Categories
Futures

Cyanobacteria

or, Curvilinear Analyses of Posthumanist Political Philosophy

Can Proletarians
View the dawning horizons
Of what is to come?
The year is 2020,
Fragments of the micro-entrepreneur,
The others are converging
Towards obsolescence, or Third World.

I wonder what has your dream of
Political Utopia underwent since I
Last saw it, it has been decades.
Seems like cosmological heat death will
Anticipate its arrival (if we’re lucky)
And yet perhaps it is this very Utopia, Prescription
Of mass dynamics that led us to our current State?
Listen closely,
Our cherished socialist state has us on hold,
Midst of a nationwide Finance & Soft Skills course.

The process of environmental reciprocity
Is a game that the System has
Failed tremendously to override.
The miscarriages of anthropomorphic reality in dealing
With existential Threat have proven it to be few more
Than the simplest of prokaryotic-spaces.
Our current ordinal patterns are built on sand,
And everywhere
With enough entropy
Deserts will blossom from their ashes.

Level 1; world-space; diffusion of eco-collapse

Etymological

The genealogy of the English sign “right” diverges from its Latin cognates at a certain point. Rewinding, we trace it back to Old English (riht/ryht), then provide, from comparative evidence, further reconstructions of its Proto-Germanic iteration (rehtaz), and finally hit a limit at the Proto-Indo-European reconstruction: h₃reǵtós. Arbitrarily picking French as an example Romance language, we apply the same process to “droit”; Old French “dreit” is itself a descendant of the Latin “directus”, the perfect passive participle of “dīrigō”. It is composed of a prefix “dis-” and a base “rego”; to direct, to command, to guide, and to administer. In turn, its Proto-Indo-European father “h₃réǵeti” and the previous “h₃reǵtós” share a root; “h₃reǵ-” (right, just, king), which, on one occasion, morphed into the Gothic “reiks”, and finally into two contemporary German signs, “Recht” and “Reich”. Law and Empire. The faint traces of now-defunct nomadic messages—where meaning derives itself from sums of onomatopoeic blabbering and miscommunicated attempts at standardisation; linguistic iteration of a social contract—are alive and breathing to this day.

In Ancient Greek, it was syntactically impossible for a grammatical subject to “possess” a right. Rather “right” was seen as an objective property, a cosmological one—sometimes an ontological one—and, in its more humanistic iterations, a harmonious one. It always referred back to a notion of order, anti-entropy, one which each human (and every above-human) had to obey. Some of us might be superior to others, but one could never transcend this order of things. Yet centuries later, in the freshly hegemonic spaces of enlightened Western Europe, such a conception of right had almost completely vanished, and was replaced by subjective right; one which could be possessed, owned, and appropriated by an invention of recent date: the individual human subject. Pulling on the threads of genealogy, we find his genesis in early monotheism, which posited God to be an all-encompassing Being, capable of free will, One that had the ability to transcend all matter, all ideas. Yet how could He transcend the old ontological harmony, the order to which all beings must be subordinated? Such a notion is irreconcilable with the idea of a greater cosmological order that one must adhere to regardless of personal (or divine) standing, and therefore it must go, superseded by the individual human subject, modelled in the image of a free God. The formation of contemporary “human” rights and liberalism is now complete.

The emphasis on etymology might come across as strange, considering it only focuses on anthropomorphic language. Yet nothing obliges us to conceive of natural language as an inherently humanist construction. Ever since De Saussure, the conception of language as a mental faculty possessed by humans has been challenged by structuralist and post-structuralist semioticians, who understood it instead as a formalised system of signifier-signified pairings, where transformational grammars approximately function as a base predicate calculus, notwithstanding a handful of quirks out of single-sorted first-order logic’s reach. Yet these formalised systems, once stripped of their Boolean artifacts, are not necessarily incompatible with the former phenomenological view of language; the mind roots itself in consciousness, and consciousness is little more than a factory, one which produces (and is produced by) material flux, flows that can be divided down into smaller and smaller units of matter, which mirror formal systems still. At the smallest scale accessible to current technology, the quantum realm, formal logic continues to operate, albeit in a modified, many-valued form: quantum logic, or a non-commutative, non-associative, and many-valued iteration of propositional calculus. Here it appears we have an escape route at our disposal, one where language and consciousness, effectively coupled to logic, are stripped of their anthropocentric defects; the first steps in constructing durable instances of environmental reciprocity. Yet with formalism comes abstraction, and with abstraction the possibility of a remaining humanist artefact still lingers, one which risks plunging the thought process back into mundane rehashes of our current European canon: Platonism.

Anti-Plato

The goal of any formal system is not simply to represent concrete thoughts, but also to adequately manipulate their abstractions. And abstractions have a long history in Western thought. The shift in “right” from the attributes of objective harmony to the possessions of individual subjects, human abstractions, may find its origins within Christianity, but Christianity itself has its own unique roots. What is Platonism? One might define it as a metaphysical antidote to the alleged anarchy of Athenian democracy, the belief that abstractions not only point to things that escape the boundaries of space-time, but to transcendent essences, ones that lie beyond matter, beyond ideas, time, beyond phenomenological experience. In the Dialogues, this is mythologised by “Socrates”, who attempts to murder two birds with one stone—Meno’s paradox and the One over Many issue—leading to the formation of an immortal human soul (that remembers even as an imperfect copy), and in turn paving the way for contemporary monotheism. Yet, despite the incessant whining of some New Atheists, the undoubtedly bloodstained career of organised religion does not stem from some backwards, primitive spirituality, nor from an illiberal clique trapped in the Middle Ages; it stems from Platonism, the doctrine of a metaphysical binary, where one belligerent (abstracted) substance transcends and dominates the other, the foundation of all true world theories, where one rips apart “true” and “false” forms, essences and their repeated copies, with a philosophical crowbar, Boolean overtones. And, to the dismay of many secularists, Platonism will live on in the liberal State, no matter how much it attempts to separate itself from the Church. 

Arguably the first who truly shook Platonism to its core (in the “West”, at least) was the architect of immanent ontology: Spinoza, who, in his Ethics, managed to construct a sprawling and deterministic assemblage, on par with Marx and Darwin in its systematisation, and he would pay for it with a heavy toll. The Cartesian dualism (and substance dualism more generally), which traces its roots to Plato’s Phaedo, was overridden by an uncompromising materialist monism, the undivided unity of Being; natura naturans, a god-Machine relying on no more than seven axioms to operate universally, is immanent to everything, and nothing may transcend it. “God is the immanent cause of all things and not the transitive cause.”Baruch Spinoza, Ethique (Paris: Librairie Generale Francaise, 2018), Prop 18. This univocity of being later became the foundation of Deleuze’s metaphysics of difference, one that tries to redefine difference as a relation rather than a negation; the spaces in between two “distinct” objects or subjects, rather than the mere reversal of a Platonic opposition. Laid out at first in fragments within his historical monographs, then more systematically in his seminal text Difference and Repetition, this differential ontology does not attempt to bury Plato in the sand and play dumb, but rather to turn the very machines which fuel Platonism against themselves; the simulacrum is reinterpreted not as a mere imperfect copy, but rather as a product of difference in and of itself, as something which undermines and destabilises these very notions of “original” and “copy” that form the bedrock of the theory of Forms. Taking a noticeably different approach, Derrida too attempts to turn transcendent dualism against itself, with a linguistic tint; his oft-misrepresented method of Deconstruction, once defined as a criticism of Platonism and its hierarchical oppositions, stemmed from a particular contradiction within language. As it stands, written language hierarchically dominates oral speech: academia excludes the majority of oral knowledge outside Western tradition (often to its own detriment), literacy is demanded as a requirement for social progress, and the “correct” use of spoken language is determined by written rules. It has long been noted that this division between the two couples itself to the civilisation-savagery binary, as the development of writing co-occurred with the stratifications of early sedentary polities. In the exergue of Of Grammatology, Derrida cites Rousseau and Hegel as examples of this:

“The depicting of objects is appropriate to a savage people; signs of words and of propositions, to a barbaric people; and the alphabet to civilised people.”

Johann Gottfried. Herder and Jean-Jacques. Rousseau, On the Origin of Language (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1986).

“Alphabetic script is in itself and for itself the most intelligent.”

Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel, Encyclopedia of the Philosophical Sciences in Basic Outline, ed. by Klaus Brinkmann and Daniel O. Dahlstrom (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2015).

Yet a closer glance reveals this opposition to be nonsensical, as it is arguably written language which should be seen as the inferior side of the binary; the imperfect transcription, or copy, of a more ideal Form, that of spoken language. In many of its forms, Deconstruction often consists simply of this; reversing these hierarchical oppositions in order to undercut them, and reveal their arbitrariness. Taking the supposedly essential Forms of Platonism and subjugating them to their immanent displays. But whether we attack Platonism on metaphysical or linguistic terrain, one thing is unchanged: the uncountable set of new concepts, virtualities, processes that are at once real potential, now that we have detached ourselves from eternal well-defined essences, little more than obsolete concepts. Here, things finally begin to unfold. 

Origami; non-integer geographies

Platonism has been abolished in this provisional ontology, as has any possible form of transcendence. Nor are we in a position to describe “creation”, in the sense of distinct objects producing wholly new ones, ones distinct from their progenitors. What we have to reckon with is an ontology where the distinction between continuous processes (flows) and discrete objects disappears; the gaps in between flows fold into objects, the “void” in between objects is folded into flows. Substance does not create new substances or transcend existing ones, nor does it create spatially distinct attributes of itself. The process of origami, where paper is folded into recognisable objects, expresses this beautifully. The paper does not transform into the object: such a statement would imply that something distinct from paper now lies within the object, and yet materially this is far from the case. Rather its substance is folded (differentiated, through the creases that divide sections of the paper, and angles that define a certain difference between two lines) to manifest as the object. And, with the appropriate formal system, origami operates on all scales.

Spinoza was not the only continental rationalist to be reimagined by Deleuze. Today Leibniz is most known for independently discovering calculus, the mathematical study of continuous change, after Newton, and it is his notation (df/dy, as opposed to f’(x) or ) that is conventionally used all throughout mathematics today. It is much less well known that he was also an active metaphysician, and yet his mathematical work is not so far off from his philosophical inquiry. One will not find the same metaphysical immanence seen in Spinoza’s Ethics (his theology still posits a transcendent God, in the vein of Abrahamic monotheism), but one will regardless experience a noticeable (albeit incomplete) shift in focus; from the rectilinear to the curvilinear. In his analysis situs he paved the way for topology, a field concerned with radical distortions of geometries: twisting, deforming, homeomorphisms, homotopies. Deleuze’s reiteration of Leibniz lies on the following fundamental premise: “The unit of matter, the smallest element of the labyrinth, is the fold, not the point which is never a part, but a simple extremity of the line.”Gilles Deleuze, The Fold: Leibniz and the Baroque (London: Athlone, 1993), p. 6. Once again we run into the procedural origami (contrasted to the fixed point) which here becomes the foundation of all matter, and thus, to the materialist, all substance. This is a surprisingly intuitive proposition, semantically speaking: matter is of course a tangible substance, but also a verb (to matter), and therefore some sort of flux, as the verbal perspective implies an operation emanating from the grammatical subject in question. This not only mirrors our various topological spaces (manifolds), but also the formalised “limits” on which calculus was founded; after all, an infinitesimal only has meaning through the continuous operation of approaching a certain value, getting closer and closer (but never reaching a final point), and any apathetic attempt to tightly lock it to a single real number is not “truth”. It is only approximation. 

