The Ontology of Knowing: Politics, Ethics, and Composition
by Adam Robbert
Is the question of Science (with a capital “S”) indicative of a certain misrepresentation of knowledge, politics, and composition? The question is itself an orientalizing one since it fails to establish which science, who’s common practice, and what intellectual climate. Being a good critical thinker one might then transition “Science” to “sciences” in order to do better justice to a heterogeneous series of distributed experimental, technical, political, and intellectual practices. But is pluralizing the term enough? What work is actually done by pointing towards the multiplicity, contingency, entanglement, and fragility of scientific practices? Donna Haraway (who’s name in this context will no doubt evoke mixed feelings) was the first person I heard point out that objectivity—that rare and vaunted diamond of knowledge—was in fact a very scarce resource in scientific practices, highly sought after, rarely achieved, and far reaching in its consequences (how hard it is to undo something once labeled objective!)
I think Haraway is right on two fronts: 1) the kind of objectivity achieved by various practices of science is, in an ontological sense, a true achievement (i.e., it tells us something significant about stars, planets, helium, and lithospheres), and 2) objectivity is always a hard fought, and difficult thing to produce. But objectivity is one of those words that can leave philosophers stumbling to define. Part of this is comes from the word “objectivity” itself which, in its every invocation, already pits one kind of knowledge against all others. I’m particularly interested in how one might formulate an understanding of knowledge—including, but not limited to scientific knowledge—within what we can all Graham Harman’s “withdrawal thesis.” The charge might be made that, because no mode of being or knowledge reaches the core of Harman’s “real objects,” all knowledge claims become equally valid since all fail equally at arriving at true knowledge of a real object. Unruly waters here folks.
If—and it’s a big if—withdrawal necessitates an ontological relativism of all knowledge claims (a “flat epistemology,” to borrow a term from Terrence Blake) we would land in a shaky relativism, both in terms of the question of science and the development of knowledge in general. Clearly, this is not a desirable position to be in with regards to ethics, politics, and science. However, I think the answer to the question is, “No—withdrawal does not necessitate a flat epistemology.” To reach this conclusion I argue that Harman’s withdrawal thesis (and his metaphysics in general) cannot be understood without some working knowledge of one of Harman’s great inspirations—Bruno Latour —and that the process of adjudication between knowledge claims is explicitly arrived at (for Harman) from Latour. Latour’s criteria for knowledge, as we know, come from the applied notions of composition and political art. The epistemic and the political must be composed and the criteria for the composition is doubly political and aesthetic insofar as what gets taken up in composition must (a) resist the trials of strength put against the knowledge claim, and (b) represent the interests of the various actors in question (which, as we also know, can be human or nonhuman for Latour). The central problem of composition is then not just one of resistance to trials of strength (which are necessary to evaluate the claim) but of mediation and translation between actors (who are implicated in the process of knowledge production).
The prolonged engagement Harman has had with Latour (e.g., the published dialogue recounted in The Prince and the Wolf and in Harman’s overview in Prince of Networks) indicates that Harman is well aware of the implications his ontology has for the knowledge making practices of the sciences. In accord with Latour’s own method, Harman has chosen to follow the actors-themselves to arrive at his version of an object-oriented philosophy, and its controversial claim of withdrawal along with it. This reframing of the Latourian strife between actors and their mediations forms a substantial component of Harman’s metaphysical program, and this has implications for how we understand both knowledge and politics within an object-oriented philosophy.
Insofar as Harman has provided us with conceptual tools to understand the ontological foundations of the processes of mediation and translation, his ontology actually strengthens the work begun by Latour in understanding the functioning of different practices of science, and the ways in which knowledge comes to be. None of this implies that (a) science and philosophy do not make any historical progress, or (b) that all knowledge claims are equal. The problem put forth by withdrawal simply states: interactions between objects are always mediated by the qualities (sensual and real) of those objects (or set of objects), denying the claim that unmediated interaction is possible. Mediation here means not that all knowledge claims are equally valid, just that all knowledge claims are equally mediations. The quality of those mediations is determined by the criteria listed in the above paragraph, and those criteria are inherently unstable, contingent, and contestable (i.e., they are always already political). In other words, Harman’s metaphysics does not lead to a flat epistemology, but rather a worthwhile engagement with what I would describe as the ontology of knowing based in the aesthetics of causality where the aesthetic refers to the ways in which different actors interpret one another more-or-less-well, without some final arbiter capable of overseeing the whole process from above. We can see this process unfold using an example.
