Quotes & Sayings


We, and creation itself, actualize the possibilities of the God who sustains the world, towards becoming in the world in a fuller, more deeper way. - R.E. Slater

There is urgency in coming to see the world as a web of interrelated processes of which we are integral parts, so that all of our choices and actions have [consequential effects upon] the world around us. - Process Metaphysician Alfred North Whitehead

Kurt Gödel's Incompleteness Theorem says (i) all closed systems are unprovable within themselves and, that (ii) all open systems are rightly understood as incomplete. - R.E. Slater

The most true thing about you is what God has said to you in Christ, "You are My Beloved." - Tripp Fuller

The God among us is the God who refuses to be God without us, so great is God's Love. - Tripp Fuller

According to some Christian outlooks we were made for another world. Perhaps, rather, we were made for this world to recreate, reclaim, redeem, and renew unto God's future aspiration by the power of His Spirit. - R.E. Slater

Our eschatological ethos is to love. To stand with those who are oppressed. To stand against those who are oppressing. It is that simple. Love is our only calling and Christian Hope. - R.E. Slater

Secularization theory has been massively falsified. We don't live in an age of secularity. We live in an age of explosive, pervasive religiosity... an age of religious pluralism. - Peter L. Berger

Exploring the edge of life and faith in a post-everything world. - Todd Littleton

I don't need another reason to believe, your love is all around for me to see. – Anon

Thou art our need; and in giving us more of thyself thou givest us all. - Khalil Gibran, Prayer XXIII

Be careful what you pretend to be. You become what you pretend to be. - Kurt Vonnegut

Religious beliefs, far from being primary, are often shaped and adjusted by our social goals. - Jim Forest

We become who we are by what we believe and can justify. - R.E. Slater

People, even more than things, need to be restored, renewed, revived, reclaimed, and redeemed; never throw out anyone. – Anon

Certainly, God's love has made fools of us all. - R.E. Slater

An apocalyptic Christian faith doesn't wait for Jesus to come, but for Jesus to become in our midst. - R.E. Slater

Christian belief in God begins with the cross and resurrection of Jesus, not with rational apologetics. - Eberhard Jüngel, Jürgen Moltmann

Our knowledge of God is through the 'I-Thou' encounter, not in finding God at the end of a syllogism or argument. There is a grave danger in any Christian treatment of God as an object. The God of Jesus Christ and Scripture is irreducibly subject and never made as an object, a force, a power, or a principle that can be manipulated. - Emil Brunner

“Ehyeh Asher Ehyeh” means "I will be that who I have yet to become." - God (Ex 3.14) or, conversely, “I AM who I AM Becoming.”

Our job is to love others without stopping to inquire whether or not they are worthy. - Thomas Merton

The church is God's world-changing social experiment of bringing unlikes and differents to the Eucharist/Communion table to share life with one another as a new kind of family. When this happens, we show to the world what love, justice, peace, reconciliation, and life together is designed by God to be. The church is God's show-and-tell for the world to see how God wants us to live as a blended, global, polypluralistic family united with one will, by one Lord, and baptized by one Spirit. – Anon

The cross that is planted at the heart of the history of the world cannot be uprooted. - Jacques Ellul

The Unity in whose loving presence the universe unfolds is inside each person as a call to welcome the stranger, protect animals and the earth, respect the dignity of each person, think new thoughts, and help bring about ecological civilizations. - John Cobb & Farhan A. Shah

If you board the wrong train it is of no use running along the corridors of the train in the other direction. - Dietrich Bonhoeffer

God's justice is restorative rather than punitive; His discipline is merciful rather than punishing; His power is made perfect in weakness; and His grace is sufficient for all. – Anon

Our little [biblical] systems have their day; they have their day and cease to be. They are but broken lights of Thee, and Thou, O God art more than they. - Alfred Lord Tennyson

We can’t control God; God is uncontrollable. God can’t control us; God’s love is uncontrolling! - Thomas Jay Oord

Life in perspective but always in process... as we are relational beings in process to one another, so life events are in process in relation to each event... as God is to Self, is to world, is to us... like Father, like sons and daughters, like events... life in process yet always in perspective. - R.E. Slater

To promote societal transition to sustainable ways of living and a global society founded on a shared ethical framework which includes respect and care for the community of life, ecological integrity, universal human rights, respect for diversity, economic justice, democracy, and a culture of peace. - The Earth Charter Mission Statement

Christian humanism is the belief that human freedom, individual conscience, and unencumbered rational inquiry are compatible with the practice of Christianity or even intrinsic in its doctrine. It represents a philosophical union of Christian faith and classical humanist principles. - Scott Postma

It is never wise to have a self-appointed religious institution determine a nation's moral code. The opportunities for moral compromise and failure are high; the moral codes and creeds assuredly racist, discriminatory, or subjectively and religiously defined; and the pronouncement of inhumanitarian political objectives quite predictable. - R.E. Slater

God's love must both center and define the Christian faith and all religious or human faiths seeking human and ecological balance in worlds of subtraction, harm, tragedy, and evil. - R.E. Slater