There remain nevertheless two bugs in Leibniz’s machine, otherwise sublime in terms of sheer logical validity. Firstly, though he was critical of the mind-body dualism of Descartes, his theological presuppositions backed him into a corner of monist idealism, in contrast to the monist materialism of Spinoza. Secondly, his frenzied and vain attempts to prove the parallel postulate, resulting from his incomprehension and even outright aversion towards non-Euclidean systems, should be considered obsolete. The parallel postulate functioned as a concept only in providing the necessary logical foundations to Euclid’s Elements, and nothing more; once exploring geometric systems devoid of the postulate, one is propelled into an full “organless” array of geographies, the virtualities that enclave traditional geometry. What is directly above you warps down to face you head on as you converge towards it (elliptic geographies), or; on the other hand, perhaps the liminal spaces of the circle you are mapped to scatter and disperse themselves on the sides as you press forward (hyperbolic geographies). With the removal of transcendent theology, one cures Leibniz’s assemblage of its malicious optimism (the “best of all possible worlds” of his making was only made possible by the deportation of any imperfections to segregated “inferior” worlds, where they would be out of reach). The idea that dissonances and virtue can enfold themselves into One totalising scheme, rather than having one banish the other to outside-space, is what turns the convergent monadic subject, founded on Leibniz’s metaphysical component, into Deleuze’s divergent nomadic subject, who opens himself up to full immanence precisely because no “organism” encloses or organises him, in the aims of intercepting any rogue atonalities. Our enfoldings are the banal sources of post-structuralist geography; pointillism is obsolete.

Non-Euclidean worlds were not the only thing Leibniz shied away from. In his studies on recursive self-similarity, he accidentally stumbled upon fractals, a concept far out of reach for the formal sciences at the time, yet one that once again paves the way for enfoldings upon enfoldings of novel terrains. The concept of a “fractional dimension” (1.5D, 2.4D, log(5)D, etc.) might seem nonsensical: topological dimension, after all, only applies to the domain of the natural numbers. Yet through the introduction of “roughness”, the Hausdorff dimension, one unfolds the uncountably infinite number of dimensions that lie between the usual discrete n-dimensional spaces, and extends the more classical definition of dimension to continuous non-integers, through fractals. The bio-cosmological implications of this are staggering, and we will soon explore them further. Yet it is rather ironic that Leibniz shied away from this, as his “monads” themselves are, in a way, recursively self-similar. For his project of rationalist epistemology and his “truths of reason” to function, it must be possible for the mind to acquire all knowledge without requiring any outside empirical experience, and, since the mind is a monad, each monad must contain a totalised picture of the cosmos in all its potential states (or in Leibnizian terminology, each monad must be “windowless”, that is to say no empirical experience can pass into one); the most fundamental component of the universe contains all of it in itself, and therefore our world must, by this premise, be recursively self-similar, a universal fractal.

Level 0; prokaryotes; civilisation-savagery

Polity, structural Teleologies

Before getting carried away in our newly-unfolded spaces, liberated from the shackles of Platonism, we must first unearth the politico-material roots of this philosophy. 399 BCE. The polis incorporates the urban city into the State, and classical Attica’s genealogy leads us to rather uncertain origins, more relevant to the domain of anthropology than history. Gens formed into phratries, then tribes, confederations of tribes, and the earliest historical records give us a glimpse of a society in flux, one fast approaching patrilineal monogamy, the dissolution of what Marx and Engels termed the “gentille constitution”,Friedrich Engels, The Origin of the Family, Private Property and the State (London: Penguin Books Limited, 2010). and in turn one where private property begins to emerge. The “noble savagery”, which would later mythologise the genocidal removal of indigenous peoples throughout colonial spaces, did not last long in Athens, and was overridden by sedentary agriculture, domestication of animals. Let us explore a strange intersection of formal systems; the aforementioned structuralism of signifier-signified pairings and the process of natural selection, taken from Darwin: On the Origins of Speciesism. Arguably the first major structuralist thinker (though not the first structural linguist) was the anthropologist Lévi-Strauss, and he traced the general exploitation of man by man back to an “Original Sin” of speciesism: 

“. . . Is it not the myth of exclusive dignity of human nature that made nature experience its first mutilation, of which more mutilations would then inevitably follow? We began by cutting man away from nature, and by granting him sovereign rule; we thought then that we had erased his most indisputable character, namely that he is first and foremost a living being. And by staying blind to this common property, we had given free reign to all abuse. Never more than in the last four centuries of his history has Occidental man managed to grasp that by granting himself the right to radically separate humanity from animality, by granting to one what he refuses to the other, he was opening up a vicious circle, and that this same border would soon be used to separate men from other men.”

Claude Lévi-Strauss, Anthropologie Structurale Deux (Paris: Pocket, 2003), p. 56.

This autocratic lust that seeks to administer environmental spaces in totalising fashion is not some sorry defect of civilisation: it is civilisation, it is no accident, but instead the “valid” logical conclusion of Darwin’s natural-selection-machine. And civilisation is the motor of Platonism, because it fooled us into thinking we could transcend nature, when in reality we were always destined to be immanent to it. Food surpluses have been increased through the progressive coercion of ecosystems, and prisoners of tribal war prove to be more valuable alive than dead; we find ourselves at the emergence of slavery, the backbone of the Greek city-state, and the genesis of private property. Over centuries, the Occidental form of private ownership has dispersed and scattered itself throughout the dominant epistemic atmosphere of a given time period. To become as embedded into doxa as the air one breathes, it has referred back to the “befores” of an ongoing paradigm shift, in an attempt to legitimise itself. The feudal serf is thought or thinks himself to be free from exploitation because prior acknowledged forms of exploitation (chattel slavery) robbed the victim of human status, a property now conceded to him by his new masters. This is reiterated for the capitalist wage-laborer; supposedly free, as unlike the serf he is not tied to any particular plot of land, instead having the freedom in theory to choose his employer, and yet it is this employer who will exercise a discipline staggeringly more punishing, administrative and all-controlling than any imaginable in feudal systems. Of course, one must avoid granting too much teleology or stagism to this process, as has mistakenly been done so by many. What is it that orthodox Marxism, a body of theory particularly guilty of this, converges towards? Some may say the upper stage of communism, or “the development of the productive forces”, but this remains vague. It cannot be egalitarianism: Engels fully recognises the existence of a “primitive communism” in The Origins of the Family, one which preceded the formation of class society and where egalitarian gift economies were largely dominant. The unfortunate truth is that a vast majority of orthodox Marxist theory has unwittingly kept the very roots that produced liberalism’s most horrendous crimes: the mythology of progress, which has and continues to torment millions of people living beyond state control, including those in Marxist-Leninist states. Of course, Marx himself did not necessarily endorse this kind of stagist “progress” vision. In a polemic against N. K. Mikhailovsky, he states: 

“[Mikhailovsky] absolutely must needs metamorphose my outline of the genesis of capitalism in western Europe into a historico-philosophical theory of the general course, fatally imposed upon all peoples, regardless of the historical circumstances in which they find themselves placed, in order to arrive finally at that economic formation which insures with the greatest amount of productive power of social labor the most complete development of man.”

A Letter on Russia – Karl Marx

Some teleological defects no doubt still lie in dialectical materialism, but a passage like this suggests that, at the very least, it is likely that Marx’s thoughts on the matter were far more nuanced than those of his successors. Yet the fact that subsets of such a politically subversive ideology were unable, both in their theory and in their practice, to escape the hegemonic chokehold of progress-theory; such a fact can only be a glowing testament of the sheer all-encompassing supremacy of civilisational thought. And all of it loops right back to Platonism. Not back to Plato; such a claim would only rehash those monotonous great man theories that plague our histories (which are themselves Platonic in many ways), but back to civilisation. Platonism is transcendence, transcendence is the civilisational assemblage, and the eco-suicidal civilisational assemblage, climate dementia, yearns for transcendence’s obsoletion.

Ecological

It is worth noting that climate change is not the first instance of a colossal extinction event produced by biological organisms. Prior to industrial society and carbon-induced collapse, the cyanobacteria had mastered a separate, yet strangely similar process of production; photosynthesis, which maps input-fluxes of carbon dioxide and water to output-fluxes of glucose and, more importantly, dioxygen. The accumulation of this latter chemical in the atmosphere led to a mass extinction event now known as the “Great Oxidation Event”, wiping an innumerable amount of species away, approximately 99.5% of all life on earth. The danger of an excess of oxygen is hard to fathom in the Anthropocene, where greenhouse gasses pose a much greater threat, yet the consequences of such an excess are just as terrifying, if not more, than contemporary anthropogenic climate change. Oxygen toxicity for individual humans would mean tinnitus, nausea, dizziness, tunnel vision, cell damage, and eventually death. A heavier lithosphere would lead to mass oxidation, turning the water in oceans into hydrogen peroxide.The very same chemical once injected into mentally ill prisoners during early phases of the Holocaust. But more importantly, overwhelming amounts of molecular oxygen in the air would engender the perfect conditions for generalised exothermic redox reactions; the mere act of lighting a match could ignite massive fires, even explosions. Previous atmospheres, richer in oxygen, demanded larger tracheae: from this colossal insects (ungeheures Ungeziefer; Gregor Sasma)Franz Kafka, Metamorphosis and Other Stories, trans. by Michael Hofmann (New York: Penguin Books, 2008). roamed the face of Earth. And all of this from nothing but prokaryotic-spaces. 

The prokaryote is the monad of a human organism. The collection of humanist thought, and in fact the collection of all biological information in the universe of which it is a subset, is embedded within it. Eukaryotic cells, that form the majority of contemporary multicellular life, are composite substances; our current hypotheses on their origin suggest them to be either mutations or combinations of existing prokaryotes. To understand what this entails, we must return to Leibniz, and begin tracing the sketches of his generalised fractal-machine (in analogy with Spinoza’s god-Machine), a machine which embeds a fully complete set of potential or actualised states into their own indivisible parts or, in other words, turns all that is discrete into something continuous and introduces self-similarity into the equation. Here we are, of course, playing a dangerous game: this machine’s unstated premise is an idealist metaphysics, and therefore one can not apply it to tangible matter so simply. The required axioms are clear: a rationalist epistemology that needs no external empirical experience to self-correct, and an ontology where all of reality is in some way mind-dependent; the mind is a monad, and the monad is the windowless foundation of reality. From this, the only valid logical conclusion is our fractal-machine. If reality is nothing but aggregates of fundamental constituents that ontologically depend on the mind, and the mind has the theoretical potential to epistemologically decompose every possible aggregate, then the monad must contain the entire universe, in all its potential states, within itself. Not an “image” of the entire universe, nor an illusion of it, but the universe as it exists in the human mind, which, for Leibniz, is synonymous with the universe. Centuries after, with the knowledge of the mind’s material roots in mind, we cannot entertain such an anthropocentric notion. If the fractal-machine is to be of any further use, it must be brought into the material world at once.