The example I want to use is climate change and the associated political and ethical considerations that emerge when tracking the ontology of the event itself, and the ontology of knowledge by which we come to understand the event. When we are talking about a globally distributed phenomena like climate change—whose “center” is nowhere but whose effects are everywhere—the groups that must be mobilized (the “public” which must be formed, in Latour’s sense) to respond will be stakeholders that may: (a) hold mutually exclusive positions, (b) be ontologically entangled within different local scenarios in diverse and/or incommensurable ways, (c) be situated alongside asymmetrical categories related to gender, class, and nation, and (d) not even be of the same species (climate change effects all species, after all). As anthropologists, political ecologists, social psychologists, and environmental activists of all stripes know, any issue emerging at the intersections of climate change, eco-social pollution, and political organizing can be organized in myriad ways. Yes, there is data, and yes there is science. But the knowledge regarding complex systems like climate and ecosystemic functioning—particularly when thought alongside of complex human social dynamics—rarely leads to straightforward conclusions about the future trajectory of those systems; in fact, it would be regressive to suggest that appeals to mathematics and physics could solve these problems alone. In other words, the knowledge must be mediated, composed, and translated on multiple levels of interaction in such a way so as to assemble the collective towards a complicated idea called “justice.”
Such practices of mediation are at the heart of what Latour means by political art (in close alliance with what Isabelle Stengers calls “cosmopolitics”). Here’s Harman in praise of Latour’s politics (and metaphysics):
All reality is political, but not all politics is human. Referring to the ‘cosmopolitics’ of his friend Isabelle Stengers, Latour speaks of a redefined political order that ‘brings together stars, prions, cows, heavens, and people, the task being to turn this collective into a “cosmos” rather than an “unruly shambles”’ (PH, p. 261). It is no accident that Latour’s book Politics of Nature is translated into German as Das Parlament der Dinge: ‘The Parliament of Things’. We must liberate politics from the narrowly human realm and allow prions and the ozone hole to speak as well. Whether babble is reduced by reason (Socrates) or by power (Callicles), in either case political mediators are eliminated. Latour’s position is not just more politically attractive than this, but more metaphysically acute (Prince of Networks, p. 89).
Harman’s object-oriented philosophy can thus be read as implicitly tied to a Latourian politics of composition (indeed, this seems to be precisely what is at issue when Harman links his metaphysics of the object to the aesthetics of causality). To my reasoning this sets up a renewed potential for thinking through complex epistemic, political, and aesthetic issues (surely intertwined categories) at just the time we need them. In this respect, I don’t think the obligation lies solely on Harman to sort out all of the implications and uses of an object-oriented philosophy, but rather falls on the rest of us who are committed to using philosophy as a tool to help arrange more livable collectives in a socio-ecologically troubled twenty-first century. Not everyone will be interested in such a task of course, but for those that are I think Harman provides valuable resources to do so.
Adam,
For the sake of argument, let’s say we grant all that. What reason is there to accept Harman’s OOO, which appears to be the strongest of the OOOs?
Aside, I don’t know enough about Latour for your invocation of him to mean much in regards to Harman; can you say a few words for the rest of us?
Jason,
Prince of Networks is available for free online here:
http://www.re-press.org/book-files/OA_Version_780980544060_Prince_of_Networks.pdf
The Prince and the Wolf is available through Zero books and the audio for the whole exchange is available here:
http://www.lse.ac.uk/collections/informationSystems/newsAndEvents/2008events/HarmanLatour.htm
In addition to the overviews I have provided above, these two sources will bring you up to speed. You may also wish to read the short book We Have Never Been Modern by Latour, often cited by Harman has one of his biggest inspirations.
happy reading and researching.
Adam,
Thank you, but I do not have time to read several books; I am just as capable of research as anyone and I already have those books. Sadly, I cannot read everything suggested to me, which is why I asked for a few sentences. I am, btw, reading parts of the Democracy of Objects again to see if I might be missing something.
