11 of 11 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars
Enlightening Latour Intro, July 3 2010
By Joseph C Goodson - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Prince of Networks: Bruno LaTour and Metaphysics (Paperback)
Graham Harman sees Bruno Latour as the bridge which philosophy must pass through to get to the twenty-first century and its challenges, and the book may just convince you of that. There are two parts to this fantastically written essay: first, the metaphysics of Latour and his actors -- their irreducibility, their alliances, their translations -- and, second, how Latour holds our hand and helps us into the realm of a new philosophy of objects. The book is charmingly and vividly written, both very accessible and very entertaining (you'll laugh, you just might cry -- seriously, there are a couple of surprisingly moving passages). It encourages the reader to move off in two directions: towards a greater understanding of Latour's fascinating and compelling actor-network theory (ANT), but also in the direction of the work-in-progress object-oriented philosophy, Harman's own philosophical brainchild (though with some very important ancestors that just might surprise you!). This is a really fun philosophical ride, especially since neither work is finished (both Latour and Harman are busy writing and publishing -- keep an eye out for Harman's The Quadruple Object in 2011 which is a more thorough investigation of some of the ideas brought out at the end of Prince of Networks).
If you feel that you are in a kind of philosophical rut, unable to talk about anything but texts and signifiers, this book is definitely for you. If, on the other hand, you are of the scientistic persuasion, and can't stop talking about quarks or the Higgs boson, this book is also for you, and might offer you some challenges to reductionist materialism. And if not, you'll surely have fun reading it.
12 of 16 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars
ANT, Sep 21 2009
By releaseyet "releaseyet" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Prince of Networks: Bruno LaTour and Metaphysics (Paperback)
This is an excellent book. I was not familiar with Latour or Harman but having read this, I want to find out more. I was particularly intrigued by the mention of moving away from anthropocentrism...the notion of anything being an "actor" in a network,actors can be anything from people to animals, to ideas and objects... I've been pondering this in recent time. Also, the notion that something doesn't "exist" before it is "invented/discovered" is also very thought provoking. Check it out, its surprising and deep. I've read through it once but as I look deeper into the two thinkers I'll be going back in this book.