@article{Hauberg-Lund_2016, title={The Nature of Freedom - on the ethical potential of the knowledge of the non-human origins of human being}, volume={11}, url={https://tidsskrift.dk/res_cogitans/article/view/27250}, DOI={10.7146/rc.1127250}, abstractNote={Many ways there are to articulate the objective conditions of human subjectivity. If poetry is regarded as one way, philosophy ought to be regarded as another. Whereas young Danish poet Theis Ørntoft (1984-) in his <em>Poems 2014</em>invokes a host of metaphors inorder to stage and address the fluctuating and at most semi-stable foundations of human being, American philosopher Graham Harman (1968-) in his <em>The Quadruple Object</em>expounds the structural components of a metaphysics that uncovers the ontological relativity of the objectively secured stability of human subjectivity. The implications of Harman’s so-called ’object-oriented ontology’ for the ethically significant construal of the relation between nature and freedom will be spelled out towards the end of my article.}, number={1}, journal={Res Cogitans}, author={Hauberg-Lund, Martin}, year={2016}, month={maj} }