Jason, at the level you are trying to engage this material at there is no way around reading them.
Thank you for a direct and honest response.
[...] Robbert discusses the problem of the relation between “Harman’s object-oriented philosophy” and [...]
“Jason, at the level you are trying to engage this material at there is no way around reading them.”
The most helpful thing said on any blog about OOO in the past several years. Thank you.
Hello Adam,
thank you for quoting me and linking to my blog, not many people do that.
I think your idea of a Latour-Harman hybrid is interesting, as long as one recognises that it is a New Thing, that is to say an incommensurable supplementation, and not just an explicitation of what is already there.
Lastly, I have been indulging for a few weeks now in a free of charge advertising campaign for Harman’s book THE THIRD TABLE. I encourage everyone to read it. Buy it, it’s cheap and can be read in half an hour!
Hi Terrence,
As it so happens my citation of you in the above post failed to include the actual link to your site! (fixing right now…)
I have been enjoying your close readings of Harman’s book The Third Table, and I look forward to continuing to read your thoughts on OOO as they unfold.
As for the “New Thing” about linking Harman and Latour, I don’t think it’s quite so new, and it’s certainly not an incommensurable supplementation in any case. The primary issue between Harman and Latour is well documented and centers around the nature of relations, irreducibility, and withdrawal (but that’s a whole other discussion).
Aside from these differences (important as they are) I think there is every opportunity to consider Harman’s object-oriented philosophy alongside of Latour’s work, and indeed this ground is covered very successfully in Prince of Networks.
Thanks for reading.
Joseph,
“Just read more” is a common rhetorical tactic of shifting the burden of proof, and thus it is not “the most helpful thing said on any blog about OOO.” It comes down to trust that it is not a tactic, and I trust Adam about that. You are now engaging in the kind of conversation that gives OOO such a bad reputation.
And then Terence, who is far more read than I on the subject, comes over and tells us by implication that Joseph’s comment is unwarranted.
Regardless, I asked Adam because I haven’t waded into the OOO+politics discussion because I haven’t seen it in any of their works, and I wondered if I was looking at the wrong ones.
It is a common rhetorical tactic, just not here. Prince of Networks is a very thorough exploration of object-oriented philosophy’s relationship to Latour, exploring its similarities and contrasts (the second half of it, specifically). As I read him, that is what Adam was responding to when you asked him to say a few words about that relationship. Of course, it is unnecessary to read everything on the subject in order to form an opinion on it. Even a few pages from the second half of Prince of Networks would be enough to start a conversation on it.
I should have left out your name when I quoted his sentence, because I was not agreeing with it in relation to you, specifically, as if you should do more reading. I agree with the sentiment in general and that it was even said.
Sigh.
Now I’m seeing partisanship everywhere as well. Joseph, I apologize for coming down on you like that. I think sickness is catching. In that case, maybe I can bump it up on my list as I’ve heard people raving about Latour since forever.
That’s okay; I really should have been less glib in my first comment, given that all of these debates are already so close to boiling point, or are already boiling away.
For what it is worth, I read your blog and I think you are very fair. Your comments on the post by Galloway I also thought were very good, as well as needed in that discussion.
Thanks.
Most of my comments about OOO are directed at Levi with a few towards Harman. I am trying hard to get him to see what my criticisms are, especially since they are so basic and crucial.
[...] just read this great post over at Adam’s Knowledge Ecology and it got me thinking… I started posting a [...]
[...] terrific posts discussing politics and ethics, vis a vis OOO, Harman, Morton, Stengers, and Latour (here and [...]
Harman’s and other OOO theorists strike me as engaged in a subtle version of the multiple and not multiplicity. That they hedge the image of the object with withdrawl does not hide the approach’s desire, the continuation of the enlightenment project, to master with proviso. The boogie man of correlationism is a straw dog, the shadow of Cartesian thinking from one – After Finitude – who still believes in governance by thought. “organized” “scientific” responses are the problem, not the solution. How can anyone still believe in corrective progressivism after 200 years of screwing the planet with exactly those tools???