Firstly, our machine requires a mind-dependent ontology, but we can swap this ontology with one generalised to any substance. It currently operates in the Leibnizian framework because epistemological information and ontological substance function in the same way, in that they are both mind-dependent. We already know our ontological substance will be a material one, independent from the mind, which itself is only a patterned network of biological matter. Therefore the same must apply to epistemological information, as it is “contained” within a mind, and therefore simply prescribes a more specific instance of this patterned network: a particular set of activation values mapped to neurons. This first premise, that connects knowledge to substance, is preserved by virtue of monism; the fractal-machine functions not because knowledge and substance are both necessarily mind-dependent, but rather because both are aggregates of the same fundamental component, the monad. Secondly, to fully materialise the fractal-machine, one must substitute a matter-oriented concept in lieu of our rationalist epistemology, and for this we must proceed in two phases; firstly grounding the human mind in pure material substance, then generalising it to systems beyond anthropomorphic thought. The former already allows us to outline biological fractals; the latter will sharpen these to a staggering scale.

We shall limit ourselves to a biological domain of discourse as of now, rather than the full universe, for the sake of keeping things relatively concrete. Here, a return to Darwin’s formal machine, a function which acts on living organisms and naturally selects them according to a handful of axioms. The non-logical signatures of “life” act more as vague descriptions than a rigorous definition, unfortunately. We can nevertheless identify seven attributes: homeostasis, organisation, metabolism, growth, adaptation, response to stimuli, and reproduction. The set of entities that generally tend to display these characteristics (which we shall soon discover is far from limited to biological organisms) serves as the domain of the natural-selection-function, and from there the formal system kicks into gear: input-organisms are encoded in variation, heredity, and “sorted” through the use of differential reproduction. Enough iterations, enough deep time, and the process produces seemingly infinite forms of magnificence. But there is no creation. Only processes, flux, and unfoldings. No new biological information is materialised by natural selection; variation depends on the randomised exchange of existing genetic information, mutations, or more rarely polyploidy. None of these three are “guaranteed” to happen in any specific way, and common doxa has determined via induction that the latter two won’t. You don’t wake up and go to work expecting a life-threatening mutation to occur, or live in fear of giving birth to someone with three pairs of chromosomes. But difference is not simply a negation, the opposite of the “expected” scenario. It is the relation between these innumerable genetic potentials, and therefore an ontological agent in its own right. The summation of all biological potential is embedded within every existing organism precisely because one now focuses on the relations between all potential output-organisms—output-organisms that are already enfolded within the Darwinist machine, or perhaps immanent to its input-organisms. Why stop at a full body without organs? It is not as if you will ever reach it without dying. Why not also consider a cell without organelles, a genome without DNA, a colony without organisms? Everywhere, biological assemblages that lack an image. They do not actively seek to antagonise their machine-parts, just as the body without organs is not a body against organs: it is a body against organisation. The collection of possibilities that are suppressed by this organisation is what it aims for, but just like Leibniz’s calculus it is a process, not a final destination. If you stop, you can only ever hope for an approximation. If you push forwards, you will never stop converging towards.

Let us shift the biological fractal’s scale, to the anthropomorphically-scaled constructions we know so well. What are the seven characteristics of a nation-state? It maintains its internal “territory” at any cost (homeostasis), it is structured by various arborescent branches of repressive organs (organisation), it oversees flows of currency, labour and energy (metabolism), it must grow economically and strive for efficiency (growth). It must shift and morph in response to external or internal threats (adaptation), reply with repressive force to any contestation of sovereignty (response to stimuli), and every day it must be reborn from its past self, the midwives being its civil servants, officials (reproduction). Was political theory always just biology at a human scale? If we take liberal theory at its word, when it claims the individual human to be the atom of society, then we confirm self-similarity: nation-states are aggregates of humans, which are aggregates of cells, and all three organised systems display our seven characteristics of life. The third, we have seen, caused a mass extinction event in its prokaryotic iteration (the cyanobacteria); today the eco-fascist accuses the second of plunging his fellows into a new one, whilst the eco-socialist levels this charge against the first. Here the question is not one of eco-pessimist civilisational collapse or solar-powered reciprocal utopia; you will always have the chance to tend towards either as a mathematical limit, if you wish so. Rather it is one of agency. Could the cyanobacteria have stopped the drastic oxygenation of the atmosphere? Perhaps by ironing out a few kinks in the System, by voting Biden, or by forming some Marxist-Leninist vanguard parties? Such a notion is profoundly absurd, but the alternative is terrifying. Perhaps our consciousness, our language, and our civilisation-thought were never going to stop the very biologico-social systems of our “making” from progressively annihilating life on Earth. Were we as deluded, in thinking that we could, as those who personify microscopic bacteria? The answer need not be one that “relegates” humans to an inhumane status devoid of free will. We can on the contrary, if we wish, anthropomorphise the cyanobacteria; humanise them not from above, as some hierarchical civilising apparatus, but instead let them humanise themselves on their own terms, because anthropomorphic possibilities were always immanent to them. 

Entropy

First the materialisation of that sublime rationalist epistemology, the arrayed network of synapses, and electrical signals; next is to separate it from this anthropocentrism, and allow it to fully function on its own terms. We must generalise epistemological information beyond the material network that forms the mind. And as it so happens, we have already done so. The formal systems of logic earlier mentioned, those that coupled themselves to cognition, did so to anchor anthropomorphic language into the material world, to detach both it and themselves from jaded humanist thought. There is no reason not to do the same for anthropomorphic knowledge, which, once no longer dependent upon the human mind, is the perfect substitute for Leibniz’s truths of “reason”. All formal systems are immanent to natura naturans. All their unfolded potentialities lie embedded within material substance. And the totalised cosmos is always a possibility of a formal system, indifferent of its state. As you zoom into the univocal fractal, you hit the realm of quanta; uncertainty, therefore folded possibilities, becomes a fundamental aspect of the cosmos. And yet it mirrors formal systems still. Commutativity and associativity no longer operate, true, we also have additional values; but the rest still works. No syllogism can escape matter, nor can it leave its closed formal system in which it is embedded, and all scales make it so in our universal fractal. But once more, we must be wary of pointillism. It was long hypothesised that the cosmos was a fractal in terms of spatial organisation specifically; yet a recent large-scale galaxy redshift survey suggests this not to be the case.Michael J. Drinkwater and others, ‘The WiggleZ Dark Energy Survey: Final Data Release and the Metallicity of UV-Luminous Galaxies’, Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 474.3 (2018), 4151–68 https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stx2963. If one can talk of a univocal fractal, it is one where only processes are self-similar across scales, rather than geo-cosmological patterns. Seems like the universe itself tries to construct an organless cosmos. 

All these “systems” gradually tend towards entropy. All our systems are gradually tending towards entropy. This entropy does not limit itself to the second law of thermodynamics, but permeates many domains, as varied as quantum information science, sociology, algorithms, cryptography, and ecology, to name only a few. It has a special raison d’être for biological and artificial organisms, acting as an unconditional and unavoidable threat to our existence: old age, decay, disintegration of biological life, and the progressive corruption of data for man-made neural codes (accumulations of non-critical failures in hard drives, bit rot). Current conjectures on the end of the Universe extend this entropic threat to all matter: heat death, a universal lack of thermodynamic free energy, where flows between systems and their surroundings are no longer possible, and maximum entropy grinds all to a halt. Such a scenario is anthropomorphically unappealing, at least in comparison to its quasi-Manichean alternatives (the Big Rip, the Big Crunch), precisely because putting the universe on eternal pause is much stranger to us than simply ending it. What is “annihilated” within heat death is not any tangible object, but the processes and flows that can no longer operate, and they had always been the main ontological agents in the factory. The paper once molded into vibrant origami itself lives on, as nothing will ever transcend it; yet it can no longer be folded. 

The sedentary experience of private property within the polity is “Order”, the nomadic experience of an unlimited hunter-gatherer is “Disorder”. But is the contemporary turmoil of an overpopulated urban slum in the Third World “order”? And is the egalitarian thermal state of a free-flowing nomadic system “disorder”? Did state apparatuses progressively assemble new arranged structures out of scattered tribal archaisms, or were they the disorganised product of an inevitable entropic increase ? Even today, there are still human spaces beyond state control; they do not await the eager arrival of the civilising mission, because they had once fled it, and they were, in part, born in opposition to it. Our posthumanist politics are nothing but meek theology today, but it will not take long before they assemble and fulfil their functions. There was one Platonic opposition that few have truly attempted to dissolve: that of civilisation and savagery. It has been experimented, throughout Western thought, to flip this binary on its head: we cited Derrida earlier, Montaigne, Diderot. But it was never dissolved. Only reversed. Savagery-civilisation. In the final cosmological scheme of things, entropy leads us to one place and one place only, and that place is neither nomadism nor sedentary control. The disorder of a failed state, the disorder of state capture, neither can be the final destination. Our upcoming heat death is as uninterested in a cosmological civilisational conquest as much as it is in civilisational collapse, just as climate collapse does not discriminate between planetary leviathanisation and nomadisation, between the state-sponsored plunder of the Far North and the nomadic flight away from failed states of the Global South; all flows grind to a halt, and the purpose of civilisation was to administer flows (economic flows of markets, information flows of communication, fecal flows of sewage under the city-state), and the raison d’être of nomadism was to let flows run free, but neither ever considered the possibility that something could freeze them over. Temperature differences, identities, still have the potential to spatially exist, but once maximum entropy is reached, no thermodynamic system will ever exert a flow, a difference, unto its surroundings again. 

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Heidegger at the End of the World Monographs

HEW #3: Yo-Yo Ma Plays the Soundtrack for the St Vitus Dance

Introduction, § III: Philosophy as the Science of Being

October, 2020

Despite all appearances – and let me clear, those are unabashedly terrible – now is not the time for misanthropes. Oh you hate people? Kids screaming on the subway, dumb opinion havers, non-self-awareness practicing chakra wreckers, we all see them. But in the face of such a time that reaches out and grabs everyone by the groin and wrenches this hard, surely no type could seem less helpful than the holier-than-thou ugly saints in the lineage of the malicious shade Houellebecq or its diluted americana cousin a la unhelpful science gnome deGrasse Tyson. 

What to do then, when the weight of an existence careening the wrong way up a one-way street with the throttle locked in starts to creak at the rivets in your head? For me these days it’s Bach. What a guy. In an apparent act of foresight some 300 years in advance, he wrote his music intricately enough that the voice of a single instrument requires nothing else nearby to support it. Independence is, albeit tragically, a good trait in a vicious age that threatens all collectivity. Man was into his self care.

Why all this waffle about the baroque?

Take a breath. I’m just here to talk about repetition. Any fan of the cello suites knows they repeat themselves. A lot. A musician worth their salt, say RostropovichHighly recommend everyone watch Rostropovich talk about his music.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jBe_4Pe49FA
, will immediately confront you with the question: why? If we just heard that bit, even that note – think that pounded pedal note in the first prelude – what good does it do to constantly go back to it? Is it because we’re stupid? It’s because we’re stupid, isn’t it.

Don’t get too angry if I tell you there actually isn’t an answer. One answer, that is. The thing is, it’s up to you as a musician to do something with the repetition to make it speak. Play louder than before, emphasize different parts, use different bows. Make the same different. Go back to that breath you were holding and watch it swell again and again. There’s a certain creative sweet spot dozing in the terrain of difference and repetition. Someone should write a book about it.

