Abstract

This article discusses the main provisions of the object-oriented ontology of Graham Harman. The four-fold structure of an object is analyzed in detail as the relationship of sensory qualities, real qualities, a sensory object and a real object, as a result of the interaction of which the fundamental ontological structures of time and space arise. Some problems arising from the basic postulates of the system, such as the lack of interaction between real objects and the indeterminacy of the "ego", are also addressed.

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