Autonomous Conceptions of Our Planetary Situation

Studia Philosophica Wratislaviensia 15 (2):29-44 (2020)
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Abstract

This article is constructed through a series of linked aphorisms that articulate the relations between autonomy, sense, the world, different people’s worlds, disagreement, and wonder. It advances anthroponomy—the organization of humankind to support autonomous life. In the context of the planetary, sociallycaused environmental changes of today such as global warming or the risk of a mass extinction cascade, a part of autonomous engagement with our planetary situation is developing an autonomous conception of it—a conception of our situation that makes sense to us. This pluralistic idea has consequences for environmentalism, notably around coloniality, and the reduction of different autonomous worlds to a dominant world, which is currently part of the discourse of the Anthropocene. The aphorisms in this article develop a reflective path toward autonomous conceptions of our planetary situation given the reality of coloniality in how that situation is understood. One result of this path is to open up a way for people to become more autonomously engaged with our environmental situation, an engagement grounded in wonder and critical of the discourse of the “Anthropocene”.

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Jeremy David Bendik-Keymer
Case Western Reserve University

Citations of this work

Does Wonder Matter for Politics? Comments on Lisowska and Bendik-Keymer.W. P. Małecki - 2020 - Studia Philosophica Wratislaviensia 15 (2):71-74.

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