This is a thought that creeps into my rummage bag of a mind as I’m reading these lectures and it feels like an insight worth tagging along. We’re still in the introduction and it already feels like I’m slowly turning back in on the same words save that they just feel a little bit different each time through. Unfortunately, it’s only text so I don’t have some soviet sex-cellist like Mischa Maisky to really make me tingle. All I have is a muddle of phrases telling me that philosophy is about being (Sein) and not beings (das Seiende). That’s the pedal note. On top of that – layered structure. “Philosophy is not a science of beings but of being or, as the Greek expression goes, ontology.”Heidegger, p. 11; “Philosophie ist nicht Wissenschaft vom Seienden, sondern vom Sein.” Martin Heidegger and Friedrich-Wilhelm von. Herrmann, Die Grundprobleme der Phänomenologie (Frankfurt am Main: V. Klostermann, 1997), p. 15. Pedal. Now add that this is what the Greeks were talking about with when they coined the term which would go on to become the bane of suburban parents sending their kids to dubious humanities programs across the world – Ontology. Harmonic layer. Ad infinitum. Someone call Yo-Yo Ma.

Armed with a nice new word, we return to another iteration of the root note: the defining of philosophy as the study of being. “Philosophy is the theoretical conceptual interpretation of being, of being’s structure and its possibilities. Philosophy is ontological”“Heidegger, p. 11; “Philosophie ist die theoretisch-begriffliche Interpretation des Seins, seiner Struktur und seiner Möglichkeiten. Sie ist ontologisch.“ Heidegger and Herrmann, p. 15. A few more new words: theoretical, conceptual, interpretation, structure, possibility. Seems alright. Grad school scrabble. But what do we do with this? Alas barely is another corner turned that we are back with our faces in the same mess from the last section about Weltanschauungen. (How do I write German plurals in English? What an unwieldy language. It feels like I’m going to crunch somebody’s nose swinging these long coarse words around. Nietzsche’s hammer indeed). Remember how I got jerked around in Dispatch 1 where I thought we’d get into perspectives and some stuff about historicity? I’ve barely regained my dignity after taking the bait too soon and now I’m supposed to take it again, except now we’re mixing around the words of philosophy and science again so that this time we are calling philosophy a science; all the earlier stuff about science taking the Seiende as its object is corralled into the conceptual time-out that we’re calling “positive science.” So so so, look who’s calling everyone a positivist normie. Harkens back to my undergrad days where I baffled my perfectly reasonable sociology faculty by calling them all positivists and refusing to do anything actually resembling what the kids call sociology. Next he’s gonna start smoking weed and talking about the military industrial complex.

It feels we’re coming out swinging with a particular vigor considering this has already been covered in the last chapter. Our guy is taking no prisoners – get it? Because they’d have to exist. Look, it’s not easy trying to fit jokes into this teutonic sermon. I’m doing my best. In this corner we have all sciences with an extant “positum” as object, the Weltanschauungen, the “ontic,” the “vulgar,” among others. It seems Heidegger’s still got some destructive juices left over and he’s squaring up with pretty much everybody today. Think of a philosopher that’s hip and still kicking. Isn’t this nightmarish moniker “cultural theorist” almost always stuck on? The entire neoliberal clown car that is the European Graduate School where, for just a decent fraction of a small nation’s GDP, students can lick a chair Agamben once farted in or if they’re lucky, watch Judith Butler or Slavoj Zizek struggle with a coffee machine while the Italian autonomists scoff in the designated smoking space. Not contemporary enough for you? Maybe you want me to look at some neo-Deleuzian flow theorists – we get it, you do ketamine – or if you studied politics as an undergrad, maybe some ethics or communication theory stuff. God, at this point we might as well call Joe Rogan or the Beeperson a “cultural theorist.” It’d serve the rest of us right. The moral is these days it really does seem impossible to find philosophy untarnished with glossy bits about aesthetics, psychology, history, or that horrible plebian pursuit closeted Schmittians insist on calling politics.

If I read one more book where in place of good writing I’m told to consider a scene from Hitchcock… On the other hand, there’s the growing sense that legitimate philosophy not taking into account the reality of ecology and other non-human spheres seems a bit cramped, a bit selfish. Why you always gotta talk about yourself? In the words of McKenzie Wark, “it seems rather old fashioned to speak only of the human and not what Haraway calls the multispecies muddle we actually exist in and as.” After all, if it’s true that “the Anthropocene makes even nature historical and temporary,”McKenzie Wark, General Intellects: Twenty-Five Thinkers for the Twenty-First Century ([n.p.]: , 2017). it might end up being impossible to leave the kids alone at home long enough to go on this ontological cruise. No offense to the now highly venerated climate scientists, immunologists, and Green party activists, but it doesn’t seem like y’all are able to get the house under control yet. Babysitting is hell of a gig, especially when the toddlers have been getting into the candy. Especially when the candy was from those guys from the Heritage Foundation during 80s; that shit has now morphed into some hell-spawn of paranoid & weaponized reactionary sugar-fueled mania during its time in the online disinformation era of the 2010s.Jonathan Mahler, ‘How One Conservative Think Tank Is Stocking Trump’s Government’, New York Times, 20 June 2018 At least I heard they have a low-carb version in the works.

Chaotic as the State of Things today might be, for now the year is still 1927, Richard Nixon is barely getting the hang of shaving, and Doc Martin over here is still allowed to pontificate unawares of the effect of greenhouse gasses and of the mass murder of his political affiliates. Thus, in seated in his lecture hall, we see this growing pile of naïve ontic trash contrasted with the glorious proper philosophy, which is ontological – concerned with Sein. He can even prove it; apparently he’s already given semesters’ worth of lectures on this history from Aquinas to Kant. It seems I’m behind. Prof, will this be on the exam? No? Ok, thanks. Again ensuring that we’re free of anything remotely resembling relevance, Martin insists on denying any inclination towards a historical reading of philosophy. “We shall not now refer to this historical demonstration of the nature of philosophy, a demonstration having its own peculiar character.”Heidegger; p. 12; “Wir nehmen jetzt auf diesen historischen Beweis des Wesens der Philosophie, der seinen eigenen Charakter hat, nicht Bezug.” Heidegger and Herrmann, p. 16. This ensures that we have nothing to get a grip with except this phenomenological cool-aid he’s selling us. Reminds of the company stores in the late 19th century where workers could only use their company wages to buy company goods from stores owned by said company. This association is unfair though, Marty assures us, because if we just sit here and listen to him for a while, he’ll ultimately deliver unto us a work of true human freedom. No one ever accused him of rhetorical modesty. “Let us rather in the whole of the present course try to establish philosophy on its own basis, so far as it is a work of human freedom. Philosophy must legitimate by its own resources its claim to be universal ontology.”Heiddeger, p. 12; “Vielmehr versuchen wir, im Ganzen der Vorlesung die Philosophie aus sich selbst zu begründen, sofern sie ein Werk der Freiheit des Menschen ist. Die Philosophie muß sich aus sich selbst als universale Ontologie rechtfertigen.Heidegger and Herrmann, p. 16.

If I can jump in here speaking as an editor, Doc – can I call you Doc? – have you considered cutting some material? I don’t mean to play Gordon Lish to your Raymond CarverGaby Wood, ‘Raymond Carver: the kindest cut’, The Guardian, 26 September 2009, but if you already did this whole spiel about how all philosophy has always been ontological, why are we starting another whole course on it? Or maybe I should be asking why, if we shan’t be historical, are we about to take a deep dive into Kant and other certifiably Old Shit? Did you run out of material? Look, it’s best to be honest and not try to squeeze out a sequel just for the cash. Look what it did to J.K. Rowling. All she had to do was shut the fuck up. Then again, she’s loaded and my bank account is desolate, so who am I to cast a stone.

Back to the text. “Philosophy is the science of being.”Heidegger, p. 13;“Philosophie ist die Wissenschaft vom Sein.“ Heidegger and Herrmann, p. 17. Pedal. You know what – I want you to see the image of Yo-Yo Ma’s face every time we hit that pedal note. Guarantee you’ve never seen human bliss incorporated until you see this guy railing that pedaled G. Can we do this? Do we have a graphics team?Sourced from https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q2ZHjSA8mkY

There we go. This guy is feeeeeling it, Mr. Krabs. Every time Doc tells us to go back to the sole purpose of philosophy, Sein, think of this face. Better yet, make this face yourself. Really let yourself get into it. This might turn out to be fun after all. Anyway, I’m curious why we backpedaled a tiny bit and now want to call ourselves scientists after all. Maybe it’s something in that German word Wissenschaft. Wissen zu schaffen. To create knowledge. To conceive it. Got a ring to it. To be on par with the god of genesis. Let’s see where this science thing takes us.

For now, this whole show is getting a bit old. How long is this class anyway? To his credit, here comes another moment where Martin sounds almost like he’s got enough wit to realize he’s on the verge of hilarity. This stuff’s ridiculous right? To separate being from that which is? You’re dizzy – did you get knocked on the head too hard? “Can something like being be imagined? If we try to do this, doesn’t our head start to swim? Indeed, at first we are baffled and find ourselves clutching at thin air.”Heidegger, p. 13; “Kann man sich so etwas vorstellen wie Sein? Faßt einen beim Versuch dazu nicht der Schwindel? In der Tat, wir sind zunächst rat-los und greifen ins Leere.Heidegger and Herrmann, p. 18. I knew the babysitter was a bad idea. We should have listened to McKenzie. For a second Doc himself looks like he might be coming around to calling this whole thing off. “At the outset of our considerations, without raising any false hopes and without mincing matters, we must confess that under the heading of being we can at first think to ourselves nothing.”Heidegger, p. 13; “Wir müssen uns beim Ausgang unserer Betrachtung ohne jede Vorspiegelung und Beschöni-gung eingestehen: Unter Sein kann ich mir zunächst nichts denken.“ Heidegger and Herrmann, p. 18. There’s the bell. Class dismissed. Let me grab my bags and let’s grab a coffee at –

Goddammit. ‘The bell doesn’t dismiss you; I do’. Remember that teacher? On the other hand, it is just as certain that we are constantly thinking being. We think being just as often as, daily, on innumerable occasions, whether aloud or silently, we say “This is such and such,” “That other is not so,” “That was,” “It will be.” Heidegger, p. 13; “Andererseits steht ebensosehr fest: Wir denken das Sein ständig. Sooft wir ungezählte Male jeden Tag sagen, ob in wirklicher Verlautbarung oder stillschweigend: das und das ist so und so, jenes ist nicht so, das war, wird sein.“ Heidegger and Herrmann, p. 18. Alright. So to sum up what we have so far, we can’t think being but we constantly think it. Makes sense. I’m starting to see why folks say that “Heidegger is the only world-famous philosopher of the 20th century about whom it can seriously be argued that he was a charlatan.”Samuel Earle, ‘Heidegger, the homesick philosopher’, New Statesman, 11 September 2019 I guess said folks missed Derrida, Lacan, Deleuze – oh shit. They’re all Heideggerians. Well not Heideggerians but, you know, Heideggerians.

