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Coming together in rotational motion An introduction to the presentation at the Kiertoliike 2016 event Turo-Kimmo Lehtonen Basic physics teaches us that an object continues its motion unless it comes across obstacles. Pragmatism also emphasises that a human is constantly acting and moving. Only when we come across a problem do we stop and find a new direction for our movement. It is a mistake to think that objects and people remain stationary and that movement or human action only begins when someone takes action or something happens. Movement comes first. What does this revelation mean regarding communal thinking? For some reason, our everyday habits of talking about the actions of people–but also the habits of psychologists and sociologists of examining togetherness–disregard the fundamentality of movement. It is often said that "we are at a turning point" as if this could be a surprise, as if it was somehow clearer or simpler not to turn, to change. We often talk about community by almost unobservedly assuming that it is a stable, stationary thing. As if we could know exactly what shape, size and type all the members of a community are. At the same time, we are also prone to thinking that being a community means invariance. In a rural community, everyone knows each other; in a religious community, everyone shares a stable content of thinking. In a commonwealth, the borders of countries are clear, which enables peace. In this presentation, I will examine another way of perceiving the nature of togetherness. I will use the writings of French philosophers Michel Serres and Bruno Latour as a basis to discuss community as a collective whose existence means movement, active self-collection of a community, rotational motion. It is not a stop or a break. Another important emphasis in the idea of Serres and Latour is that any time people come together, there are also other factors involved; different natural elements, technologies, even sceneries and spaces. We are always together through an indirect connection. There are always more than two of us. Even when we are alone. Perhaps the most important change produces by Serres and Latour to the traditional way of thinking about a community is the notion that we do not actually know what a community is and what it can comprise. Even a sociologist does not know what makes a community. That is why they must study it. The fundamental motion of togetherness means that a community must be constantly rounded up and that the elements taking part in it are diverse, manifold, and changing. Togetherness is a problem, an open question, a factor constantly directing action, which makes it an object of interest. The fundamentality of movement leads to a few points. First, being stationary is relative; stability only means movement which is slower than its environment instead of something absolute. The 1 movement of a wall is slower than the movement of human bodies. The movement of a road is slower than the movement of a car travelling on it. Second, if everything is moving, creating movement is not difficult. Staying still, however, is an achievement. The stability of things is an accomplishment. The stability of a religious community requires strict adherence to the way of life, a rural community requires a vast amount of repeated, shared action and rituals, a commonwealth requires constant diplomatic interaction. If all existence is togetherness, no one can dance alone. Dancing means dancing with spaces, objects, technologies, and natural elements. Always. However, to put this in a reverse perspective, as all dance is communal, this means that there is nothing particularly interesting about the communality of dancing. What is interesting is to discern to which particular togetherness people are paying attention and which is decided to be left and stabilised in the background. What is surprising? Which movement rotates forward? 2