•  287
    Interview
    Philosophy Now 151 43-45. 2022.
  •  94
    … and the Leg Bone's Connected to the Toxic Waste Dump Bone
    Anthropology of Consciousness 28 (2): 135-142. 2017.
    Ecological images—the fragile web of life, NASA's “blue marble” Earth, everything being connected—appeal to our love for the planet's being and our faith that there is still hope, if we can just care enough. But this imagery is neither true nor false. In other words, when we visualize these sorts of things, we don't know what we're talking about! We think we do. But what is this wholeness really, are we actually parts of it, and what kind of part? A lot of thinking ecologically sounds religious …Read more
  •  138
    Having set global warming in irreversible motion, we are facing the possibility of ecological catastrophe. But the environmental emergency is also a crisis for our philosophical habits of thought, confronting us with a problem that seems to defy not only our control but also our understanding. Global warming is perhaps the most dramatic example of what Timothy Morton calls “hyperobjects”—entities of such vast temporal and spatial dimensions that they defeat traditional ideas about what a thing i…Read more
  •  28
    Chapter Twenty-Seven From Dark Ecology (2016)
    In Susan McHugh & Giovanni Aloi (eds.), Posthumanism in Art and Science: A Reader, Columbia University Press. pp. 160-162. 2020.
  •  120
    Hyperobjets
    with Laurent Bury
    Multitudes 3 (3): 109-116. 2018.
    Le déréglement climatique est sans doute l’exemple le plus dramatique d’« hyperobjet », à savoir d’entités de dimensions temporelles et spatiales si disproportionnées à nos habitudes de perception que nos cadres de pensée et de compréhension s’en trouvent déjoués. Cet article explique ce que sont les hyperobjets et évoque leur impact sur nos modes de pensée ainsi que sur les façons dont nous devons apprendre à coexister. Les hyperobjets nous forcent à prendre en compte l’inséparé.
  •  50
    Dunkle Ökologie Für eine Logik zukünftiger Koexistenz
    Internationales Jahrbuch Für Medienphilosophie 4 (1): 251-268. 2018.
  •  57
    X-Ray
    In Jeffrey Jerome Cohen (ed.), Prismatic Ecology: Ecotheory Beyond Green, University of Minnesota Press. pp. 311-327. 2013.
    This chapter considers a way of imagining ecology without nature by thinking about how humans see only a certain bandwidth of light. X-rays, also known as gamma rays, are perhaps the ultimate example of invisible light. X-rays confuse the commonsense difference between light and matter, since they can directly wound and destroy life, even as they illuminate it, brighter than bright. X-rays give the lie to the artificial division between perceiving and causing that has plagued philosophy and ideo…Read more
  •  30
    Kissing in the Shadow
    with Paul Thomas
    Continent 2 (4): 289-334. 2012.
    In late August 2012, artist Paul Thomas and philosopher Timothy Morton took a stroll up and down King Street in Newtown, Sydney. They took photographs. If you walk too slowly down the street, you find yourself caught in the honey of aesthetic zones emitted by thousands and thousands of beings. If you want to get from A to B, you had better hurry up. Is there any space between anything? Do we not, when we look for such a space, encounter a plenitude of other things —a slice of plaster, an old vin…Read more
  •  65
    An Object-Oriented Defense of Poetry
    New Literary History 43 (2): 205-224. 2012.
  •  62
    Art in the Age of Asymmetry: Hegel, Objects, Aesthetics
    Evental Aesthetics 1 (1): 121-142. 2012.
    Timothy Morton argues that we have entered a new era of aesthetics, an ecological one. In this period, a new phase of art, unpredicted, and unpredictable, by Hegel, comes about. This phase of art is the Asymmetric Phase
  •  3
    Zero Landscapes in the Time of Hyperobjects
    Graz Architectural Magazine (7): 78-87. 2011.
  •  119
    The context for these interviews was a seminar [Peter Gratton] conducted on speculative realism in the Spring 2010. There has been great interest in speculative realism and one reason Gratton surmise[s] is not just the arguments offered, though [Gratton doesn't] want to take away from them; each of these scholars are vivid writers and great pedagogues, many of whom are in constant contact with their readers via their weblogs. Thus these interviews provided an opportunity to forward student quest…Read more
  •  81
    Ecology as Text, Text as Ecology
    Oxford Literary Review 32 (1): 1-17. 2010.
    The further scholarship investigates life forms the less those forms can be said to have a single, independent and lasting identity. The further scholarship delves into texts the less they too can be said to have a single, independent and lasting identity. This similarity is not simply an analogy. Life forms cannot be said to differ in a rigorous way from texts. On many levels and for many reasons, deconstruction and ecology should talk to one another. It is interesting to contemplate an entangl…Read more
  •  124
    Objects as Temporary Autonomous Zones
    Continent 1 (3): 149-155. 2011.
    continent. 1.3 (2011): 149-155. The world is teeming. Anything can happen. John Cage, “Silence” 1 Autonomy means that although something is part of something else, or related to it in some way, it has its own “law” or “tendency” (Greek, nomos ). In their book on life sciences, Medawar and Medawar state, “Organs and tissues…are composed of cells which…have a high measure of autonomy.”2 Autonomy also has ethical and political valences. De Grazia writes, “In Kant's enormously influential moral phil…Read more
  •  119
    Unsustaining
    World Picture (5). 2011.
  •  1
  •  97
    Sublime Objects
    Speculations (II): 207-227. 2011.
  •  65
    Response to Peter Gratton
    Speculations 1 (1): 200-202. 2010.