In his book Humankind: Solidarity with Nonhuman People (not to be confused with Humankind: A Hopeful History by Rutger Bergman, which I also recommend) Morton says something quite Jamesian:
“Wholes subscend their parts [in other words, a whole is less than the sum of its parts], which means that parts are not just mechanical components of wholes, and that there can be genuine surprise and novelty in the world, that a different future is always possible."
Actuality is a tiny subset of possibility. But we actually have to care about the future, if the better possibilities are to be actualized. It's our "really vital question," again. What is life going to make of itself?
Will we be good ancestors?
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