Telos 190 (Spring 2020): Economy and Ecology: Reconceiving the Human Relationship to Nature
Economy and Ecology:
Reconceiving the Human Relationship to Nature
In Telos 190, we examine how the intimate connection between economy and ecology has been overlooked in favor of a perspective that sees nature not as its own actor but simply as inert raw material for our human purposes, as if our economic decisions have no effect on our relationship to nature. Yet nature never was and never can be simply a set of things, inorganic material for our desires. The project of the essays in this issue is to challenge this perspective and to propose new models for understanding the complex relationship between human beings, nature, and the economy.
Introduction
David Pan
The Descent into Disanthropy: Critical Theory and the Anthropocene
Andrew Reszitnyk
Practice and Ideology in Boris Hessen's "The Social and Economic Roots of Newton’s Principia"
Sean Winkler
Scientific Modeling and the Environment: Toward the Establishment of Michel Serres’s Natural Contract
Pamela Carralero
Metaphors in Science: Lessons for Developing an Ecological Paradigm
Aaron Grinter
Reading against the Gun: The Machine Gun and Sturm
Ross Etherton
The Old in New Critical Theory: Locating the Gambler and the Prostitute in the Image of Neoliberalism
Joseph Weiss
The Dionysian Free Jazz of John W. Coltrane
Dharmender S. Dhillon
Terrors of Theory: Critical Theory of Terror from Kojève to Žižek
Arthur Bradley
Critical Theory of the Contemporary
The Post-Liberal Moment
Adrian Pabst
The Aesthetics of Fascism
Jay A. Gupta
The Gun Sanctuary Movement: Pistol-Packing Preppers or Passionate Peaceful Populists?
Timothy W. Luke
Reviews
"Apophatic Entanglement" and the Politics of Unknowing: Catherine Keller
Andrew M. Wender