New Books in Intellectual History

Graham Harman, "Waves and Stones: The Continuous and the Discontinuous in Human Thought" (Allen Lane, 2025)

Dec 15, 2025
Graham Harman, a philosopher and founder of object-oriented ontology, is on a quest to explore the dichotomy of the continuous and the discrete in his book, Waves and Stones. He tackles profound questions about reality's nature, from the tensions in biology and physics to the philosophical implications across history. Harman critiques reductionist approaches, explores Aristotle's insights, and even dives into contemporary debates on science and religion. His talk intertwines complex ideas with real-world examples, leaving listeners pondering the structure of existence.
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INSIGHT

Continuous And Discrete Are Universal Problems

  • The continuous vs discrete tension appears across disciplines from evolution to physics and history of ideas.
  • Graham Harman argues both modes are real and irreducible, not reducible to one another.
ANECDOTE

Evolutionary Examples Of Sudden Change

  • Harman recounts biological cases like punctuated equilibrium and Lynn Margulis's endosymbiosis to show non-gradual change.
  • He uses island foxes, snapping shrimp, and organelle DNA discoveries as concrete examples.
INSIGHT

Physics Encodes The Continuity–Discreteness Clash

  • Physics exposes the deep clash: quantum discreteness vs general relativity's smooth curvature.
  • Harman highlights this incompatibility as a central contemporary problem in understanding reality.
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