Toward the Abstractors: Modes of Care and Lineages of Becoming
Michael, M
Date: 2 September 2019
Article
Journal
Distinktion: Journal of Social Theory
Publisher
Taylor & Francis (Routledge)
Publisher DOI
Abstract
This paper explores an ontological version of ‘abstraction’ as it manifests in the
commonalities and differences across social scientific research events. Drawing on a
range of writings that focus on the potentiality of the event, on Whitehead’s concept
of the ‘eternal object’, and on the notion of attractor as discussed by DeLanda, ...
This paper explores an ontological version of ‘abstraction’ as it manifests in the
commonalities and differences across social scientific research events. Drawing on a
range of writings that focus on the potentiality of the event, on Whitehead’s concept
of the ‘eternal object’, and on the notion of attractor as discussed by DeLanda, the
notion of abstractor’ is tentatively proposed. The aim is to show how abstractors
introduce particular potentialities, or ‘lineages of becoming’. However, in the specific
context of the research event, these abstractors are subject to modes of care (with
their own linages of becoming) that inform how analysts might engage with the
potentialities of a research event (understood as an inventive problem space). This
broad schema is initially illustrated through a particular abstractor of the ‘blackest
black’ as partially actualized in the nanotechnology VANTAblack. Subsequently, the
case of VANTAblack is used to prompt a number of heuristic questions with regard
to how we might practically and carefully explore the commonalities and differences
across research events. The paper closes with reflections on the broader status of
the approach sketched here.
Social and Political Sciences, Philosophy, and Anthropology
Faculty of Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences
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