This book's main message is to advocate for a collaborative, affective,
visualised and future-oriented research agenda. The book finds its
inspiration in "the chasm [that separates] philosophising about being
shattered and thinking that is shattered" (Heidegger 1946, Letter on
Humanism). To explore this chasm, the book journeys through a range of
psychological and posthuman perspectives on affect and becoming. The aim
of this journey is to reconcile shattered thinking-feeling with
Spinoza's ethics according to which 'our capacity to be affected
determines our capacity to act'. The book elaborates this capacity to
become in terms of our uniquely human propensity to experiment with
counter-intuitive inversions: in this case, to call to account that
which is affected, rather than that which affects. The book will appeal
to students and academics working in the fields of alternative research
methods, the social sciences, and organisation studies.