PERSON
Timothy Morton
British philosopher (b. 1968) who coined <em>hyperobjects</em> and developed dark ecology — reshaping how we think about entities too vast to perceive.
Timothy Morton is the Rita Shea Guffey Chair in English at Rice University and one of the most influential philosophers working at the intersection of ecology, ontology, and aesthetics. Born in London in 1968, Morton studied at Oxford and has reshaped contemporary thought through concepts including hyperobjects (entities massively distributed in time and space), dark ecology (environmental philosophy without the fantasy of nature), the mesh (radical interconnectedness), and strange strangers (entities that are intimate and alien simultaneously). Major works include Ecology Without Nature (2007), The Ecological Thought (2010), Hyperobjects (2013), Dark Ecology (2016), and Being Ecological (2018).
In The You On AI Field Guide
Morton's work bridges continental philosophy, ecological activism, and object-oriented ontology. Trained in Romantic poetry (doctoral work on Percy Shelley and diet), Morton's early career focused on ecocriticism and the deconstruction of 'nature' as a Romantic invention. Ecology Without Nature (2007) argued that the concept of 'nature' — as a pure, external realm separate from human culture — is an ideological construct that prevents genuine ecological thinking. The book dismantled environmental aesthetics'
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