From the Sacred to the Sacred Object: Girard, Serres, and Latour on the Ordering of the Human Collective

About From the Sacred to the Sacred Object: Girard, Serres, and Latour on the Ordering of the Human Collective

Authors Sayes, Edwin
Date 2012
Publication Technu00e9: Research in Philosophy and Technology
Vol / Pages Vol. 16 No. 2 pp. 105-122
DOI 10.5840/techne201216211
URL http://www.pdcnet.org/oom/service?url_ver=Z39.88-2004&rft_val_fmt=&rft.imuse_id=techne_2012_0016_0002_0105_0122&svc_id=info:www.pdcnet.org/collection
Language en

Type: Journal Article

Abstract

The philosophy of Bruno Latour has given us one of the most important statements on the part played by technology in the ordering of the human collective. Typically presented as a radical departure from mainstream social thought, Latour is not without his intellectual creditors: Michel Serres and, through him, René Girard. By tracing this development, we are led to understand better the relationship of Latour’s work, and Actor-Network Theory more generally, to traditional sociological concerns. By doing so we can also hope to understand better the role that objects play in structuring society.

Attachments