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Form and Object: A Treatise on Things

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What is a thing? What is an object? Tristan Garcia decisively overturns 100 years of Heideggerian orthodoxy about the supposedly derivative nature of objects to put forward a new theory of ontology that gives us deep insights into the world and our place in it.

489 pages, ebook

First published November 30, 2011

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Tristan Garcia

36 books64 followers
Tristan Garcia is French philosopher and novelist.

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Author 1 book35 followers
October 24, 2020
I'd urge everyone to read it if you haven't already done so. I can't guarantee that you'd like it. He's writing with the simplicity of a Classical philosopher but this sophistication does not come from the structure of his sentences but his thought process. The main statement is simple. A thing is the difference between what comprehends it and what it comprehends (comprehension in its widest sense). What follows, however, is very sophisticated and thought-provoking. When I put Garcia, Morton, Bryant, Harman, DeLanda hand in hand in my mind, I arrive at a very fresh, somewhat deterministic and fatalistic at times, well hard to explain, but in overall a very wide, encompassing and inclusive perspective about life, the universe and everything. And yes, the answer is forty-two!

"I am in a city. I am in a society. I am in a culture. I am in atoms and molecules. I am in the perceptual field of someone who looks at me and who judges me. I am in my flesh. I am in evolution. I am in history. I am in a square metre. I am in unity. I am in baggy clothing. But I am not in myself."
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Author 10 books20 followers
December 18, 2015
A very rigorous and nearly analytic approach to finding, defining and situating things apart from us, and flying against the "flow" theorists such as Deleuze, Massumi and Latour to insist on the givenness of things out there. Fascinating, revealing, but not an easy read. Not as much fun I'd say as Deleuze & Co either, but important, ironically, in the necessary move from theory to things. Thinging. But likely will not finish it; it’s process is an incarnation of an analytic philosophy. It sits in a stack under the night table.
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