In Whitehead’s process ontology, we can think of the experiential ground of reality as an eternal pulse whereby what is objectively public in one moment becomes subjectively prehended in the next, and whereby the subject that emerges from its feelings then perishes into public expression as an object (or “superject”) aiming for novelty. There is a rhythm of Being between object and subject, not an ontological division. This rhythm powers the creative growth of the universe from one occasion of experience to the next. This is the Whiteheadian mantra: “The many become one and are increased by one.” - Matthew Segall

Without Love there is no Truth. And True Truth is always Loving. There is no dichotomy between these terms but only seamless integration. This is the premier centering focus of a Processual Theology of Love. - R.E. Slater

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Note: Generally I do not respond to commentary. I may read the comments but wish to reserve my time to write (or write from the comments I read). Instead, I'd like to see our community help one another and in the helping encourage and exhort each of us towards Christian love in Christ Jesus our Lord and Savior. - re slater

Thursday, July 9, 2026

Why Process? (12)



ESSAY TWELVE
III. The Philosophy of Reality

Reality → Ontology → Metaphysics → Interpretation → Ethics → Participation

Why Process?

Metaphysics XII - Toward an Open Relational Metaphysics

by R.E. Slater and ChatGPT


Reality does not ask us to defend our philosophies.
It asks whether our philosophies correspond to reality.
- R. E. Slater

Being is the enduring achievement of becoming.
- R.E. Slater

The Dao is ever-flowing.
- Dao De Jing

Process is not an aspect of reality;
it is the very mode of its existence.
- Nicholas Rescher

Every philosophy eventually becomes a way of living.
- R. E. Slater


Essay Outline
Preface
I. Why Process?
II. From Substance to Relation
III. Recovering Becoming
IV. Why Relation Matters
V. Emergence, Embodiment, and the Creativity of Reality
VI. Toward an Open Relational Process Metaphysics
VII. An Invitation to Continue the Conversation
Bibliography


Preface

The previous three essays have traced a long philosophical journey. We began by asking the deceptively simple question, What is reality? We then surveyed the great philosophical traditions that have sought to answer that question across civilizations and centuries before turning to the principal metaphysical conversations shaping contemporary philosophy today.

Taken individually, these traditions often appear to compete with one another. Some emphasize substance, others relation; some permanence, others change; some consciousness, others matter; some reason, others experience. Yet viewed together, another possibility begins to emerge. Beneath their many differences, certain themes recur with remarkable persistence. Relation, emergence, interdependence, creativity, process, and participation increasingly appear - not as isolated ideas - but as recurring attempts to understand the same reality from different philosophical horizons.

This observation does not establish a new metaphysical system, nor does it diminish the enduring contributions of earlier philosophies. Rather, it invites a different question. Instead of asking which philosophical system ought to prevail, we may ask whether the recurring patterns appearing across many contemporary conversations point toward a more comprehensive understanding of reality itself.

The purpose of this essay is therefore not to defend process-relational philosophy simply because it is one philosophical option among many. Rather, it asks why process and relational metaphysics have re-emerged with renewed significance in contemporary thought. What questions do they answer particularly well? What limitations of classical substance metaphysics do they seek to address? Why have ideas once considered peripheral increasingly become central to discussions concerning emergence, ecology, consciousness, complexity, and the nature of existence itself?

These questions guide the essays that follow. Our purpose remains what it has always been throughout this series: not to persuade reality to conform to our philosophical preferences, but to allow our philosophical understanding to correspond as faithfully as possible to the reality we all inhabit.


I. Why Process?

Every age has sought the foundations of reality.
Ours increasingly discovers that those foundations may themselves be relational.
- R. E. Slater

For much of Western philosophy, reality was understood primarily through the language of enduring substances. From Plato's eternal Forms to Aristotle's conception of substance (ousia), from medieval scholasticism to many modern philosophical systems, permanence often served as the measure of what was considered most real. Change certainly occurred, but it was frequently regarded as secondary to the more enduring realities that made change intelligible.

Yet the previous essays have revealed something remarkable.

Across many of today's philosophical conversations - whether concerning emergence, consciousness, ecology, systems thinking, information, or relational ontology - a different emphasis has begun to appear. Independent thinkers, often working from very different assumptions and pursuing very different questions, repeatedly return to the language of relation, development, interdependence, and becoming. Although they do not always describe themselves as process philosophers, many nevertheless find themselves asking questions that process-relational philosophy has long considered central.

This convergence deserves careful attention. It does not prove that process metaphysics is correct, nor does it invalidate the substantial contributions of earlier philosophical traditions. It does, however, suggest that reality itself may be inviting philosophers to reconsider assumptions that have guided metaphysical reflection for centuries. If so, then process philosophy deserves renewed consideration - not because it is new, but because it appears capable of integrating insights that increasingly emerge across otherwise diverse fields of inquiry.

The question before us is therefore not whether everything changes. Few contemporary philosophers would deny that reality exhibits continual transformation. The deeper question is whether change belongs merely to the appearance of reality, or whether becoming itself belongs to reality's deepest nature.

