Title The problem of reality and modal ontology /
Authors Šerpytytė, Rita
DOI 10.1515/opphil-2020-0121
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Is Part of Open philosophy: Topical issue: imagination and potentiality: the quest for the real / edited by Graham Harman and Kristupas Sabolius.. Warsaw : De Gruyter. 2020, vol. 3, iss. 1, p. 517-526.. eISSN 2543-8875
Keywords [eng] res ; object ; Real ; Realität ; Wirklichkeit ; modus ; modal ontology
Abstract [eng] The problem of the relation and difference between things and objects is one of the most decisive issues for the conception of the real. These words are usually used interchangeably – and not only in their everyday usage. There are some contemporary philosophical positions that consider almost “everything” as an object; on the other hand, there are proponents of a strict separation of objects and things. How did it happen that the concept of thing (res) and object (obiectum) not only began to theoretically “compete” with each other but also sometimes came to represent differently conceived realities, and even occasionally came to represent an identical conception of reality? This article, on the one hand, discusses the philosophical strategies that reveal the difference between objects and things and enable such a conception of reality which takes into account the Kantian distinction between Realität and Wirklichkeit. On the other, it reconstructs Giorgio Agamben’s project of modal ontology. Agamben’s take on the question What is real? is oriented toward the modus of being and could be traced back to the recognition of the difference between objects and things as well as the “restoration of the life of things themselves.”.
Published Warsaw : De Gruyter
Type Journal article
Language English
Publication date 2020
CC license CC license description