Incomputable Earth
Technology and the Anthropocene Hypothesis
Abstract
Incomputable Earth: Technology and the Anthropocene Hypothesis challenges the dominant narrative that positions technological solutions as the primary response to ecological crisis. This open access collection argues that climate breakdown represents an irreducibly incomputable problem that cannot be resolved through algorithmic optimization or cybernetic planetary management. Radically interrogating the political epistemology underlying the Anthropocene hypothesis against the backdrop of new regimes of algorithmic classification and prediction, this volume addresses the crucial need to rethink the meaning and inter-relationality of “human,” “nature,” and “technology.” Drawing on feminist science studies, decolonial epistemologies, and historical materialist analysis, the contributors examine how computational frameworks transform Earth’s complex relationships into extractable data, perpetuating the very logics that created planetary crisis. Examining new forms of subjectivity and resistance, this timely volume provides both rigorous critique of technoscientific planetary governance and speculative horizons for collective response to climate breakdown—offering a blueprint for reclaiming abstraction from computational capture while centering radically transformed ways of knowing and being human. This book is available open access through the Bloomsbury Open Access programme and is available on www.bloomsburycollections.com It is funded by The Austrian Science Fund (FWF).
Keywords
Computation; Artificial intelligence; Collective intelligence; Data positivism; Earth systems; Extraction; Instrumentality; Materialist; Digital vitalism; Techno-positivism; Black reason; Individuation; Indeterminacy; Planetary financialization; Inhuman; Bioremediation; BiocentricISBN
9781350265004Publisher
Bloomsbury Publishing (UK)Publication date and place
London, 2026Imprint
Bloomsbury AcademicSeries
Theory in the New Humanities,Classification
Impact of science and technology on society
Artificial intelligence
Pollution and threats to the environment
Social and political philosophy
Western philosophy from c 1800
Conservation of the environment