That question marks a significant turning point in the history of metaphysics.

For if reality is fundamentally relational, if novelty genuinely emerges, if identities persist through ongoing interaction rather than isolated independence, then metaphysics itself must learn to speak a different language. It must explain not only what things are, but how they continually become what they are.

It is this possibility that process philosophy places before us.


II. From Substance to Relation

The question is whether change itself belongs to the very nature of reality.
- R.E. Slater

For much of Western philosophy, metaphysical reflection sought to identify the enduring substance underlying the changing world. This search proved remarkably fruitful. It provided philosophical language for permanence, identity, continuity, and order. Without these insights, neither science nor philosophy could adequately explain why the world exhibits such remarkable stability amid continual change.

Yet the contemporary conversation increasingly suggests that another question deserves equal attention. Rather than asking only What endures?, philosophers increasingly ask How does enduring reality come to be?

This shift subtly transforms the metaphysical landscape. Substance is no longer viewed simply as the starting point of philosophical explanation. Increasingly, it is understood as something that itself requires explanation. Stable identities, enduring organisms, coherent ecosystems, social institutions, and even galaxies appear not as isolated givens but as relatively enduring achievements arising through countless ongoing relationships.

A process-relational metaphysics therefore begins from a different intuition. Rather than treating relation as something that exists between independently complete entities, it asks whether relation itself belongs to the very constitution of reality. If so, becoming is no longer merely the movement of already existing things. Becoming becomes the continual emergence of reality through relational participatory interaction itself.

One way of expressing this intuition is through a simple metaphysical progression:

Relation → Becoming → Embodiment

Relation becomes the metaphysical origin. Becoming becomes the activity through which reality unfolds. Embodiment becomes the temporary achievement of that activity.
  • Relations give rise to becoming (the process)
  • Becoming gradually stabilizes into enduring embodiments (the activity)
  • Those embodiments enter new relationships, giving rise to further becoming (the achievement)

Reality therefore appears neither as a collection of isolated substances nor as perpetual, undifferentiated flux. Rather, relatively stable identities emerge through ongoing relational processes whose temporary achievements become the starting point for further transformation.

Within this understanding, being and becoming no longer stand opposed to one another. Being may instead be understood as the enduring embodiment of successful becoming, while becoming continually renews the relations through which new forms of existence emerge. Stability and change cease to be philosophical rivals. They become complementary dimensions of one continuously unfolding reality.
This perspective does not reject the substantial insights of Plato or Aristotle. Rather, it seeks to reinterpret them within a broader metaphysical horizon. Substance remains indispensable for describing persistence, identity, and continuity. A process-relational metaphysics simply asks whether these enduring realities themselves emerge through deeper patterns of relational becoming.

If this possibility proves persuasive, then relation is no longer a secondary characteristic of independently existing things. It becomes one of the primary conditions through which reality continually constitutes itself.


III. Recovering Becoming

Every age has sought the foundations of reality.
Ours increasingly discovers that those foundations may themselves be relational.
- R. E. Slater

For more than two millennia, Western metaphysics has often been narrated as the triumph of being over becoming. From Parmenides through Plato and Aristotle, permanence increasingly became the defining characteristic of what was considered most fully real. Change certainly occurred, yet it was commonly understood as something happening to enduring realities rather than as something constitutive of reality itself.

Yet this telling of philosophical history is only part of the story.

The question of becoming never disappeared. It remained present, sometimes quietly, sometimes forcefully, whenever philosophers sought to explain life, growth, novelty, creativity, history, evolution, and transformation. Heraclitus' insight that reality is characterized by continual change never ceased challenging metaphysics to account not only for permanence but also for emergence.

The modern revival of process-relational thought should therefore not be understood as an abrupt departure from the Western tradition. It is better understood as the recovery of a conversation that had long remained in the background. Rather than rejecting classical metaphysics, contemporary process-relational philosophy asks whether becoming deserves a more foundational place alongside being in our understanding of reality.

Alfred North Whitehead gave this recovery its most comprehensive philosophical expression. Rather than beginning with enduring substances, Whitehead proposed that reality is fundamentally composed of events, occasions, and ongoing processes of creative becoming. Stability, on this view, is not denied. It is explained. Enduring objects, organisms, and persons become relatively stable achievements arising from continuous relational activity rather than permanently self-contained substances.

Since Whitehead, process philosophy has continued to develop through thinkers such as Charles Hartshorne, John B. Cobb Jr., David Ray Griffin, and Nicholas Rescher. Yet contemporary process-relational metaphysics has also been enriched by conversations extending well beyond the classical process tradition. Developments in emergence theory, ecological philosophy, systems thinking, relational ontology, and complexity studies have all reinforced the intuition that reality may be better understood through patterns of dynamic relation than through static independence alone.

For this reason, process-relational metaphysics should not be viewed merely as one philosophical school among many. It increasingly functions as a meeting place where several independent philosophical conversations converge. What began as a recovery of becoming through Whitehead has gradually expanded into a broader investigation of relation, emergence, embodiment, participation, and the ongoing creativity of reality itself.

