I know that it’s usually in bad taste to publish a private e-mail correspondence with another individual over the internet, but in this case I feel it’s fairly harmless. Â Over at Levi Bryant’s blog, Larval Subjects, I was engaging in an interesting discussion between Levi and Michael from Archive Fire. Â You can see one of my comments on this thread, as well as Michael’s favorable citation of some of the points I make. Â Anyway, sometime yesterday, I added another comment on the entry regarding the debate between Spinoza and Leibniz on actualism vs. possibilism (although Spinoza was dead when Leibniz’s major metaphysical writings began to appear).
After several hours, I saw that new comments had been updated for the post, and so I checked to see if Levi or Michael had responded to anything I’d written. Â Much to my dismay, I discovered that my comment was nowhere to be found. Â I tried leaving another one, asking what had happened, but this one likewise disappeared after a few minutes. Â Concerned, I contacted Levi through e-mail:
[E-mails deleted out of respect for Levi Bryant’s privacy]
Basically, Levi told me that he felt insulted by a comment I’d left the day before, and that, coupled with my satyric post on SR/OOO, he’s decided to cease discussion with me. Â My reply to him was that the sendup of SR/OOO was aimed at the movement in general, and that he shouldn’t take it as a personal affront. Â I also encouraged him to develop a better sense of humor about things generally and himself in particular.
So far, I haven’t received any further response.  This isn’t the first time this has happened, either.  Back in the ides of April, I published a somewhat lengthier (though similarly fraught) exchange between Levi and me that had resulted from a heated debate on the subject of Marxism on his own blog.  He accused me at that point of “hate speech.”  After some further conversation through e-mail (following the correspondence posted in that entry), I explained myself more thoroughly.  Levi eventually came to his senses and invited me back to comment on his blog.
Now again, it’s his right to exclude certain individuals from posting or commenting on his blog if he wants to. Â I just think it’s a shame that he allows his feelings to be so easily hurt, or that he takes an obviously satyrical manifesto directed at a general movement and interprets it as a personal attack. Â It’s really too bad that he can’t have a little better sense of humor about this, and have a laugh along with everyone else.
By contrast, the responses I received from the author of the blog ktismatics and Joseph Weissman of Fractal Ontology were unambiguously supportive.  Even the e-mail I received, from Nick Srnicek of Speculative Heresy, was polite and largely understanding:
[A polite and good-natured e-mail deleted out of respect for Nick Srnicek’s privacy]
If this means an end to my participation on Larval Subjects, then so be it. Â It’s just sort of sad that it had to be over such a petty matter.