Education after the end of the world. How can education be viewed as a hyperobject?

Educational Philosophy and Theory 54 (3):251-262 (2022)
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Abstract

This article considers a series of ideas disturbing the conventional wisdom that decrees education an essential force in saving the world. Taking Morton's descriptions of hyperobjects seriously, we consider his radical idea that the world has ended amidst the eco-political depredations of the Anthropocene. Accordingly, we claim that education in modernity most properly belongs - materially and ideologically - with technological enframing and the rise of biopower. In other words, what is taken almost universally as the sacred realm of education is, in fact, a contributory factor in the global eco-ontological crisis. Morton describes global warming, plastics and nuclear arsenals as hyperobjects: viscous, nonlocal entities that exist in temporal and spatial planes vastly different from our own immediate worlds. They are the threatening, difficult to access entities that express the Anthropocene. While most will propose that education will be vital in combating looming ecological apocalypse, we consider that education is a hyperobject itself. Education, we opine, is aligned with the forces and conditions that have generated the present crisis. This is because education embodies the same qualities as the hyperobjects of modernity; according to any rigorous historical ontology, education as we know it must be seen as the most extensive expression of a dangerous biopower that is beyond control. If this position is to be taken seriously, education is not merely impotent in combatting ecological catastrophe, but is a key apparatus supporting the Anthropocene. Education is thus another element of the end of the world.

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References found in this work

Null. Null - 2016 - Philosophy Study 6 (9).
The beautiful risk of education.Gert Biesta - 2013 - Boulder: Paradigm Publishers.
Object-Oriented Ontology.Graham Harman - 2015 - In Michael Hauskeller, Thomas Drew Philbeck & Curtis D. Carbonell (eds.), The Palgrave Handbook of Posthumanism in Film and Television. New York, NY: Palgrave. pp. 401-409.

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