Ecocosmism: Finitude Unbound
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Memories: Of the Earth
The metaphorics of soil [Boden] (in which everything that grows and bears fruit and nourishes takes root) and the metaphorics of foundation [Grund] (upon which everything durable and solid works and stands, is built and erected) do not seem to be easily brought together in imagination: roots require the soil’s porousness and permeability to allow trees and plants to rise to the light from which they first properly take life; on the other hand, a human building demands rocklike density and insolubility for the foundation it rests upon. These “fundamental differences” of the ground of life [“Grundverschiedenheiten” des Lebensboden] also seem to condition divergent worldviews and lifestyles: the cultivating and the constructing [7] (p. 68).
Husserl says, imagine a bird capable of flying to another planet: it would not have a double ground. From the sole fact that it is the same bird, it unites the two planets into one single ground. Wherever I go, I make a ground there and attach the new ground to the old where I lived. To think two Earths is to think one same Earth. For man, there can be only men. Animals, Husserl says, are only variants of humanity. We think that which is the most universal in us starting from the most singular. Our soil or ground expands, but it is not doubled, and we cannot think without reference to one soil of experience of this type. The Earth is the root of our history. Just as Noah’s ark carried all that could remain living and possible, so too can the Earth be considered as carrier of all the possible [8] (p. 77).
3. Impasses
Capitalism strives to be a universal system, but it cannot be as long as it is essentially dependent on the non-capitalist system. When it becomes universal, it must break down because the exhaustion of externality is fatal for the externalization society: Capitalism is the first form of economy with propagandistic power; it is a form that tends to extend itself over the globe and to eradicate all other forms of economy—it tolerates no other alongside itself. However, it is also the first that is unable to exist alone, without other forms of economy as its milieu and its medium. Thus, as the same time as it tends to become the universal form, it is smashed to smithereens by its intrinsic inability to be a universal form of production [12].
4. Inappropriable Spaces
5. The Unsustainable
6. Cosmic Times
are our contemporaries, our travel companions, and hence probably, their apparent immobility: we are forging ahead together. […] (The) encounters between sidereal cadavers colliding into resurrection would easily come across as a disturbance of the established order.—A disturbance ! But what would become of the world if the ancient and dead suns with their string of defunct planets continued indefinitely their funeral procession, reinforced every night with the arrival of new funerals? All the sources of light and of life that shine in the heavens would extinguish gradually, like the luminaries of a light show. Eternal darkness would wash upon the universe [27].
7. Conclusions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
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Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
1 | Blumenberg, H. Care Crosses the River; Fleming, P., Translator; Stanford University Press: Stanford, CA, USA, 2010; p. 68. The expression is a direct reference to Martin Heidegger’s 1929 text Vom Wesen Des Grundes (On the Essence of Ground), published in: Heidegger, M. Pathmarks. McNeil, W., Translator; Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK, 1998, pp. 68–135. [7] |
2 | Nancy, J.-L. “Note on the Untranslatable Mondialisation”. In The Creation of the World or Globalization; According to Nancy, the terms “mondiale”, “mondialisation” preserve something untranslatable, “while globalization has already translated everything in a global idiom”. As he explains in the “Author’s Note” to the English Edition of his book La création du monde ou la mondialisation, “by keeping the horizon of a ‘world’ as a space of possible meaning for the whole of human relations (or as a space of possible significance) gives a different indication than that of an enclosure in the undifferentiated sphere of a unitotality”.; Raffoul, F., Pettigrew, D., Translator; State University Of New York Press: Albany, NY, USA, 2007; pp. 27–28. [15] |
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Tusa, G. Ecocosmism: Finitude Unbound. Philosophies 2024, 9, 27. https://doi.org/10.3390/philosophies9010027
Tusa G. Ecocosmism: Finitude Unbound. Philosophies. 2024; 9(1):27. https://doi.org/10.3390/philosophies9010027
Chicago/Turabian StyleTusa, Giovanbattista. 2024. "Ecocosmism: Finitude Unbound" Philosophies 9, no. 1: 27. https://doi.org/10.3390/philosophies9010027
APA StyleTusa, G. (2024). Ecocosmism: Finitude Unbound. Philosophies, 9(1), 27. https://doi.org/10.3390/philosophies9010027