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The Outside That Thinks: Fragments Toward a Non-Human Ontology. Obscura, #3

Par : Nox Vale
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  • FormatePub
  • ISBN8232424794
  • EAN9798232424794
  • Date de parution10/04/2026
  • Protection num.pas de protection
  • Infos supplémentairesepub
  • ÉditeurDraft2Digital

Résumé

This is not a conventional philosophical treatise. It is a series of rigorous incursions into territory where systematic ontology itself comes under interrogation. Beginning with the ancestral rift-events like the Cambrian explosion that occurred without any observer-Vale explores how reality operated for billions of years independently of minds, then moves through hostile objects that generate incompatible descriptions across scales, the collapse of properties into regime-relative phenomena, mathematics as exposure, an ontology of interference, cognition as contamination, the non-local subject, temporal fractures, and ultimately the radical thesis of the outside that thinks: non-representational processes (evolution, immune systems, protein folding) that perform operations formally isomorphic to thought without consciousness, intention, or representation.
The book culminates in absolute exteriority-ontological blackout zones that are constitutively inaccessible to cognition not due to our limitations, but because their structure is incompatible with representation itself. Fragments deliberately advance positions only to expose their insufficiency, creating a living tension that mirrors the interference patterns it describes. Appendices provide formal systems of incompatibility (drawing on paraconsistent logic), thought experiments, and a glossary of non-intuitive terms.
Challenging correlationism (in the tradition of Quentin Meillassoux), object-oriented ontology (Graham Harman), and Kantian legacies, this work relocates mind as one late, contingent product of a reality that thinks in multiple substrates-some representational and contaminated, others direct and non-human. It is unsettling, precise, and intellectually honest: philosophy that ends less tidily but more truthfully.
For readers drawn to speculative realism, new materialism, philosophy of science, and radical ontology, The Outside That Thinks offers no easy conclusions-only the precise shape of why certain ambitions collapse, and what remains when they do.
The Nihilist’s Manifesto
3,49 €