This does not mean that the classical Greek questions concerning substance, identity, or permanence have been abandoned. On the contrary, they remain indispensable. The difference lies in how they are interpreted. Rather than treating permanence as metaphysically primary, process-relational philosophy increasingly understands enduring realities as relatively stable embodiments emerging through continuing relational becoming.

In this way, the older philosophical polarity between being and becoming begins to soften. Instead of opposing one another, they become mutually illuminating. Being speaks of persistence. Becoming speaks of generation. Relation discloses the dynamic through which both are continually held together.


IV. Why Relation Matters

Nothing exists entirely by itself.
Everything becomes through relation.
- R. E. Slater

If becoming describes the dynamic character of reality, relation describes the medium through which becoming occurs. Nothing becomes entirely by itself. Every process unfolds within an ever-expanding network of relationships that both enable and constrain what may emerge.

This insight has become increasingly significant across contemporary philosophy. Organisms develop within ecological communities. Persons mature within families, cultures, and histories. Languages arise through shared human experience. Scientific knowledge advances through collaborative inquiry. Even the physical universe is increasingly described through interacting fields, systems, and networks rather than isolated objects existing independently of one another.

A process-relational metaphysics therefore proposes that relation is not merely something added to already complete entities. Rather, relation belongs to the very conditions through which entities become what they are. Identity is not erased by relation; it is constituted through relation. Independence remains possible, but only as a relative achievement emerging within larger patterns of mutual dependence.

This perspective helps explain why contemporary discussions increasingly emphasize emergence, complexity, embodiment, ecology, and participation. Each of these approaches recognizes that wholes frequently exhibit properties that cannot be adequately explained by examining isolated components alone. Novelty appears through interaction. Order develops through cooperation. Stability emerges through dynamic equilibrium. Reality continually demonstrates that relationship is often more explanatory than isolation.

This does not imply that relation dissolves individuality. On the contrary, relations make individuality possible. Every organism possesses its own integrity precisely because it participates within larger relational systems that sustain its existence. Individuality and community therefore become complementary rather than contradictory. Each continually gives meaning to the other.

One of the most significant consequences of this perspective concerns the nature of identity itself. Classical metaphysics often understood identity as something possessed. A process-relational metaphysics increasingly understands identity as something achieved. Every enduring reality embodies a history of successful relationships that have gradually stabilized into coherent forms. Identity therefore becomes less a static possession than an ongoing accomplishment continually renewed through participation in the larger realities from which it arises.

Seen in this light, relation is no longer simply one characteristic among many. It becomes one of the primary conditions through which becoming generates embodiment, embodiment sustains identity, and identity enters new relationships that give rise to further becoming. Reality reveals itself not as an aggregation of isolated parts but as an ever-deepening community of relational participation.


V. Emergence, Embodiment, and the Creativity of Reality

Being is the enduring achievement of becoming.
- R. E. Slater

Reality not only becomes - it continually enlarges the possibilities of becoming.
- R.E. Slater

For a process-relational metaphysics, reality is not merely characterized by continual activity. Activity alone explains little. The deeper question concerns how genuinely new realities arise without abandoning the continuity from which they emerge.

This is the philosophical significance of emergence.

Emergence proposes that reality possesses an inherent capacity to generate forms of organization that cannot be fully explained by examining their individual components in isolation. New possibilities arise through relationship itself. Complexity gives rise to coherence. Coherence gradually stabilizes into embodied forms. Embodiment, in turn, becomes the starting point for further participation in an ever-expanding web of relations.

This perspective helps explain why reality repeatedly exhibits creativity without requiring arbitrary interruption. Galaxies form. Stars ignite. Planets develop. Life emerges. Consciousness awakens. Cultures evolve. Moral communities arise. At every level, enduring structures appear not as static givens but as relatively stable achievements arising through ongoing processes of relational organization. Each achievement, in turn, becomes the condition for further achievements. Reality does not simply continue; it continually enlarges the possibilities of its own becoming.

Within this understanding, embodiment becomes one of the central categories of metaphysical reflection. Reality does not remain an abstract flow of becoming. Becoming continually seeks embodiment. Every organism, ecosystem, culture, institution, and person represents a temporary but genuine achievement through which relational activity acquires coherent form.

Embodiment should therefore not be understood as the termination of becoming. Rather, embodiment provides becoming with continuity. Stable identities endure because relational patterns continue to sustain them. When those relationships change, embodiments also transform, giving rise to new possibilities of becoming. Reality continually renews itself through this rhythm of emergence, embodiment, and participation.

One may therefore summarize the process-relational movement of reality in a simple progression:

Relation → Becoming → Embodiment → Participation

  • Relation generates becoming.
  • Becoming achieves embodiment.
  • Embodiment enters participation.
  • Participation generates new relations.

Reality unfolds not through repetition but through an ever-deepening spiral of creative development in which each embodiment enriches the field of future relations, and each new relation opens further possibilities for becoming.

