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17. Ted Toadvine: Deep Time, the Anthropocene Debate and Eco-Phenomenology

Author
Peter Holliday
Published
Mon 20 May 2024
Episode Link
https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/peter-holliday/episodes/17--Ted-Toadvine-Deep-Time--the-Anthropocene-Debate-and-Eco-Phenomenology-e2jssfq

Peter speaks to the philosopher Ted Toadvine about a wide range of environmental themes and issues. Toadvine specialises in environmental ethics and contemporary European philosophy. His new book titled The Memory of the World: Deep Time, Animality, and Eschatology explores the ethical and ecological implications of deep time from a phenomenological perspective and is available now via University of Minnesota Press.




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Timestamps:


(00:00) Introduction


(02:44) Episode begins


(09:57) Why Toadvine wrote The Memory of the World


(16:56) Toadvine’s earliest experiences of deep time


(23:27) Reconciling humanity and the natural environment


(40:57) Technology and nature


(46:00) The problem with the Anthropocene


(58:10) The problem with biodiversity


(01:05:52) The relationship between nature and language


(01:10:12) What is eco-phenomenology?


(01:15:10) Nature as the horizon of all things


(01:20:07) “Nature loves to hide”


(01:26:08) Edmund Husserl’s description of the natural world as a “correlate of consciousness”


(01:31:48) “The sun did not exist before human beings”


(01:42:45) The ethical problems of global sustainability


(01:52:23) The relationship between deep time and embodiment


(02:03:43) The animals that haunt our humanity from within


(02:20:38) Derrida at the end of the world


(02:29:06) The cultural obsession with doomsday


(02:36:39) The phenomenological perspective of the end of the world


(02:47:20) A phenomenology of the elements


(02:52:04) Art and the elements

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