
New Books Network Graham Harman, "Waves and Stones: The Continuous and the Discontinuous in Human Thought" (Allen Lane, 2025)
Dec 15, 2025
Graham Harman, a prominent philosopher known for his work in object-oriented ontology, discusses his new book, Waves and Stones. He explores the intriguing relationship between continuity and discontinuity in various fields like physics, evolution, and architecture. Harman questions whether our reality consists of significant turning points or gradual shifts, analyzing concepts from general relativity to quantum theory. He also touches on Aristotle’s distinctions and critiques reductionist views, offering a fresh perspective on the fabric of reality.
AI Snips
Chapters
Books
Transcript
Episode notes
Continuity vs Discreteness Is Universal
- The continuous vs discrete question recurs across disciplines from biology to physics and politics.
- Graham Harman argues both regimes are irreducible and shape how we model reality.
Margulis’s Endosymbiosis Vindicated
- Harman recounts Lynn Margulis’s radical serial endosymbiosis theory and its vindication.
- Her prediction about organelles being alien in origin was later confirmed by DNA analysis.
Quantum Jumps Clash With Smooth Gravity
- Physics splits into quantum theory’s jumps and general relativity’s smooth curvature.
- Harman highlights their incompatibility as a core modern paradox, especially near black holes.