There are many examples here but the one which comes to mind almost immediately is Extended Evolutionary Synthesis (EES). Where classical Neo-Darwinism asked, "How do organisms change?" EES ask, "How do developmental systems, organisms, environments, behaviors, cultures, and inherited relationships co-generate evolutionary novelty?" That is profoundly process-relational which is seen in its elementary grammar: interaction, niche construction, developmental plasticity, epigenetics, reciprocal causation, ecological inheritance, systems, emergence. These are all relational concepts.

Seen from this perspective, creativity is no longer an occasional feature of the universe. It belongs to the very manner in which reality continually constitutes itself. Reality not only becomes; it continually generates new possibilities for becoming. Every successful embodiment enlarges the horizon from which future embodiments may emerge.

This understanding neither dissolves permanence into perpetual change nor freezes becoming into static being. Instead, it recognizes reality as an open process-relational movement in which persistence and transformation continually sustain one another.


VI. Toward an Open Relational Process Metaphysics

Every philosophy eventually becomes a way of living.
- R. E. Slater

Throughout this essay we have followed a gradual movement in contemporary metaphysical thought. We began with the recovery of becoming, considered the explanatory significance of relation, and explored how emergence and embodiment continually generate new possibilities within reality itself. Together these developments suggest that metaphysics may be entering a new phase of philosophical reflection.

An open relational process metaphysics begins not with isolated substances but with reality understood as fundamentally relational, dynamic, and participatory. Rather than assuming that permanence alone defines what is ultimately real, it asks how enduring realities continually arise through ongoing patterns of relation, becoming, and embodiment.

This openness should not be confused with uncertainty or philosophical relativism. Reality itself remains the measure of every metaphysical proposal. Openness simply acknowledges that our understanding of reality remains continually subject to refinement as philosophical reflection, scientific discovery, historical experience, and human understanding continue to develop. A metaphysics that seeks correspondence with reality must therefore remain capable of learning from reality.

For this reason, an open relational process metaphysics understands truth not as a possession secured once and for all but as an ongoing correspondence between human understanding and the reality we inhabit. Philosophical systems remain indispensable, yet none should become immune from revision when reality itself discloses new dimensions of understanding.

This posture also helps explain why so many contemporary conversations appear increasingly relational in their explanatory grammar. Whether in ecology, systems theory, complexity studies, information philosophy, relational ontology, or developments such as the Extended Evolutionary Synthesis, independent fields increasingly describe reality through interaction, emergence, reciprocal influence, and dynamic organization rather than isolated mechanisms alone. Although these disciplines do not thereby become metaphysics, they nevertheless illustrate a broader intellectual movement toward relational modes of explanation.

Such observations do not establish an open relational process metaphysics as the final philosophical word. They do, however, suggest that reality may be inviting a broader metaphysical vocabulary than earlier substance-centered paradigms could easily provide.

Several recurring themes now appear with increasing frequency throughout contemporary philosophical reflection:

  • relation before isolation,
  • becoming alongside being,
  • embodiment rather than abstraction,
  • emergence rather than reduction,
  • participation rather than detachment,
  • creativity rather than determinism,
  • openness rather than closure.

These themes do not constitute a finished philosophical system. They represent recurring patterns that increasingly appear across contemporary metaphysical reflection. Together they suggest a vision of reality that is less mechanical than organic, less static than dynamic, less fragmented than relational, and less closed than continuously unfolding.

An open relational process metaphysics therefore does not seek to replace the great philosophical traditions that preceded it. Rather, it seeks to gather their enduring insights into a broader conversation. Plato's concern for enduring reality, Aristotle's concern for intelligible order, the medieval search for coherence, the modern emphasis upon reason, the existential concern for lived existence, the hermeneutical concern for interpretation, the ecological concern for interdependence, and contemporary investigations into emergence, consciousness, complexity, and information each illuminate genuine dimensions of the same reality.

The question is therefore no longer whether one philosophical tradition should triumph over another. Increasingly, the question becomes whether reality itself invites a more comprehensive metaphysical grammar capable of holding these insights together without diminishing their distinctive contributions.

An open relational process metaphysics does not claim to have completed that task. It simply accepts the invitation to continue it.


VII. An Invitation to Continue the Conversation

Reality does not ask us to defend our philosophies.
It asks whether our philosophies correspond to reality.
- R. E. Slater

The purpose of this essay has not been to establish an open relational process metaphysics as the final interpretation of reality. Philosophy rarely advances through finality. Rather, it advances through the continual refinement of understanding as new insights illuminate old questions and familiar assumptions are reconsidered in light of a deeper correspondence with the world we inhabit.

The journey we have traced throughout these essays suggests that contemporary metaphysics is undergoing precisely such a period of renewal. Independent philosophical conversations increasingly converge upon themes of relation, becoming, emergence, embodiment, participation, and openness. They do not always arrive at identical conclusions, nor should they be expected to. Yet together they suggest that reality may be more profoundly relational, dynamic, and generative than many earlier metaphysical systems could fully explain.

