Didier Debaise is coming to Dundee

Talk: Thinking the earth. Geophilosophy from Deleuze and Guattari to Latour.

Wednesday 22nd of January Dalhousie 2F15 – 16.00-17.30 Sponsored by the Royal Institute of Philosophy

In their latest work, Deleuze and Guattari invent “geophilosophy”. With this expression, they intend to give philosophy a new orientation by inscribing it in its terrestrial and territorial dimensions. The first sentences with which they introduce it are eloquent: ‘Subject and object give a poor approximation of thought. Thinking is neither a line drawn between subject and object nor a revolving of one around the other. Rather, thinking takes place in the relationship of territory and the earth’ (Deleuze and Guattari, 1991: 85). In this lecture, I’d like to follow the genesis of this geophilosophy, show its main features and trace the way in which it finds a new relevance in what B. Latour has called “The new climate regime”. 

Workshop: Thinking interdependent networks of becoming

Thursday 23rd of January  Carnelley Small LT – 11.00-13.00 in collaboration with ENERGY

How can philosophy contribute to understanding the complex web of interdependencies that characterize our world? Didier Debaise, a leading voice in speculative philosophy and environmental thought, invites participants to reimagine the concept of interdependency in a workshop that draws on his work with Isabelle Stengers. This event explores how contemporary philosophical tools, particularly those inspired by process philosophy and relational ontologies, can illuminate the dynamics of energy, matter, and life.

Aligned with the ENERGY project’s commitment to interdisciplinary approaches, the workshop seeks to challenge anthropocentric paradigms by examining energy as a connective force that transcends human and non-human divides. Debaise will lead discussions on how energy flows are not merely resources to be exploited but integral to a mesh of relations that sustain life, communities, and ecosystems.

Participants will engage with philosophical frameworks that rethink causality, agency, and temporality to address urgent environmental and ethical challenges. Drawing connections between philosophy, ecology, and energy studies, the workshop aims to foster a collaborative space where new ideas about coexistence and mutual dependency can emerge.

Suggested reading for this workshop: Didier and Stengers, Ecology of trust. Didier and Stengers, The Insistence of Possibles: Towards a Speculative Pragmatism. Email Tina for copies of the texts.

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