
New Books in Buddhist Studies Mercedes Valmisa, "All Things Act" (Oxford UP, 2025)
Jan 13, 2026
Mercedes Valmisa, a philosopher and scholar of Chinese philosophy, discusses her groundbreaking book, All Things Act, which redefines agency as collective rather than individual. She argues that actions arise from networks of both human and nonhuman actors, challenging traditional concepts of intention and capacity. Valmisa also explores the idea of 'wu wei' as an enabling force for self-organization, and critiques the pessimism surrounding individual responsibility, advocating for a shift towards a more relational understanding of agency and social conditions.
AI Snips
Chapters
Books
Transcript
Episode notes
Agency As Emergent Process
- Mercedes Valmisa argues agency isn't an inner capacity but a process emerging from networks of humans and nonhumans.
- She shows intentions and actions form through sociomaterial interactions, not solitary free will.
Bring Action Into The Relational Turn
- Valmisa aligns philosophy of action with relational, processual turns across sciences and metaphysics.
- She starts from relational dynamics to explain how agency arises within interacting systems.
Archimboldo Portraits As A Method
- Mercedes uses Arcimboldo portraits and Latour's black boxes to illustrate how apparent unities hide assemblages.
- These examples invite us to look at the relations that produce and stabilize things.