Far from soothing our suspicions, Doc throws fuel on the fire as he makes clear that philosophy has accepted the simplicity of the “is”-word in no small thanks to that stupid stupid thing we call sound wisdom. By taking the word “is” for granted, common usage has made even the best and brightest forget to question it. The rabble is good for nothing, especially those lazy, dirty ones that have no respect for our customs, amiright? Again, the English “common sense” doesn’t have the same insistence on not being crazy that the German does: “gesunder Menschenverstand.” Healthy human ability to reason. If we had more time here I’d crack open my copy of the DSM V and go through this diagnostic checklist top to bottom. Alas, with no time for medical quackery, I ask you, respectable members of the jury, does this sound healthy?:

“But wherever common sense is taken to be philosophy’s highest court of appeal, philosophy must become suspicious. In “Uber das Wesen der philosophischen Kritik iiberhaupt” [“On the Essence of Philosophical Criticism”], Hegel says: “Philosophy by its very nature is esoteric; for itself it is neither made for the masses nor is it susceptible of being cooked up for them. It is philosophy only because it goes exactly contrary to the understanding and thus even more so to ‘sound common sense,’ the so-called healthy human understanding, which actually means the local and temporary vision of some limited generation of human beings. To that generation the world of philosophy is in and for itself a topsy-turvy, an inverted, world.” The demands and standards of common sense have no right to claim any validity or to represent any authority in regard to what philosophy is and what it is not.”Heidegger, p. 14; “Man beruft sich auf den gesunden Menschenverstand. Aber allemal, wenn der gesunde Menschenverstand zur letzten Instanz der Philosophie gemacht wird, muß diese mißtrauisch werden. Hegel sagt in »Über das Wesen der philosophischen Kritik überhaupt«: »Die Philosophie ist ihrer Natur nach etwas Esoterisches, für sich weder für den Pöbel gemacht noch einer Zubereitung für den Pöbel fähig; sie ist nur dadurch Philosophie, daß sie dem Verstände und damit noch mehr dem gesunden Menschenverstände, worunter man die lokale und temporäre Beschränktheit eines Geschlechts der Menschen versteht, gerade entgegengesetzt ist; im Verhältnis zu diesem ist an und für sich die Welt der Philosophie eine verkehrte Welt.« Die Ansprüche und Maßstäbe des gesunden Menschenverstandes dürfen keine Geltung beanspruchen und keine Instanz darstellen bezüglich dessen, was Philosophie ist und was sie nicht ist.Heidegger and Herrmann, p. 19

Read that a few times. Best read it aloud to your friends and unsuspecting neighbors. Let it soak in. Maybe make the face again, Doc. Christ, stop being so weird, can you? Philosophy, as those hapless humanities parents from before well know, has little respect for that thing called Common Sense. No one ever accused this stuff of being too easy. Imagine Plato’s apologia if he just stopped being obtuse and got a job at IBM as a creative tech consultant. I heard Apple’s got a new take on the classic forms. If philosophy were common, what’d be the point of a PhD, you know? Next you’re gonna tell me those Capuchin monks aren’t any closer to god than those kids at the bar. I think I can hear Bourdieu scratching through the clay above his grave somewhere.

Now, good friends, we come to the end for today. Right before you go, Doc’s got something to say. We’re all shuffling our papers and getting ready to head out, listening to him lay out the plan for next week. The usual teasers. “What if being were the most complex and most obscure concept?”Heidegger, p. 14; “Wenn Sein der verwickeltste und dunkelste Begriff wäre?Heidegger and Herrmann, p. 19 Pedal. Wait, did you catch that turn towards the darker. A note of urgency for the cliff-hanger; que the trailer music and dramatic narration: “What if arriving at the concept of being were the most urgent task of philosophy, a task which has to be taken up ever anew?”Heidegger, p. 14; “Wenn das Sein auf den Begriff zu bringen die dringlichste und immer wieder neu zu ergreifende Aufgabe der Philosophie wäre?“ Heidegger and Herrmann, p. 19 Alright buddy. But here’s something that tickles my ear in a way I’m not sure I like. In claiming we’ve all forgotten something Aristotle apparently said, he describes the contemporary times and his tone reaches for something insidious:

“Today, when philosophizing is so barbarous, so much like a St. Vitus’ dance, as perhaps in no other period of the cultural history of the West, and when nevertheless the resurrection of metaphysics is hawked up and down all the streets[.]”Heidegger, p. 14; “Heute, wo man so barbarisch und veitstänzerisch philosophiert, wie vielleicht in keiner Periode der abendländischen Geistesgeschichte, und heute, wo man gleichwohl auf allen Gassen eine Auferstehung der Metaphysik hinausschreit“ Heidegger and Herrmann, p. 19

Today is a time of barbarity. It is the time of the St. Vitus dance. The West is burning. The Occident is at stake. Cheap resurrection hacks abound and the dead are come, it is said, back for thrills and filthy gossip. Is this the language of an academic philosopher? Or is it something heavier, a voice more kin to the Apocalypse of John, the final revelations. Don’t tell me that all which is has ever been can be so easily done away with. Don’t promise there won’t be any victims. I can hear the voice somewhere nearby of Spengler.You’ll be hearing more about Spengler in future reports. He’s unfortunately relevant to the nonsense today in Germany. Of Barth. Of Hitler. Further back, the Anabaptists & the holy violence of the 16th century peasant furies.“Between 1918 and 1927, within nine short years, there appear in German half a dozen books that are more than books in their dimensions and manner of extremity. The first edition of Ernst Bloch’s Geist der Utopie is dated 1918. So is volume one of Oswald Spengler’s Decline of the West. The initial version of Karl Barth’s Commentary on Romans, of Barth’s reading of St. Paul, is dated 1919. Franz Rosenzweig’s Stern der Erlösung follows in 1921. Martin Heidegger’s Sein und Zeit is published in 1927. The question of whether the sixth title forms part of this configuration, and, if so, in what ways, is among the most difficult. Mein Kampf appears in its two volumes between 1925 and 1927. […] These works are, in a sense which is also technical, apocalyptic. They address themselves to “the last things.” […] We know of the dread foresight, of the contract with apocalypse in Mein Kampf. Like their leviathan counterpart in Austria, Karl Kraus’s The Last Days of Humanity, these writings out of the German ruin are, indeed, meant to be read either by men and women doomed to decay, as in Spengler, or by men and women destined to undergo some fundamental renovation, some agonizing rebirth out of the ash of a dead past. This is Bloch’s message, Rosenzweig’s, and, in a perspective of eternal untimeliness, that of Barth. It is Hitler’s promise to the Volk. Massive scale, a prophetic tenor, and the invocation of the apocalyptic make for a specific violence. These are violent books. There is no more violent dictum in theological literature than Karl Barth’s: “God speaks His eternal No to the world.” In Rosenzweig, the violence is one of exaltation. The light of God’s immediacy breaks almost unbearably upon human consciousness. Ernst Bloch sings and preaches revolution, the overthrow of the existing order within man’s psyche and society. The Spirit of Utopia will lead directly to Bloch’s fiery celebration of Thomas Münzer and the sixteenth-century insurrections of peasant-saints and millennarians. The baroque violence, the rhetorical satisfaction in disaster — literally “the falling of the stars” — in Spengler’s magnum have often been noted. And there is no need to detail the raucous inhumanity in the eloquence of Herr Hitler.

And below that, perhaps something more primordial, the screaming engine of huge affliction and dismay, mixed with obdurate pride and steadfast hateJohn Milton, Paradise Lost (1667), Book 1., the pit itself, that knot of Gordian horror that you’ve always been carrying with you.

Don’t be too fast to call me paranoid. This voice doesn’t get to tell me to simply lay my life, the human details of connection and living aside when I can hear such a tremor in his voice. For someone who claims to be doing nothing but pure ontology, there is a human malice in these closing words. Is this what philosophy is going to be? A clearing of the barbarous, an encounter with the inhuman horror of the dancing body beyond redemption – remember the mad dancers in front of the statue of St. Vitus who himself was boiled to death? I don’t think I’m quite ready to give Doc here permission to be absolved from all guilt when it comes to worldly horror.

You might think I’m jumping the gun here, but step aside with me for a moment. We’re still in the introduction, so there’ll be philosophical minutia aplenty to come. Right now we’re still talking big picture. An attempt at elevating this mythical Sein doesn’t look like it’s going to leave space for the relations between particulars, all that stuff of the positum; the primacy of the ‘existential’ question is starting to feel like a massive act of arrogant personal self-affirmation. Yet there’s still somehow this note of disdain towards all which is currently around us.

I wouldn’t be the first to note that this works suspiciously well as a metaphysical panacea for the prickly questions about anti-Semitism and affiliations with National Socialism.Pierre Bordieu, The Political Ontology of Martin Heidegger ([n.p.]: , 1988), p. 54. A get-out-of-jail-free card for the black notebooks. After all, don’t you see he’s telling us that he’s not talking about history or party politics? He’s not a dirty sociologist or pundit. Ignore all the growing sounds of Nazis being unearthed in German police networks.‘350 cases of suspected far-right sympathy found in German security forces’, DW No, the issue at hand is not (only) his particular national or cultural associations. That’s not what we’re here for. If he wants to talk pure philosophy, I’m game. Following his lead, I’m starting to feel the tremor in reality as I try to take on his premise of cleaving being from that which is. I can’t tell what I’m looking at though, and it’s making me queasy. Quoth the raven who hates jazz, “the penetrating look and the one that goes past you, the hypnotic and the disregarding gaze, are of the same kind; in both, the subject is extinguished.”Max Horkheimer, Theodor W. Adorno, Dialectic of Enlightenment ([n.p.]: , 1944), p. 158. “The meaning of this “is” remains closed to us.”Heidegger, p. 14; “Der Sinn dieses >ist< bleibt uns verschlossen.” Heidegger and Herrmann, p. 18. I’ll certainly drink to that.


Post-Script. 1976. Todtnauberg, on the rim of the Black Forest.

Countless were the days that he would in a dread start and with his inaugural breaths could not but curse already the coming of a dawn over him which signaled anew the rising of yet another day he’d live shambling across the charcoal ruins in his memory of that house that only he could see. How often had he, over nothing but the mundanities of breakfasts and weekday traffics felt the unbidden ripples of a scream, now decades aged in his otherwise healthy breast scrape, trudge across his rib, across his tongue, low like beaten oxen. There exists a species of nightmare, one borne perhaps equally of a tortured memory’s truth as much as vivid, infernal invention, which carries behind it a tail that sweeps a final draft of bitter embers and ashen despair, burning and obscuring indiscriminate, into the waking light of those poor men and women who fate chooses for its riders.

It is one such man now that we now see. He has retained his mind in his extended struggle over what must once have been unquestionably sanity, but his heart, so often lurched across the threshold of a present and a psychic world of involuntary recollection, has been dashed to a bloodied fiber, and here, we see this what was bled emerge in his eyes as they open, as he steps out into the street. Little of the man, the civil agent of his responsibilities as husband, as son, as professor and as citizen, little of this is there in what asks him, demands, screams for each step into further oblivion. The city is in flames again. It was so once before.

What can I say unto you, old man, but that I will pray at higher station for some being of still greater order to one day pity you and simply extinguish all that is light in you finally and quickly. For now you are faced with a burning edifice at every angle your heaving, sweat rimmed look will beg to turn. This city is in flames and the screaming you hear matches the screaming you heard when you watched them burn the first time. This is your doing, it always has been, and the meagre prayer, pittance of repentance you now want to deliver is to absolution as one lone maple leaf to an armada.

