This book engages with the classic philosophical question of mind and
matter, seeking to show its altered meaning and acuteness in the era of
the Anthropocene. Arguing that matter, and, more broadly, the natural
world, has been misconceived since Descartes, it explores the
devastating impact that this has had in practice in the West. As such,
alternatives are needed, whether philosophical ones such as those
offered by figures such as Whitehead and Nagel, or posthumanist ones
such as those developed by Barad and Latour. Drawing on recent
anthropological work ignored by philosophers and sociologists alike, the
author considers a radical alternative cosmology: animism understood as
panpsychism in practice. This understanding of mind and matter, of
culture and nature, is then turned against present-day posthumanist
critiques of what the Anthropocene amounts to, showing them up as
philosophically misguided, politically mute, and ethically wanting. A
ground-breaking reconceptualization of the natural world and our
treatment of it, Cosmologies of the Anthropocene will appeal to
scholars of sociology, social theory, philosophy and anthropology with
interests in our understanding of and relationship with nature.