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Artificial Earth: A Genealogy of Planetary Technicity
Linköping University, Department of Thematic Studies, Tema Environmental Change. Linköping University, Centre for Climate Science and Policy Research, CSPR. (Linköping University Negative Emission Technologies (LUNETS))ORCID iD: 0000-0002-1979-2795
2023 (English)Book (Refereed)
Abstract [en]

Artificial Earth: A Genealogy of Planetary Technicity offers an intellectual history of humanity as a geological force, focusing on a prevalent contradiction in the Anthropocene discourse on global environmental change: on the one hand, it has been argued that there are hardly any pristine environments anymore, to the degree that the concept of nature has lost its meaning; while on the other, that anthropogenic environmental change has become so prevailing that it ought to be conceived of as a force of nature, in the literal sense of the expression. Artificial Earth argues that to fully grasp the stakes of this discourse, we need not only understand the contemporary scientific and technological transformations behind the Anthropocene, but also explore the history of an ontological concern tied up with it.

In order to do so, Artificial Earth examines reflections on the ontological dualism between nature and artifice within the history of earth science from the late eighteenth century onwards. Paying particular attention to its consequences for how human subjectivity has been conceptualized in the Anthropocene, it then enrolls these resources in an effort to problematize attempts since the 1980s to formalize earth science in systems theoretical terminology. In sum, the aim is to investigate the historical conditions for the possibility of conceiving human artifice as an integral part of the earth’s terrestrial environment, with the conviction that such an investigation may assist in resolving the aforementioned contradiction or at least to understand it better by tracing its historical lineage.

Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
Santa Barbara: Punctum Books, 2023. , p. 348
National Category
History of Ideas Philosophy
Identifiers
URN: urn:nbn:se:liu:diva-147321DOI: 10.53288/0406.1.00ISBN: 978-1-68571-130-6 (print)OAI: oai:DiVA.org:liu-147321DiVA, id: diva2:1198345
Conference
Encountering Materiality: Science, Art, Language, Geneva, June 23-25, 2016.
Projects
This work was supported by a fellowship at the Seed Box: A Mistra-Forman Environmental Humanities Collaboratory, Linköping University. Editing and final preparation of the manuscript was supported by the Swedish Energy Agency under Grant 46222-1 (MESAM) and the Swedish Research Council for Sustainable Development (Formas) under Grant 2019-01973.
Funder
Swedish Energy Agency, 46222-1Swedish Research Council Formas, 2019-01973Available from: 2018-04-17 Created: 2018-04-17 Last updated: 2023-10-26

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