Page 65 - Studia Universitatis Hereditati, vol. 3(2) (2015). Koper: Založba Univerze na Primorskem/University of Primorska Press.
P. 65
ia universitatis This for example was very important when philosophy faced was that of not finding enou-
how to addr ess hyperobjects in exhibitions using emerging technologies 65 creating the interaction for our National Park gh terra firma to stand on in order to basically
Explorer7 in a national park in Breheimen Nor- say anything about reality itself. There has been,
way. Here the feedback of the physical interac- since Kant, and some unfortunate misinterpre-
tion was not on the object itself but rather on the tations of Nietzsche, a tending towards an on-
map all user interact with, therefore we were un- tological detente where philosophy narrowed its
able to make latency a playability feature, which foci of attention. The latter rendered a total va-
we had previously done in the aforementioned lue relative argumentation and the former a epis-
sea monster table, where the latency was incor- temological recursion. To paraphrase, it could go
porated as a use quality contributing to the lurk- something like: How can I know that there are
ing feeling of vulnerability we wanted the visi- (or are not) real things? What gives me (or deni-
tors to experience. Since the control function es me) access to those real things? What are the
and the feedback were separated in the Nation- possibilities of this access? What is the possibili-
al Park Explorer however the latency had to be ty of possibility? The Kantian rift had become a
kept at a minimum to keep the mental pairing of chasm deep enough to fill almost all of continen-
the input and the feedback intact. tal philosophy. This correlationism8 is not provi-
ding answers, or questions, that move or benefit
Based on these example we see that it is other sciences, art forms or practices. Some phi-
completely possible to incorporate the interac- losophers understandably had enough of this
tion as a part of the interpretation and interac- and thought about the current issues facing hu-
tion. However in a few of our upcoming projects manity, e.g. technological singularity; machine-
there is a new class of issues more and more prev- -human mergers or global warming.9
alent in museums that require a new class of in-
teractive approaches. Background

Theoretical background The shortcomings of the academic paper mill
might be to blame here. These thoughts have
In recent times some headway in the philosop- predictably not evolved through the academic
hical approach of the most pressing issues of our circuit as intended, but instead been circulating
time have been made. Due to a philosophical on forums on the internets where people within
standstill over the last 100 years, few scientists, academia who have been frustrated with the exi-
artists or designers have looked to philosophy sting forms of academic output and its incapabi-
to find answers or even questions. The ones who lity to accommodate new, unfinished, thoughts
did oftentimes found themselves in a Heidegge- or work in progress.  
rian maze of circular arguments. The problem
The discourse has sort of ventured all the
7 Vimeo, https://vimeo.com/72203926 (20016-02-01). way into a place where one has been forced to ask
oneself: Why save a species if one does not be-
lieve in a species. Particularly this needs to have
an operational level as well. That something can
be done even though we do not agree on holis-
tic definitions or hierarchies or what privileges
whom.

Of all the things humans have created, re-
leasing the hyper object of climate change will

8 Levi Bryant, Nick Srnicek and Graham Harman, ed.The speculative
turn (Melbourne, [Victoria] Australia: re.press, 2011).

9 Timothy Morton, Hyperobjects: Philosophy and Ecology after the End of
the World (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2013).
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