When the hammer works, it disappears. You just hammer. The tool recedes into pure function. Then it breaks. Snaps, slips, refuses. Suddenly the hammer has an inside. A being separate from its use.
Heidegger noticed this first. But he left the human at the centre of the story. The hammer becomes visible when it fails because we stop using it and start examining it. The human is still the measure. Graham Harman says: that’s not what’s happening. The hammer was always more than its function. It withholds something from every object it encounters, not just from us. When two billiard balls collide, neither ball fully accesses what the other is. There is always a remainder. A depth that no encounter exhausts.
Object-oriented ontology builds from this: everything that exists has equal ontological status. Rocks, corporations, poems, electrons, the smell of rain, a fictional character, a memory, a hyperlink. None of these is more real than any other. None requires a mind to exist.
The philosophical name for what this pushes against is correlationism. The assumption baked so deep into post-Kantian thought that it barely gets named: reality is always the correlation between mind and world. We can only know things as they appear to us, never as they are in themselves. The human sits at the centre of ontology by quiet default. OOO breaks the circuit. The world was real before minds arrived in it. It will be real after.
Timothy Morton added hyperobjects: things so massively distributed in time and space they cannot be localised. Climate change. The internet. The totality of all plastic ever manufactured. You never encounter the hyperobject. You encounter manifestations of it. A heatwave, a thread, a bottle cap on a beach. The totality exceeds any contact. Which is true of smaller objects too. Every object exceeds every encounter. The withdrawal is total and it is everywhere.
What this does to the text is what pulls me.
If texts are objects, and they are, then a text withdraws. The essay you write is more than you intended. It has a life in other readers, other moments, other contexts that exceed your authorship completely. It interacts with other objects in ways you did not put there and cannot predict. The meaning that arrives is not the meaning you sent. This is not a failure of communication. It is the nature of objects.
Which might be the deepest reason the fragment is a legitimate form. Not because the essay demands too much, or because attention is scarce. But because the fragment enacts withdrawal. It offers itself incompletely, deliberately. The reader’s contact produces something that was not in the fragment alone. The encounter is the meaning. The text plus whatever it touches when it arrives.
Posthumanism needed this. It was always arguing for the decentering of the human. OOO performs that decentering at the level of ontology. The human occupies no special category. We are objects among objects. No more withdrawn from full access than anything else.
Humbling and liberating. And the two don’t need to be reconciled.
Network
Related fragments
- The Text-Based Ontologist — the seed phrase; text as the universal substrate means texts are objects in this sense, and objects withdraw
- Meaning Through Navigation, Not Sequence — the mind moves through objects rather than receiving them; navigation as the locus of meaning
Related notes
- Ontology — the foundational taxonomy; OOO appears in the key frameworks table; this fragment extends that entry
- The Seven Theses — thesis six: hypertext as epistemology; connects to OOO’s flat ontology and the reader-as-encounter
Source
- Francesca Ferrando, The Art of Being Posthuman — where the term arrived
- Graham Harman — Tool-Being, The Quadruple Object, Object-Oriented Ontology: A New Theory of Everything
- Timothy Morton — Hyperobjects