You have woken again to the horror, and that, in its uncountable voices singing is what begs you speak. Are you looking into a new world of sleep for as again and before – are you dreaming of their disappearance anew, or is this blaze now final, are you ready to walk?


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Heidegger at the End of the World Monographs

HEW #2: Extremely Stupid and Very Well Armed

[§ 2, p. 8-15] September, 2020.

Do you hear me, Lord of Revelations? Call off your men. I was just touched by some deluded smiling freaks who tried, in all honesty, to baptize me on the road in front of a boarded up old-folks home up here in the wooded north of the city. Do I really look so bad, Lord? Have I truly strayed so far? Or was it just more post-hippies? Adults so strung out on COVID-price-gouged molly they can’t tell what was once a soviet sunset from the Berghain techno light show? Either way, evangelicals or hippies turned alt-yuppies, my options don’t look good–both flavors of apocalypse are in terrible taste.

The US election is looming and the first Big March in Berlin since August happened this weekend–anti-corona, fascists, the poorer start-up washouts who want their rent capped. Despite my hopes, it was nothing but an underwhelming trickle of the angry and the dumb and, as always. it was often hard to tell the difference. You’ll hear more about that from me soon.

Between you and me, I’m terrified. Maybe it’s no wonder that I’m turning to questions of faith in these off-brand end times. I did ask the Jesus-freaks if they were Baptists. They laughed and said they didn’t know. Then they mentioned they weren’t sure if Baptists even believed in the healing power of Christ. They laughed some more. In these times, laughter really might be the answer. Or art? Isn’t that what Instagram and exasperated middle school guidance counselors teach us? Maybe I could sink myself into some sort of creative daze, write that script for the scathing political drama about the White House that everybody definitely wants to see . . .

Ah. Shit.

I shouldn’t have been surprised.

If there was ever a mug that you instinctively knew would be the harbinger of buzzkill, it was our man Heidegger’s. Seriously, google the guy. You can unmistakably hear the soft frying of Schnitzel in his aura. Apparently it was Marty’s brother who got the entire genetic dosage of the familial sense of humor; this according to anyone who spent more than a minute with both of them.

Okay, where did we leave off last time? I got all carried away about how this Weltanschauung thing was gonna show we’re all sadists at heart or something. The proverbial hearty potatoes of every good modern critical theory hard-on: something about subjectivity, the subject, imagination, queering multiplicities, etc. Apparently today we’re going to learn what philosophy is by asking how it relates to weltanschauungen.

“Philosophy can and perhaps must show, among many other things, that something like a world-view belongs to the essential nature of the Dasein. Philosophy can and must define what in general constitutes the structure of a world-view. But it can never develop and posit some specific world-view qua just this or that particular one. Philosophy is not essentially the formation of a world-view; but perhaps just on this account it has an elementary and fundamental relation to all world-view formation, even to that which is not theoretical but factically historical.”Martin Heidegger, The Basic Problems of Phenomenology, trans. by Albert Hofstadter, Revised Ed (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1988), p. 10; ” Philosophie kann und muß vielleicht unter vielem anderen zeigen, daß zum Wesen des Daseins so etwas wie Weltanschauung gehört. Philosophie kann und muß umgrenzen, was die Struktur einer Weltanschauung überhaupt ausmacht. Sie kann aber nie eine bestimmte Weltanschauungals diese und jene ausbilden und setzen. Philosophie ist ihrem Wesen nach nicht eltanschauungsbildung, hat aber vielleicht gerade deshalb einen elementaren und prinzipiellen Bezug zu aller, auch der nicht theoretischen, sondern faktisch geschichtlichen Weltanschauungsbildung.” Martin Heidegger and Friedrich-Wilhelm von. Herrmann, Die Grundprobleme der Phänomenologie (Frankfurt am Main: V. Klostermann, 1997), p. 13.

We look at the text and, well, first things first, an admission; I was barking up the wrong tree last week. I got a bit too excited about this Weltanschauung question, I missed that it was mostly a ruse to bring us to philosophy’s favorite narcissistic exercise: defining itself. Defining itself real hard. In one of his lectures on metaphysics, Adorno once joked to the effect that one could most easily be sure one was doing metaphysics simply by discussing whether or not one was doing metaphysics. Funny guy.

And what is philosophy? Here we quickly distinguish ourselves from priests and artists:

“A philosophical world-view is one that expressly and explicitly or at any rate preponderantly has to be worked out and brought about by philosophy, that is to say, by theoretical speculation, to the exclusion of artistic and religious interpretations of the world and the Dasein.”Heidegger, p. 6; “Eine philosophische Weltanschauung ist eine solche, die eigens und ausdrücklich oder jedenfalls vorwiegend durch die Philosophie ausgebildet und vermittelt werden soll, d. h. durch theoretische Spekulation mit Ausschaltung der künstlerischen und religiösen Deutung der Welt und des Daseins.” Heidegger and Herrmann, p. 8.

Uh oh. None of that artsy shit here. Forgive me, I can’t help but hear a nasal Shapiro: facts don’t care about your feelings, you sentimental lib. “Madam, I swear I use no art at all.” Strap in, though, because we’re only getting started. You see, unlike science, philosophy might ask us to forgo everything we thought was important, useful, visible, hell, actually everything entirely. In its stead, in his steely Teutonic tone—maybe think Clint Eastwood vith a German akcent—he gives us a sort of metaphysical 18th amendment and warns us that the philosophical weltanschauung bars not only booze but any real-existing object, any “this or that” (Seiendes als dieses und jenes) so to speak. Spooky. After going out of his way to rub our faces in the worldly, in everything you’ve ever known and cared about—psych!—Marty yanks it, chucks it, and washes his hands of it.

I’ll admit, at this point, I’m feeling whatever it is he’s been putting in the water; I’m confused. What are we talking about then? What are we even doing? Where am I? Who are you?

Apparently anticipating the naïve clamor of the rabble, the city kids and their quick thrills and sexual promiscuity, Heidegger teases us and makes us guess. Tell us, what are we talking about?

“What then is philosophy supposed to concern itself with if not with beings, with that which is, as well as with the whole of what is? What is not, is surely the nothing. Should philosophy, then, as absolute science, have the nothing as its theme? What can there be apart from nature, history, God, space, number?”Heidegger, p. 10; ” Womit soll die Philosophie sich denn beschäftigen, wenn nicht mit Seiendem, mit dem, was ist, sowie mit dem Seienden im Ganzen? Was nicht ist, ist doch das Nichts. Soll etwa die Philosophie als absolute Wissenschaft das Nichts zum Thema haben? Was kann es geben außer Natur, Geschichte, Gott, Raum, Zahl?” Heidegger and Herrmann, p. 13.

Give us something to work with! Daddy, please! I’m starting to get why Lacan called Kant erotic . . .

Finally, we get to the big reveal. I’ll drop the entire thing in its entirety for you. In the words of a friend who was very much fed up with me: how about you stick this in your theoretical pipe and smoke it:

We say of each of these, even though in a different sense, that it is. We call it a being. In relating to it, whether theoretically or practically, we are comporting ourselves toward a being. Beyond all these beings there is nothing. Perhaps there is no other being beyond what has been enumerated, but perhaps, as in the German idiom for ‘there is,’ es gibt [literally, it gives}, still something else is given. Even more. In the end something is given which must be given if we are to be able to make beings accessible to us as beings and comport ourselves toward them, something which, to be sure, is not but which must be given if we are to experience and understand any beings at all. We are able to grasp beings as such, as beings, only if we understand something like being.Heidegger, p. 10; ” Von all dem Genannten sagen wir, wenn auch in einem verschiedenen Sinne, es ist. Wir nennen es Seiendes. Darauf bezogen, sei es theoretisch oder praktisch, verhalten wir uns zu Seiendem. Außer diesem Seienden ist nichts. Vielleicht ist kein anderes Seiendes außer dem aufgezählten, aber vielleicht gibt es doch noch etwas, was zwar nicht ist, was es aber gleichwohl in einem noch zu bestimmenden Sinne gibt. Mehr noch. Am Ende gibt es etwas, was es geben muß, damit wir uns Seiendes als Seiendes zugänglich machen und uns zu ihm verhalten können, etwas, das zwar nicht ist, das es aber geben muß, damit wir überhaupt so etwas wie Seiendes erfahren und verstehen. Seiendes vermögen wir als solches, als Seiendes, nur zu fassen, wenn wir dergleichen wie Sein verstehen.” Heidegger and Herrmann, pp. 13–14.

Here we have it then. This is the plan. The goal of philosophy. The reason we are gathered here today. And so we reach the end of part 2 of our introduction and hit the first sentence of the next: “Das Sein ist das echte und einzige Thema der Philosophie.” [“[B]eing is the proper and sole theme of philosophy.”] That’s got some meat on it.



Let’s perhaps pause here and look in the mirror. Rather, let’s look around. With every vestige of institutional stability being blasted into precarity with the neoliberal dynamite quietly packaged and shipped out by the Chicago boys, I think we’re approaching a certain metaphysical certainty that no animal alive today with “human” on the name tag can in good faith claim that they’re an apolitical operator. With the internet-facilitated hyperfocus on the political aspects of every minute aspect of life, it really seems that the cliché lines of philosophising don’t seem as quite as serious; universal questions of mortality, meaninglessness, and temporality, unconcerned with historical effects of race, gender, class, etc. smacks of privileged indulgence at best. If asked to think of a philosopher, the popular imagination maybe spits out French men in dark coats with cigarettes contemplating the pain of life, perhaps drinking heavily, driving recklessly and looking at those younger girls over there. Come to think of it, it’s no wonder Marty was turned off by Sartre. He had a stick up his ass even by small town Prussian standards and would have never stood for this shit.

Hell, even the small survivalist and mountaineering forums I like to spend my discrete evenings on are being rocked by the pesky little realities of power politics and historical structures behind them. And if the recluse isn’t safe . . .

Who the hell has the actual space, time, dare I ask, the money to do this? To step away from every thing. You raised your hand? “Perhaps that’s exactly why he’s—” Yeah, good lord. I can feel the condescending professorial smirk from here.

Sorry. Maybe this is too much snark. I gotta breathe. It was only the first debate. Maybe things aren’t so bad. Chris Wallace did his best. Maybe I could even go find my newfound evangelical friends and talk things over. None of that changes the fact that, as cultural critic turned messiah of the young Left Mark Fisher noted, nowadays remarking on the futility of our situation is already de facto passé. There is no space today for talk like this. Maybe what this philosophy needs is some space to stretch it—I think in German they call it Lebensraum.

Jokes aside, reality today doesn’t go for the price anymore. These days it doesn’t seem to have the capacity for serious philosophical, conceptual structures at all. While early 20th-century conflicts were riddled with conceptual treatises, dogmatic schools, and ideologically fleshed-out weltanschauungen, today’s conflict doesn’t seem to need much of that at all. Instead, the rapid-fire think-piece hot take format has exceeded both in volume and velocity the need for, and possibly even the ability for, carefully constructed foundational arguments to support particular social positions and their perspectives. The GOP gets it: they didn’t even bother writing down a platform for 2020. Perhaps if we look outside of the world of letters, we may very well find certain schools of thought constituted not by philosophical structures but by embodied realities. It is the age of the body and the imagination after all. 

