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The Darkest of Secrets

Philosophica International Journal for the History of Philosophy 2024 Score: 35 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Nicolas de Warren

Summary

Researchers examined the philosophical dimensions of trash and garbage through a phenomenological analysis drawing on the writings of Husserl, Stiegler, and others, exploring concepts of sedimentation, temporality, and technology to understand how society renders waste invisible. This paper investigates what it means to 'throw away' something — at both individual and collective levels — and what remains unseen in the language and practice of discarding.

In this paper, I propose an exploration of the question of trash and garbage, of what, in other words, we unthinkingly throw away and discard, individual and collectively. What is this thing called trash and garbage? What phenomenological resources—where I understand phenomenology as centered on an analysis of the “look” of things (their visibility and invisibility) and on how we speak about things (or fail to speak, the silences)—are available for learning how to question what is trash and garbage? In developing my analysis, I draw on the notions of sedimentation, temporality, and technology in the writings of Husserl, Stiegler, and others.

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