•  231
    Realism Without Materialism
    Substance 40 (2): 52-72. 2011.
  • Dialoghi di Estetica. Intervista a Graham Harman
    with Davide Dal Sasso and Vincenzo Santarcangelo
    Artribune 252017. 2015.
  •  1
    The Object Strikes Back: An Interview with Graham Harman
    with Lucy Kimbell
    Design and Culture 5 (1): 103-117. 2013.
  •  69
    What objects exist in the social world and how should we understand them? Is a specific Pizza Hut restaurant as real as the employees, tables, napkins and pizzas of which it is composed, and as real as the Pizza Hut corporation with its headquarters in Wichita, the United States, the planet Earth and the social and economic impact of the restaurant on the lives of its employees and customers? In this book the founder of object-oriented philosophy develops his approach in order to shed light on t…Read more
  •  145
    Review: Zeroing in on Evocative Objects (review)
    Human Studies 31 (4). 2008.
  •  200
    Prince of Networks is the first treatment of Bruno Latour specifically as a philosopher. It has been eagerly awaited by readers of both Latour and Harman since their public discussion at the London School of Economics in February 2008. Part One covers four key works that display Latour’s underrated contributions to metaphysics: Irreductions, Science in Action, We Have Never Been Modern, and Pandora’s Hope. Harman contends that Latour is one of the central figures of contemporary philosophy, with…Read more
  •  85
    12. Badiou’s Relation to Heidegger in Theory of the Subject
    In Sean Bowden & Simon Duffy (eds.), Badiou and Philosophy, Edinburgh University Press. pp. 225-243. 2012.
  •  34
    Violence and Splendor
    Singularum 1 2-17. 2012.
  •  3
    On the State of Nature
    Cairo Review of Global Affairs 17. 2015.
  •  270
    Time, Space, Essence, and Eidos: A New Theory of Causation
    Cosmos and History 6 (1): 1-17. 2010.
    This article attempts to develop the abandoned occasionalist model of causation into a credible present-day theory. If objects can never exhaust one another through their relations, it is hard to know how they can ever interact at all. This article handles the problem by dividing objects into two kinds: the real objects that emerge from Heidegger’s tool-analysis and the intentional objects of Husserl’s phenomenology. Each of these objects turns out to be split by an additional rift between the o…Read more
  •  144
    The current fashions in both analytic and continental philosophy are staunchly anti-metaphysical. There is supposedly no way to talk about the world itself — the philosopher is confined to antiseptic discussions of language, or of other modes of human access to the world. In this provocative work, Graham Harman expands the discussion from his previous book, Tool-Being, arguing for a theory of "the carpentry of things" — a more accessible way of viewing the world that incorporates ideas from Huss…Read more