It
also explores the implications of plant electrical activity, plant
intelligence, and plant "neurobiology" for possibilities of
relational capacities in plants while even grappling with theories
of animism to challenge the animate/inanimate divide. The result is
an engaging, novel treatment of human-nature relational ontology
that will encourage the reader to look at the world in a whole new
way.
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