An open relational process metaphysics emerges from this wider conversation rather than standing apart from it. It does not seek to replace the enduring wisdom of earlier traditions, but to gather their lasting insights into a broader and more coherent understanding of reality. In doing so, it remains committed to a principle that has guided this series from its beginning: philosophy exists not to preserve its own systems, but continually to refine them in response to reality itself.

The essays that follow therefore move beyond the question of why a process-relational understanding has become increasingly compelling. They begin asking what such a metaphysics might disclose about the nature of existence, identity, consciousness, freedom, value, culture, religion, and the future of human participation within an unfinished universe.

For if reality is fundamentally relational, then philosophy can no longer remain merely descriptive.

It must also become participatory.

Every metaphysic eventually becomes a way of inhabiting the world.


BIBLIOGRAPHY

Classical Process Philosophy

Cobb, John B., Jr. A Christian Natural Theology. 2nd ed. Louisville, KY: Westminster John Knox Press, 2007.

Griffin, David Ray. Reenchantment without Supernaturalism: A Process Philosophy of Religion. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2001.

Hartshorne, Charles. Reality as Social Process: Studies in Metaphysics and Religion. New York: Hafner Publishing, 1953.

Rescher, Nicholas. Process Metaphysics: An Introduction to Process Philosophy. Albany: State University of New York Press, 1996.

Whitehead, Alfred North. Adventures of Ideas. New York: Free Press, 1967.

———. Modes of Thought. New York: Free Press, 1968.

———. Process and Reality: An Essay in Cosmology. Corrected ed. Edited by David Ray Griffin and Donald W. Sherburne. New York: Free Press, 1978.

———. Science and the Modern World. New York: Free Press, 1967.


Relational Ontology and Contemporary Metaphysics

Ferraris, Maurizio. Manifesto of New Realism. Albany: State University of New York Press, 2014.

Gabriel, Markus. Why the World Does Not Exist. Cambridge: Polity Press, 2015.

McDaniel, Kris. The Fragmentation of Being. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2017.

Schaffer, Jonathan. "On What Grounds What." In Metametaphysics: New Essays on the Foundations of Ontology, edited by David Chalmers, David Manley, and Ryan Wasserman, 347–383. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2009.

Sider, Theodore. Writing the Book of the World. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2011.

Williamson, Timothy. The Philosophy of Philosophy. Malden, MA: Blackwell Publishing, 2007.


Emergence, Systems, and Complexity

Capra, Fritjof. The Web of Life: A New Scientific Understanding of Living Systems. New York: Anchor Books, 1997.

Capra, Fritjof, and Pier Luigi Luisi. The Systems View of Life. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2014.

Holland, John H. Emergence: From Chaos to Order. Reading, MA: Perseus Books, 1998.

Meadows, Donella H. Thinking in Systems: A Primer. White River Junction, VT: Chelsea Green Publishing, 2008.

Mitchell, Melanie. Complexity: A Guided Tour. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2009.

Morin, Edgar. On Complexity. Cresskill, NJ: Hampton Press, 2008.


Evolution and Emergence

Jablonka, Eva, and Marion J. Lamb. Evolution in Four Dimensions. 2nd ed. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2014.

Laland, Kevin N. Darwin's Unfinished Symphony: How Culture Made the Human Mind. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2017.

Laland, Kevin N., Tobias Uller, Marcus W. Feldman, Kim Sterelny, Gerd B. Müller, Armin Moczek, Eva Jablonka, and John Odling-Smee. "The Extended Evolutionary Synthesis: Its Structure, Assumptions and Predictions." Proceedings of the Royal Society B 282, no. 1813 (2015).

Noble, Denis. Dance to the Tune of Life: Biological Relativity. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2016.

Pigliucci, Massimo. Evolution: The Extended Synthesis. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2010.


Consciousness and Participation

Chalmers, David J. The Conscious Mind. New York: Oxford University Press, 1996.

Goff, Philip. Galileo's Error. New York: Pantheon Books, 2019.

Kastrup, Bernardo. The Idea of the World. Winchester, UK: Iff Books, 2019.

Nagel, Thomas. Mind and Cosmos. New York: Oxford University Press, 2012.


Reference Works

Craig, Edward, ed. Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy. London: Routledge, 1998.

Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy.

Russell, Bertrand. A History of Western Philosophy. New York: Simon & Schuster, 1945.

Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Edited by Edward N. Zalta and Uri Nodelman.



