in/compatible systems 
 
Keynote by Graham Harman (us)
Moderated by Christopher Salter (ca/de)
 
The idea that everything is interconnected has become a staple of   intellectual life. As a related phenomenon, “contextualisation” is now   the method of first resort throughout the humanities. This lecture   opposes the general trend of emphasising systems and wholes over   autonomous individuals. Among the greatest drawbacks of holistic   ontology is its inability to explain disruptions and surprises in any   system it studies. At best, one posits some sort of “materiality” lying   outside all formatted systems that serves as their underground source  of  change, a theory that fails for a variety of reasons. The only   alternative is to adopt an object-oriented model of fully formatted   entities lying beyond the grasp of the human mind and even of each   other. After providing some theoretical background for this claim, I   will consider several recent political phenomena that are better   understood by an object-oriented approach than a holistic one.