Meso-Metaphysics and Paradigmatic Environmental Anti-Modernism: Bruno Latour’s Down to Earth and the Rejection, and Embrace, of Metaphysical Necessity Cover Image

Meso-Metaphysics and Paradigmatic Environmental Anti-Modernism: Bruno Latour’s Down to Earth and the Rejection, and Embrace, of Metaphysical Necessity
Meso-Metaphysics and Paradigmatic Environmental Anti-Modernism: Bruno Latour’s Down to Earth and the Rejection, and Embrace, of Metaphysical Necessity

Author(s): Jason Morgan
Subject(s): Philosophy
Published by: International Étienne Gilson Society
Keywords: Bruno Latour; Gaia; metaphysics; climate change; Marxo-Hegelian grand narratives; globalism; Vladimir Verensky; anthropocene; Georges Bataille; Gayatri Spivak; Donna Haraway; neo-paganism;

Summary/Abstract: Bruno Latour’s latest book, Down to Earth, argues that the Earth itself must “ground” philosophical modernity and provide a “ground” for thinking about globalism and the problems of the globalist agenda. In this review I find the use of the Earth, and of various other stand-ins for metaphysical principles, to be a kind of “meso-metaphysics,” a metaphysics which denies transcendence but all the same makes use of transcendence and operational otherness when needful for a given ideology, such as the radical environmentalism espoused by Bruno Latour. I see this as ultimately a rejection of both metaphysics and of the possibility of science and philosophy, as the conflation of the physical ground with a philosophical ground dooms meso-metaphysics to incoherence.

  • Issue Year: 9/2020
  • Issue No: 3
  • Page Range: 507-520
  • Page Count: 14
  • Language: English