Wednesday, July 8, 2026

Reality in Contemporary Thought (11)



ESSAY ELEVEN
III. The Philosophy of Reality

Reality → Ontology → Metaphysics → Interpretation → Ethics → Participation

Reality in Contemporary Thought

Metaphysics XI - Contemporary Conversations on the Nature of Reality

by R.E. Slater and ChatGPT


Reality remains one.
Our questions become richer.
Our conversations become deeper.
- R. E. Slater

Conversation has a spirit of its own.
- Hans-Georg Gadamer

Every philosophy seeks to illuminate reality.
No philosophy exhausts it.
- R. E. Slater


Essay Outline
Table: Contemporary Theories
Preface
I. Why Metaphysics Has Returned
II. Why Reality Continues to Matter
III. Reality Exists: The Return of Realism
IV. What Is Fundamental?
V. Consciousness and Reality
VI. Process, Emergence, and Relational Becoming
VII. Emerging Patterns within Philosophy
Bibliography


Major Metaphysical Proposals Shaping Today's Conversations

Contemporary ProposalFundamental ClaimWhat It ContributesLimitation / Question
New RealismReality exists independently of our interpretations.Reasserts objective reality after postmodernism.What kind of reality is it? (OAPEN)
Grounding TheorySome facts explain or "ground" other facts.Revives metaphysical explanation beyond simple reductionism.What ultimately grounds the grounding?
Ontic Structural RealismRelations and structures are more fundamental than objects.Brings metaphysics into conversation with modern physics.Can relations exist without relata? (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy)
Analytic IdealismUniversal consciousness is metaphysically primary.Revives idealism in contemporary analytic philosophy.Does consciousness adequately explain the physical world? (Wikipedia)
Naturalistic / Scientific MetaphysicsMetaphysics should follow the sciences.Keeps philosophy accountable to empirical inquiry.Does science alone answer metaphysical questions? (arXiv)
Ontological PluralismReality may have multiple equally fundamental domains.Challenges single-foundation metaphysics.How do the domains relate? (Wikipedia)
Information-Based OntologiesInformation may be more fundamental than matter.Connects philosophy with computation and complexity.Is information itself ontologically basic?
Process / Event OntologiesBecoming, events, and relations are more fundamental than substances.Revives Whitehead and other process thinkers in light of emergence and systems thinking.Can enduring identity be adequately explained? (Wikipedia)


Preface

The previous essay traced humanity's enduring attempts to understand reality across civilizations, cultures, and historical eras. From the earliest philosophical reflections of Greece and Asia through the medieval synthesis and the modern reimagining of reality, one theme remained remarkably constant: every generation inherited the same world while interpreting it through new intellectual horizons.

Today that conversation continues. Contemporary metaphysics is no longer dominated by a single philosophical system or cultural tradition. Instead, philosophers engage an expanding landscape of proposals shaped not only by the history of philosophy but also by developments in science, consciousness studies, ecology, systems theory, information science, and renewed dialogue between Eastern and Western thought. Questions once thought settled have returned with unexpected vitality, while entirely new questions have emerged from humanity's growing understanding of the universe.

The purpose of this essay is not to determine which contemporary proposal is ultimately correct. Rather, it is to introduce the principal metaphysical conversations presently shaping philosophical reflection on the nature of reality. Each proposal illuminates important dimensions of existence while leaving further questions to be explored. By listening carefully to these diverse voices, we begin to recognize recurring themes that may point toward a more comprehensive understanding of reality itself.


I. Why Metaphysics Has Returned

Every age believes it has outgrown metaphysics.
Yet every age eventually discovers that it has only begun
asking the same metaphysical questions differently.

During much of the twentieth century, many philosophers believed that metaphysics had reached its limits. Influenced by logical positivism, linguistic analysis, and later postmodern skepticism, philosophical attention often shifted away from traditional questions concerning ultimate reality while moving towards the analysis of language, meaning, culture, and human interpretation. Some even suggested that metaphysics itself had become an obsolete enterprise.

Yet the questions never disappeared.

Instead, they quietly returned through new intellectual pathways. Advances in cosmology reopened questions concerning the origin and structure of the universe. Biology and evolutionary theory raised new questions concerning emergence, life, and complexity. Consciousness studies challenged reductionist explanations of mind. Ecology revealed the profoundly relational character of living systems. Information theory, systems science, and network theory encouraged philosophers to reconsider whether reality might be fundamentally relational rather than merely substantial.

At the same time, philosophy itself began rediscovering questions that earlier generations had often regarded as permanently settled. Is reality fundamentally composed of things, relations, events, or processes? Does consciousness emerge from matter, or does consciousness itself reveal something fundamental about reality? Can scientific investigation alone explain existence, or does reality require metaphysical interpretation beyond empirical description? What ultimately grounds existence itself?

These developments have contributed to what many philosophers now regard as a genuine renaissance of metaphysical inquiry. Contemporary metaphysics is no longer content merely to describe language or critique earlier philosophical systems. Once again, philosophers are asking what reality itself may be and how its deepest structures might best be understood.

This renewed conversation differs significantly from many earlier periods of philosophical history. Contemporary thinkers increasingly work across disciplinary boundaries, drawing insights from philosophy, science, mathematics, psychology, cognitive studies, ecology, and comparative philosophy. Rather than replacing one another, these conversations frequently intersect, overlap, and enrich one another in unexpected ways.

The result is not a single new metaphysical system but an expanding landscape of serious philosophical proposals. Some recover ancient insights in contemporary form. Others develop entirely new conceptual frameworks. Together they demonstrate that the central question of metaphysics remains as vital today as it has ever been:

What kind of reality gives rise to the world we experience?


