Culture is an arche-fossil
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RIS BIB ENDNOTECulture is an arche-fossil
Publication date: 22.12.2016
Arts & Cultural Studies Review, 2016, Issue 3 (29), pp. 275 - 289
https://doi.org/10.4467/20843860PK.16.021.6023Authors
Culture is an arche-fossil
The paper focuses on Quentin Meillassoux’s After Finitude. If presented there arguments (based on concepts of arche-fossil and ancestrality, contingency, factiality and unreason) are valid and refute the fundamental thesis of correlationism – impossibility to access the reality outside correlation between thinking and being – then we should be able to exceed it form the scientific ground it was formulated upon and to apply it to theory of culture. The paper considers that possibility and follows the consequences of such broadening. What is culture in speculative realism’s ontological paradigm? How to grasp cultural reality that is no longer a correlate of human subjectivity? Culture, its processes, objects, networks would not be human any more, ontologically. Rather, one might say, it emerged that culture is non-human. However, these questions and indications have now existed for long time in philosophy of culture, theory of culture, anthropology, cybernetics, media studies, ecology and many other disciplines. Issue that arises in regard of prior is the problem of theory of culture within speculative materialist perspective. If one acknowledges the arche-fossil argument, one cannot continue to approach culture in structuralist or phenomenological current. Meillassoux claims that mathematical ideation describes the objective structure of reality as it is in-itself. If mathematisation is the condition for theory, how can we theorise culture? The aim of the paper is to problematise the concept of culture and theory of culture in perspective of Meillassoux’s speculation.
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Information: Arts & Cultural Studies Review, 2016, Issue 3 (29), pp. 275 - 289
Article type: Original article
Titles:
Culture is an arche-fossil
Culture is an arche-fossil
Jagiellonian University in Kraków, Gołębia 24, 31-007 Kraków, Poland
Published at: 22.12.2016
Article status: Open
Licence: None
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English