By providing ontologies of nature from the perspective of the history of philosophy and of contemporary philosophy alike, the book shows that such perspectives need to be seen in dialogue with each other in order to offer a deeper and more comprehensive philosophy of nature.
This volume contains essays that offer both historical and contemporary views of nature, as seen through a hermeneutic, deconstructive, and phenomenological lens. It reaches back to Ancient Greek conceptions of physis in Homer and Empedocles, encompasses 13th century Zen master Dogen, and extends to include 21st Century Continental Thought. By providing ontologies of nature from the perspective of the history of philosophy and of contemporary philosophy alike, the book shows that such perspectives need to be seen in dialogue with each other in order to offer a deeper and more comprehensive philosophy of nature. The value of the historical accounts discussed lies in discerning the conceptual problems that contribute to the dominant thinking underpinning our ecological predicament, as well as in providing helpful resources for thinking innovatively through current problems, thus recasting the past to allow for a future yet to be imagined. The book also discusses contemporary continental thinkers who are more critically aware of the dominant anthropocentric and instrumental view of nature, and who provide substantial guidance for a sensible, innovative ontology of nature suited for an ecology of the future. Overall, the ontologies of nature discerned in this volume are not merely of theoretical interest, but strategically serve to suspend anthropocentrism and spark ethical and political reorientation in the context of our current ecological predicament.
Part I. Greek Philosophies of Physis.
Chapter
1. Physis in Empedocles
(Michael Shaw).
Chapter
2. The Ambivalence of Eros: Platos Natural
Beginning(s) (Joshua Hayes).
Chapter
3. Folding Nature Back Upon Itself:
Aristotle and the Rebirth of Physis (Marjolein Oele).- Part II. The Modern
Turn in Nature.
Chapter
4. Kants Other Nature (Angelica Nuzzo).
Chapter
5. Hegels Anti-Ontology of Nature (Sebastian Rand).
Chapter
6. Novalis,
Nature and the Absolute (Jane Kneller).- Part III. Phenomenologists and
Post-Modern Thinkers on Nature.
Chapter
7. An Ecology of the Future (Gerard
Kuperus).
Chapter
8. Nature (or Not) In Heidegger (Nancy Holland).
Chapter
9. Precarious Communities: Towards a Phenomenology of Extinction (Brett
Buchanan).
Chapter
10. Stratification, Dependence, and Nonanthropocentrism:
Nicolai Hartmanns Critical Ontology (Keith Peterson).
Chapter
11.
Naturalism, Estrangement, and Resistance: On the Lived Senses of Nature (Ted
Toadvine).
Chapter
12. Given to Bewilderment, Hand to Limb (Peter Steeves).-
Chapter
13. When Washing Rice, Know that the Water is Your Own Life: An Essay
on Dgen in the Age of Fast Food (Jason Wirth).
Gerard Kuperus is Associate Professor of Philosophy at the University of San Francisco. He is the author of Ecopolitical Homelessness: Defining Place in an Unsettled World (Routledge 2016), as well as numerous articles in Continental Philosophy focusing on philosophy of nature. He has held the position of Davies Professor (2015) at the University of San Francisco.
Marjolein Oele is Associate Professor of Philosophy at the University of San Francisco. She is the author of a variety of articles and book chapters that intertwine Aristotles philosophy with topics and figures in Continental Philosophy. Her book E-Co-Affectivity is forthcoming. She currently holds the NEH Chair at the University of San Francisco (2016-2017).