Object-Oriented Cybernetics. The Radical Objectivism of Ranulph Glanville

  • Luca Fabbris University of Turin

Abstract

How can autonomous and operationally closed units construct a shared reality? This is one of the main problems in second-order cybernetics. Ranulph Glanville’s Theory of Objects (TO) is an attempt to solve it. With TO, Glanville defines a Universe in which only unique and irreducible units – named Objects – exist. An Object is a dual unit characterized by a self-observation cycle (oscillation between a self-observing and self-observed moment). Each Object can observe and be observed by another Object. An observing Object can grasp only the public side of an observed Object (the private side of an Object is accessible only through self-observation). Objects do not share properties, and they have no common reality. Objects are unique, singular, irreducible as well as operationally closed. Reality is understood as the product of the interaction between observing units. The article (1) examines the epistemological and ontological features of TO and the radical objectivism underlying it; (2) discusses some of the problems of TO related to the definition of the observer; and (3) shows how TO can be considered an ante litteram formalization of Object-Oriented Ontology.

Author Biography

Luca Fabbris, University of Turin

PhD student at the University of Turin (FINO Consortium) with a project focusing on the ontology of self-organised systems in second-order cybernetics. He obtained his Master's degree with a thesis on William Ross Ashby. Together with Alberto Giustiniano and Claudio Tarditi, he co-edits the BIT series for the publisher Orthotes.

Published
2023-03-15
How to Cite
Fabbris, L. (2023). Object-Oriented Cybernetics. The Radical Objectivism of Ranulph Glanville. Philosophy Kitchen - Journal of Contemporary Philosophy, (18), 183-198. https://doi.org/10.13135/2385-1945/7839
Section
IV. Objects, Machines, Media