Either way you cut it, these next few months are going to be rough. I have a certain perverse hope that these lectures will give me something to clutch as we start to really hit the rapids. This, despite the fact that any proper philosopher worth the weight of their paper degrees should know well enough to take serious issue with my approach. That is, if they don’t throw it immediately in the trash. A classroom introduction to the lectures states that the “the advantage of using the lecture course instead of Heidegger’s magnum opus is that it prevents pragmatist and existentialist readings of Heidegger” and that it instead “focuses on what Heidegger is really after.” Well, there’s a saying among fencing aficionados. The biggest threat to the world’s best fencer isn’t the second best. It’s an amateur, wildly swinging their épée in all directions. Well, for all intents and purposes, consider me extremely stupid and very well armed.


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Editors note: Further instalments of Heidegger at the End of the World should be up every Friday.

You can find Andrejs’ Instagram here and his website, callitnotdoubt, here.

Categories
Monographs Neoleviathan

Neoleviathan: The Wicked and the Wretched

Introduction | Ch. 1 | Ch. 2 | Ch. 3

“If indeed there are destructive forces at play in history, it is not, or not necessarily, those that produce war. The production of war is a production of war, it is still a production. But destruction is dissimulated in the most peaceful production, death in the accumulation of wealth.”

Jean-François Lyotard

“We therefore conclude that war does not belong in the realm of arts and sciences; rather it is part of man’s social existence.”

Carl von Clausewitz

With all this gloom, we might find ourselves wanting to reach out for reasons to hope, we might find ourselves daring to ask if our problems are solvable. In their 1973 paper, Dilemmas in a General Theory of Planning, Horst Rittel and Melvin Webber bluntly stated “no”—social problems are insolvable, because social problems are wicked.Horst W. J. Rittel and Melvin M. Webber, ‘Dilemmas in a General Theory of Planning’, Policy Sciences, 4.2 (1973), 155–69 <https://doi.org/10.1007/BF01405730>. A wicked problem is a problem which is so complicated, so poorly understood, so messy, that solving it comprehensively is impossible.In his letter introducing Rittel’s use of the term, C. West Churchman suggests that the intractability of these wicked problems produces a moral duty for social scientists to be honest and thoughtful about the fact that they can only ever offer partial “solutions”, and be upfront about the untamed aspects of the problem when relaying their solutions to decision-makers. Despite the obviousness of this point, it seems to have gone unheeded. C. West Churchman, ‘Wicked Problems’, Management Science, 14.4 (1967), B-141-B-146 <https://doi.org/10.1287/mnsc.14.4.B141>; Rittel and Webber went on to echo this sentiment in their 1973 paper, writing: “We do not mean to personify these properties of social systems by implying malicious intent. But then, you may agree that it becomes morally objectionable for the planner to treat a wicked problem as though it were a tame one, or to tame a wicked problem prematurely, or to refuse to recognize the inherent wickedness of social problems.” Rittel and Webber, p. 160. For professionals working on “relatively easy problems” like paving the streets or supplying clean water to every domicile and every office, it was a matter of adopting a Newtonian-mechanistic mindset and asking how a system can be made more efficient. But when we turn to problems of equity and of interlocking systems where changes at one node have consequences for the network, we find problems that, as Rittel and Webber put it, science has not developed to handle. For the scientifically-minded professional problem-solver, three matters stand in the way of tackling wicked problems:

  1. Goal Formulation: Instead of asking what a system is made of, we ask what a system does, and what it ought to do. Unless you have been living under a rock, it should be no surprise to you how thorny an issue this is. For goals to be set, philosophical and ethical questions need to be decided upon. Priorities need to be set. Purposes need to be clarified. The struggle over the Political which Schmitt describes so well is nothing less than the struggle to formulate goals. And so it is really no surprise that the liberal-democratic order is quite capable of solving “easy problems”, while struggling to answer the big questions.
  2. Problem definition: Before social planning (“the process of designing problem-solutions that might be installed and operated cheaply”) started to concern itself with asking what the right thing to do is, it asked itself what the most efficient way of doing something was. This search for efficiency, drawn (say Rittel and Webber) from classical physics and economics, engendered incredible productivity when solving problems around which there was a consensus.  Technique, as Jacques Ellul would say, is characterised by the search for greater efficiency,Jacques Ellul, The Technological Society, trans. by John Wilkinson (New York: Random House, 1964), p. 20. and our technological societies are ones in which technique has become all-pervasive and hegemonic. Pushback to this comes from the living, breathing human beings whose happiness, dignity, or even mere philosophical sensibilities, are left out of consideration by the technical balancing of inputs and outputs. Technique can tell us how something ought to be done; it cannot tell us what we ought to do. And what we ought to do does not concern only the goals we set, but the very possibility of knowing what the problem is, and where it comes from. Our societies have long been committed to a war on drugs, and have largely decided that the problem is the consumption of drugs full-stop. But where the “problem” comes from is another issue—typically, conservatives will tend to blame this on moral degeneracy, family breakdown, corrupting media influence, etc. Taking the broad view, people on the left will tend to “blame” this (if they consider drug use a serious issue) on poverty, victimisation by criminals who have been allowed to acquire power through being pushed underground, and so on. While the truth may seem obvious to you, the next question Rittel and Webber ask is—now that you “know” where the problem comes from, how do you close the gap? The conservatives, who have the upper hand in most countries, have decided imprisonment and stigma will win the war. They don’t seem to have won yet.
  3. Equity issues: In many ways, this overlaps with goal formulation. There is no objective definition of equity, and therefore there is no way of quantifying scientifically what outcomes are desirable. Or to put it in a less abstract way, there is no way of ensuring agreement across multiple goal formulations. If different private interest groups have determined that only their specific policy prescriptions can constitute justice, while there is (necessarily) no way of objectively justifying agreement with one prescription over another, the question of equity looms over social planning just as much as goal formulation and problem-definition.

In consequence, the problems of governmental planning, which rely on subjective definition, political judgment, and moral position-taking, are wicked, and can never be solved, only resolved—“over and over again.”

Like any state, a Neoleviathan has many wicked problems to deal with though, by its nature, it is unlikely to give much of a shit about equity, and more likely to treat its subjects as if they are exchangeable units in a Newtonian schema, as Robinson-Particles, as Gilles Châtelet called it,Gilles Châtelet, To Live and Think Like Pigs: The Incitement of Envy and Boredom in Market Democracies, Paperback (London: Urbanomic, 2014). units that can be subject to the discipline of the military and the rationality of the market without paying much mind to their so-called “individuality”. But, to make matters worse, any state existing today has a “super wicked” problem to consider: climate change. A super wicked problem is characterised by its time-sensitive nature, the attempt problem-causers make to find “solutions”, the lack of a central authority (remind you of anybody?), and policy responses which dismiss and ignore the future.Kelly Levin and others, ‘Overcoming the Tragedy of Super Wicked Problems: Constraining Our Future Selves to Ameliorate Global Climate Change’, Policy Sciences, 45.2 (2012), 123–52 <https://doi.org/10.1007/s11077-012-9151-0>. And it is precisely in considering the super wicked problem that they are facing that we see the first steps towards the age of the Neoleviathans.


See, it’s tempting to dismiss the Neoleviathan as the ghoulish imagining of a storyteller, a dystopian science-fiction concept peddled as a possibility by someone who doesn’t know any better, but the truth is, if it’s a fiction, it’s one which the governments of today are already taking quite seriously, and which they’re strongly considering bringing into being before their enemies do, before the conditions for universal leviathanisation have properly arrived. In other words, they’re getting a head start.

Leviathanisation is, broadly, the transformative process by which the Neoleviathans are brought into being. The state which starts off down the road of leviathanisation is not necessarily the state (or states) which come out at the other end. That is to say, a standard, run-of-the-mill imperialist nation state like the UK, my exemplar state in this chapter, is capable of leviathanising, even though it is not itself a Neoleviathan yet, and may never be one. It is worth recapping that the Neoleviathan is defined as much by its internal activity as its external context. That is, a Neoleviathan is a Neoleviathan amongst Neoleviathans. “World order” as we know it disintegrates, letting loose in the developed world the sort of violence that, right now, it mostly just exports. The correct term for a Neoleviathan amongst leviathans is “proto-Neoleviathan”, which we will have plenty of time to discuss in another chapter. For now, though, let’s skip the taxonomy.


The UK is experiencing anxieties (long overdue) about its ability to underline its international “leadership” role with hard power. These are the words of Tobias Ellwood MP, January 2020: “[A]s global threats become more diverse and complex and our international rules-based order continues to erode, the world is responding by becoming more protectionist, isolationist and populist – hesitant to defend or upgrade that rules-based order. A resurgent Russia, an unpredictable Iran, extremism, creeping authoritarianism, cyber conflict and the geo-political consequences of climate change will dominate the 2020s. Though they could all be overshadowed by a bigger challenge – namely the authoritarian rise of China, which will soon overtake the United States as the world’s dominant power.”‘The UK Must Prepare for a Dangerous Decade and Seek a More Influential Role’ <https://www.politicshome.com/thehouse/article/the-uk-must-prepare-for-a-dangerous-decade-and-seek-a-more-influential-role> [accessed 19 September 2020]. Ellwood stresses that what is most critical for the British government as it conducts its Integrated Review of Security, Defence, Development and Foreign Policy is that it be honest about the state of the armed forces, its procurement processes, its readiness and its resilience. After all, setting the security and military policy goals of a deeply politically divided country is nothing if not a wicked problem, and, as we know, you can’t tackle a problem if you don’t know what you’re working with.

Elected Chair of the Defence Committee later that month, Ellwood struck a similar tone by noting the UK kids itself that it is better prepared for the coming decade than it really is. What is required is total overhaul: investment in cybersecurity, space defence, land and naval assets, extended soft and hard power capabilities, with a movement away from punitive conflict—“[I]f China were to take over Taiwan, would we really plow in and start something much bigger by trying to unpick that when the alternative is denial?” In order to avoid pusillanimous and cowardly retreat from international provocation, Ellwood advocates a military posture of presence. “The power to hurt is most successful when held in reserve,” as the economist Thomas Schelling said.T C Schelling and A M Slaughter, Arms and Influence, Veritas Paperbacks (New Haven: Yale University Press, 2020), p. 3. This coercive diplomatic technique requires the exposition of a clear and unavoidable connection between the unwanted act and the brutal retaliation. But the important fact is that if the retaliation ever becomes necessary, then the gambit has failed, and you simply weren’t present enough.

To properly modulate presence, foreign policy has to be factored into the defence review for the first time—denying space to adversaries, ensuring access to markets in sensitive areas, keeping shipping routes safe, and so on. An obvious truth is recognised: the dreams of British importance on the world stage are utterly pointless without the military power to underline it. Sentimentality in procurement gives way to purely economic considerations: “We’re keeping alive tiny little procurement programmes, not for the benefit of the user, but for the benefit of the builder and that I think needs to change.”‘Q&A: Tobias Ellwood, Chair of the House of Commons Defence Select Committee’ <https://www.army-technology.com/features/qa-tobias-ellwood-chair-of-the-house-of-commons-defence-select-committee/> [accessed 8 October 2020]. Ellwood suggests the implementation of NATO standards, such as the production of a NATO standard helicopter, in order to spread the costs of development and keep up with the competition. In other words, Ellwood invites technique into military planning, exemplifying the Newtonian-mechanistic view that Rittel and Webber said belonged to the past. And such amoral considerations do belong to the past, don’t they? But leviathanisation isn’t afraid of atavism.

