The Physics of the Poor
Jetzt kaufen
Durch das Verwenden dieser Links unterstützt du READO. Wir erhalten eine Vermittlungsprovision, ohne dass dir zusätzliche Kosten entstehen.
Beschreibung
Buchinformationen
Autorenbeschreibung
Timothy Speed (b. 1973, England) is an artist, author, and neurodivergent theorist. As an autistic person with ADHD, he lives what he writes about-in poverty, in conflict with systems, and with a mode of thinking that runs counter to the mainstream. His research is provocative and profound: for physics, for philosophy, and for society. Through self-experimentation, institutional investigations, and radically embodied theory, Speed develops a new perspective on consciousness, reality, and power. At its core lies the MNO theory, a model that derives nonlocality, subjectivity, and social order from a structural gap. From the exception to the rule. Speed does not conduct research about the world, he folds into it, inhabits it like an open laboratory. His texts are the imprint of this practice: wild, precise, uncomfortable. What if reality doesn´t consist of things, but of what is missing between them? What if we are merely the answer to a void? And what would that mean for our freedom?
Beschreibung
Buchinformationen
Autorenbeschreibung
Timothy Speed (b. 1973, England) is an artist, author, and neurodivergent theorist. As an autistic person with ADHD, he lives what he writes about-in poverty, in conflict with systems, and with a mode of thinking that runs counter to the mainstream. His research is provocative and profound: for physics, for philosophy, and for society. Through self-experimentation, institutional investigations, and radically embodied theory, Speed develops a new perspective on consciousness, reality, and power. At its core lies the MNO theory, a model that derives nonlocality, subjectivity, and social order from a structural gap. From the exception to the rule. Speed does not conduct research about the world, he folds into it, inhabits it like an open laboratory. His texts are the imprint of this practice: wild, precise, uncomfortable. What if reality doesn´t consist of things, but of what is missing between them? What if we are merely the answer to a void? And what would that mean for our freedom?



