Lee+Project+Hopping


 * Topical Area? || Data Sets? || Social Theoretical Questions? || Why Now? || How Prepared? || Bias? || Fields of Work? || Funders? ||
 * Metaphysics of time || history of philosophy and science texts, New Materialists || How does thinking about time as produced changed our understanding of the connection between ontology and ethics? || While some have already claimed that time is produced, none have developed this point. Doing so will help provide an alternative to thinking time as resource, container, or merely psychological phenomena, and provide a different frame from which to criticize and understand the economics of time/labor, responsibility, and ontology. || I’ve started doing some historical research on the original bifurcation of nation – not being nature and culture, but between time and world. In addition, Spinoza’s notion of the canatus came close to an understanding of substance appropriate to time production, but he retained stillness (a metaphysically unsound concept). I’ve begun making a list of thinkers and their quotes where they claim that time is produced, such as Latour, Serres, Barad, Grosz, etc. || Personal: no one has ever argued that time is produced || texts || n/a ||
 * Waste production || Waste management systems || How does beginning with Broken World Thinking change the way we understand the nature of existence and waste? Is not to exist to waste? || More ontologically appropriate perspective || Steven Jackson’s work on broken world thinking, though he uses it to understand innovation, something I’m not interested in explicitly. ||  ||   ||   ||
 * Waste production || Waste management systems || How does beginning with Broken World Thinking change the way we understand the nature of existence and waste? Is not to exist to waste? || More ontologically appropriate perspective || Steven Jackson’s work on broken world thinking, though he uses it to understand innovation, something I’m not interested in explicitly. ||  ||   ||   ||