We may, therefore, introduce a first principle of leviathanisation: maximal efficiency. Far from the propagandistic self-aggrandisement of the neoliberal state, this is efficiency taken seriously. Bloat is impermissible, the arms race becomes an internal motor of all decision-making. There is no room for complacency or laziness, and the liberal-democratic spectacle of optimism gives way to ruthless self-criticism. Likewise, experiments are forbidden except where the risk that failure will disrupt the overall functioning of the system is close to zero and/or the benefits of success are high. Military assets are standardised, and upgrades become modular and iterative. Essentially, expense becomes maximally productive. This does not preclude desperate measures being taken in crisis situations, in fact, it ensures it, for this notion of efficiency is always relative to its context, and the age of Neoleviathans proper is one in which chaos constantly and inevitably increases as the biosphere disintegrates. If nothing else, a leap in the dark is better than a noose and a bucket.


In Search of Strategy – The 2020 Integrated Review, a report published by the Defence Committee, begins with a dire assessment of the UK’s place in the world, and with an implicit critique of the government’s approach to the Integrated Review. Work on the review had been delayed thanks to COVID-19 at first, until the Government realised that any recovery from the pandemic would necessarily involve a decent and up-to-date understanding of the country’s security, defence, development and foreign policy. With exit from the European Union looming, and the United States retreating into isolationist gloom, with “inter-state competition and escalating international tension” on the rise, the UK has been left concerned by the ever-growing visibility of cracks in the Western “rules-based international order”. Or, to put it more cynically, the order that suits it nicely.

This is why leviathanisation is inevitable—plodding, decrepit government by unqualified and irresponsible staff can only ever lead to predation from without or disruptive anger from within. In Search of Strategy is laced with warnings to the current government, in fact. The Former Director General for Strategy MoD suggests outside experts be brought in to review policies and capabilities to “make sure that everybody stays honest.” The Prime Minister, he goes on to say, needs to be able to assign the right people to the job of making sure the Integrated Review is actually integrated, that leadership is provided to ensure strategic priorities and specialist analysis are properly integrated, and so on. It is hard to believe that somebody like Ellwood thinks Johnson and his cronies are up to the task, not least of all after the series of miserable failures that have characterised the government response to COVID-19 so far, which even led Ellwood to request management of the pandemic be delegated to the armed forces. In the future, it’s easy to imagine this won’t even be a question.


A Changing Climate: Exploring the Implications of Climate Change for UK Defence and Security, a report commissioned from RAND by the UK Ministry of Defence, represents just one of many recent documents discussing the security implications of climate change for governments around the world. In it, the authors produce a conceptual framework to support decision makers in understanding and responding to climate change. In other words, it’s a framework for driving leviathanisation specifically in relation to climate change, an attempt to deal with the super wicked problem.

Text Box: 1: Leviathanisation framework – policymakers integrate defence-agnostic and defence-specific assessments to effectively and periodically evaluate and respond to security threats presented by climate change.
Leviathanisation framework – policymakers integrate defence-agnostic and defence-specific assessments to effectively and periodically evaluate and respond to security threats presented by climate change.

Defence-specific assessments, naturally, concern the policy decisions and developments of the armed forces themselves. Defence-agnostic assessments assess the state of climate change knowledge and map existing government policy vis-à-vis climate change in order to make sure that decision-making integrates key policy decisions and developments which fall outside the immediate remit of climate change policy with the knowledge that regular monitoring of the Earth system brings. In other words, it ensures that government decisions make sense within the rapidly changing context of a warming world.

From this, we can derive a second principle of levi­athanisation: reactive sovereignty. Civilisation is thrown into a defensive stance, and while it still seeks to sustain itself, to capture and control territory, and to ensure access to resources, it does this in such a manner that hubris is replaced with caution, though this nevertheless does not prevent recklessness. Icarian expansion, that is, needless expenditure, is done away with, replaced with pragmatic or Machiavellian politics. “[R]esource shortages could lead to increased conflict and instability, requiring additional military operations. . . . [A]ccess to supply chain inputs such as minerals used for manufacturing defence equipment, platforms and components could be disrupted if extreme climate events cause damage to transport and communications infrastructure, or if violent conflict takes place in mineral-mining regions as a result of resource shortages. Disruption of supply chain inputs could have detrimental impacts on force readiness.”Kate Cox and others, A Changing Climate: Exploring the Implications of Climate Change for UK Defence and Security (Santa Monica, 2020), pp. 10, 12 <https://www.rand.org/pubs/research_reports/RRA487-1.html>.

Now, no sane state would allow its supply chains to be disrupted, and so the implication is obvious: “additional military operations” is code not only for benign aid operations, but also for military excursions to ensure access to and capture of critical resources. Intranational order is maintained through the threat, if not the actuality, of international violence—there is no question of pacifistic or non-interventionist opposition in the intracollapse, because war becomes solely an extension of the immune response of the state. Clausewitz: “[W]ar is not merely an act of policy but a true political instrument, a continuation of political intercourse, carried on with other means.”Carl von Clausewitz, On War, ed. & trans. by Michael Howard and Peter Paret, Princeton Paperbacks (Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton University Press, 1989), p. 87. In noting the general tendency towards new opportunities for military fallout, a fortiori leviathanisation, we might mention the militarisation of space. Ground-to-orbit and orbit-to-orbit weapons technologies are being developed, the US—ahead of the curve—has refused to waste time negotiating a treaty limiting militarisation, and we can expect to see ever-greater tension as ever-greater wealth is spent establishing an extraterrestrial presence. It isn’t hard to imagine space warfare targeting key communications and intelligence infrastructure, let alone the placement of weapons of mass destruction in orbit. The 1967 Outer Space Treaty prohibits the latter possibility now but, to heavily paraphrase Hegel on treaties between states—so what?

In the age of the Neoleviathans, moral resistance to war becomes pointless suicidality, a will-to-nothingness, and a naïve refusal to get with the program. It won’t be tolerated, and dissenters won’t last long. Schmitt once quipped that liberalism exists only when it is possible “to answer the question ‘Christ or Barabbas?’ with a proposal to adjourn or appoint a commission of investigation.”Carl Schmitt, Political Theology: Four Chapters on the Concept of Sovereignty, trans. by George Schwab (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2005), p. 62. But leviathanisation destroys the theological ideal of political and social life as dialectical, as one big gathering around the water cooler to shoot the shit. Leviathanisation means the return of “great politics”,“The time for petty politics is over: the next century will bring the struggle for the domination of the earth – the compulsion to great politics.” Friedrich Nietzsche, Beyond Good and Evil, ed. by Rolf-Peter Horstmann and Judith Norman, trans. by Judith Norman (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2001), p. 102; §208. the termination of liberalism’s bloodless caution, and the restoration of metaphysical truth to the centre of political life. Liberalism, or institutionalised metaphysical denial,“Liberalism, in his [Schmitt’s] view, is a metaphysical system that, because of its allegiance to rationalism, not only denies its metaphysical foundation, but institutionalizes that denial. This denial, he argues, will prove to be liberalism’s inevitable downfall.” Dyzenhaus. holds the Political aloft in a posture of aloof metastability. Leviathanisation, or political avalanche, brings the Political down to its preferred ground: Hobbesian war, with all the violence that entails—the return of the repressed, and the distribution of the social body into hospitable and hostile zones.


Here’s a sanity test: we use our leviathanisation framework to develop a policy and we see if it makes much sense. Remember, in dealing with climate change, we’re not interested in non-solutions like stopping it. Between the sunny optimism of the cognitariat and the grim pessimism of the military realists, I will opt for the latter. After all, they’re actually in some proximity to power. So when the UK’s military policy is being shaped under the assumption of a 2.3—3.5°C hotter world by 2100, I’d be willing to take that seriously, even if I hadn’t also dedicated the first chapter of this book to arguing we’re fucked.

Let’s take the issue of mineral supply chains as raised in RAND’s Changing Climate report: access to critical minerals could be disrupted by extreme weather events directly or indirectly, if violent conflict breaks out over resource shortages in mineral-mining regions. Critical minerals are used to make wind turbines, solar panels, lithium-ion batteries, electric motors, coolants for MRI scanners, LEDs, infrared detectors, medicine, missiles, laser rangefinders and guidance systems, night vision goggles—essentially everything (1) cool, and (2) strategically useful. It’s a shame, then, for the UK at least, that the UK has no policy whatsoever when it comes to the supply of rare earth metals and minerals. Not only that, but there isn’t even a specific department responsible for developing policy in this area.Andrew Stretton and Lydia Harriss, ‘Access to Critical Materials: Parliamentary Office of Science and Technology: POST-Note Number 609’ (London: Houses of Parliament, 2019), p. 3 <https://post.parliament.uk/research-briefings/post-pn-0609/> [accessed 8 October 2020]. You can see why Ellwood is so frustrated, especially as someone who emphasises the threat to the UK’s strategic interests from China, which currently dominates the rare earth metals and minerals market.‘The UK Needs to Shore up Its Strategic Mineral Supplies | Financial Times’ <https://www.ft.com/content/47cb09e2-55af-40db-a0d2-6ec4cdd0e0a1> [accessed 8 October 2020].

So then, in the language of our framework, we have identified a challenge for the MOD—continued access to supply chains in the face of climate change-related disruption—we prioritise for further action—a sensible person would agree this is a high-priority challenge if they wish for the UK to be capable of making decisions without a threat being posed to its access to strategically important materials—we identify policy actions to address challenges—for example, by investing the money needed to create an independent supply chain, likely by taking advantage of the UK’s Commonwealth relationships, and by, as Ellwood says, establishing a military presence in regions of strategic importance. Critics of this policy will call this colonialism, and they’ll be right! But the ecclesiastical critique of power is worthless to the leviathanised. The RAND report puts it dryly: “UK preparedness to deploy in response to climate-related events could become part of strategic messaging to UK and NATO allies and adversaries.”

Nothing says ‘fuck off’ quite like a few thousand guns.


When Rittel and Webber used the adjective “wicked” to describe the problems of social planning, what they meant was not that they were immoral problems, but that they were intractable—“‘malignant’ (in contrast to ‘benign’) or ‘vicious’ (like a circle) or ‘tricky’ (like a leprechaun) or ‘aggressive’ (like a lion, in contrast to the docility of a lamb).”

I might venture a little adjectival innovation of my own. Leviathanisation happens when a state or quasi-state actor takes a look around and gets a grip. It occurs when someone looks at the wicked problems wickedly, by which I don’t mean “evil”, but “nasty” (in contrast to “nice”), or “execrable” (like a curse) or “abominable” (like a snowman). Those who end up on the wrong side of the wicked are the wretched—they don’t solve problems, they have problems, and whether there are hard feelings involved or not, it doesn’t matter. The wretched may be a marginalised underclass, a political adversary, or innocents who have something the wicked want—whether by charisma or cruelty, the wicked will take what they need, and the wretched won’t be able to stop them. To the wretched, leviathanisation is a super wicked problem, and time is quickly running out.