The end of all things: geomateriality and deep time

Authors

  • Ted Toadvine The Pennsylvania State University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5944/rif.7.2018.29947

Keywords:

World, Apocalypse, Elements, Stone, Geology, Speculative, Realism, Deconstruction, Ancestrality, Memory, Husserl, Heidegger, Merleau-Ponty, Derrida, Nancy, Meillassoux

Abstract

The world, as a unifying nexus of significance, is inherently precarious and constitutively destined toward its own unraveling. Our fascination with a future end of the world masks our realization that the world as common and unified totality is already disintegrating. What remains after the end of the world is also what precedes it, the geomaterial elements, which condition the world without being reducible to things within it. Through our participation in elemental materiality, we encounter the abyssal vertigo of deep time as an anachronistic rupture of lived and historical time. The geological memory of stone situates it at the threshold of world and non-world, while our liability to an immemorial prehistory situates us at the intersection of incommensurable durations, those of the ancestral past as well as the apocalyptic future.

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Published

2021-02-22

How to Cite

Toadvine, T. (2021). The end of all things: geomateriality and deep time. Investigaciones Fenomenológicas, (7), 367–390. https://doi.org/10.5944/rif.7.2018.29947