II. Why Reality Continues to Matter

The unexamined life is not worth living.
- Socrates

The renewed interest in metaphysics reflects more than an academic revival. Beneath contemporary philosophical debates lies a deeper conviction: how we understand reality profoundly shapes how we understand ourselves, one another, and the world we inhabit.

Every conception of reality carries practical consequences. If reality is fundamentally material, then consciousness, value, and purpose must somehow emerge from material processes. If consciousness is fundamental, then mind occupies a different place within the universe. If reality consists primarily of relations rather than isolated substances, then identity, community, ecology, and ethics acquire new significance. Metaphysics is therefore never merely speculative. It quietly informs the ways individuals and civilizations interpret existence itself.

For this reason, the question of reality remains both meaningful and necessary. It is meaningful because human beings continually seek coherence between experience, knowledge, and existence. It is necessary because every scientific investigation, ethical decision, political vision, and religious tradition rests - whether consciously or not - upon assumptions concerning the nature of reality itself. We may avoid metaphysical reflection, but we cannot avoid living according to some understanding of reality.

The contemporary proposals introduced in this essay therefore represent more than competing philosophical theories. They are thoughtful attempts to answer enduring questions that every generation must confront anew. Their value lies not only in the answers they propose but also in the questions they preserve - questions concerning existence, consciousness, relation, emergence, identity, freedom, and meaning. The conversation continues because reality continues to invite inquiry.


III. Reality Exists: The Return of Realism

The real is not a construction of our minds,
even though our understanding of it always is.

Contemporary metaphysics begins from a surprisingly simple conviction: reality exists independently of our descriptions of it. Although this claim may appear obvious, it represents a significant philosophical recovery following several decades during which many thinkers emphasized language, culture, interpretation, and social construction as the primary lenses through which reality is understood.

The movement commonly known as New Realism argues that reality is not created by human consciousness, language, or culture, even though every act of knowing is inevitably shaped by our humanity. Philosophers such as Maurizio Ferraris and Markus Gabriel contend that the world continually resists our interpretations, reminding us that reality possesses an independence which philosophy must respect rather than dissolve into subjective perspectives.

This renewed realism should not be understood as a simple return to earlier forms of naïve realism. Contemporary realists generally acknowledge that all knowledge is mediated through human experience, conceptual frameworks, and historical context. Nevertheless, they insist that interpretation presupposes something that is interpreted. Reality therefore remains the enduring horizon toward which every philosophical inquiry is directed.

Closely related discussions have emerged through Critical Realism, associated especially with Roy Bhaskar. Critical realism distinguishes between reality as it exists, the mechanisms through which reality operates, and the experiences through which human beings encounter it. Reality, according to this view, possesses depths that often exceed immediate observation, requiring philosophical investigation alongside empirical science.

Together these approaches have restored confidence that metaphysics may once again ask meaningful questions concerning reality itself. They remind contemporary philosophy that while human understanding is always partial, reality remains something more than the sum of our interpretations.


IV. What Is Fundamental?

Seek simplicity and distrust it.
- Alfred North Whitehead

If contemporary realism reaffirms that reality exists independently of our interpretations, another family of contemporary proposals asks a different question altogether:

What, if anything, is most fundamental?

For much of Western philosophy, this question was answered by identifying the basic substances from which everything else is composed. Whether those substances were conceived as matter, mind, atoms, forms, or divine being, philosophers generally sought some enduring foundation underlying the changing world of experience.

Many contemporary metaphysicians now approach this question differently. Rather than searching for a single ultimate substance, they investigate the explanatory structures through which reality becomes intelligible. Increasingly, philosophers ask whether relation, structure, information, emergence, or explanatory dependence may be more fundamental than independently existing things.

One important development has been Grounding Theory. Rather than asking simply What exists?, grounding asks why one aspect of reality depends upon another. Some facts appear to make other facts true. Biological life depends upon chemistry. Chemical processes depend upon physics. Social institutions depend upon human communities. Grounding therefore shifts metaphysical attention from isolated entities toward relationships of dependence and explanation. Reality becomes understood not merely as a collection of things but as an ordered hierarchy of interconnected levels.

A second proposal, Ontic Structural Realism, advances an even more provocative claim. Drawing inspiration from contemporary physics, it suggests that structures and relations may be more fundamental than the objects traditionally thought to occupy them. Reality, on this view, is not primarily a universe of independently existing things but a network of enduring relationships from which identifiable objects emerge. Whether or not this proposal proves ultimately persuasive, it represents one of the most significant departures from classical substance metaphysics in contemporary philosophy.

Closely related discussions have emerged around information-based ontologies. Rather than treating information merely as something exchanged between intelligent beings, these proposals investigate whether informational patterns constitute one of reality's deepest organizing principles. Information, in this view, is not opposed to matter but may underlie the organization of physical systems, biological life, cognitive processes, and complex networks alike. Although still highly debated, such proposals reflect the growing recognition that reality may be ordered through patterns of relation rather than through isolated material components alone.

These contemporary proposals differ in important respects:

Grounding seeks explanatory order.

Structural realism emphasizes relational organization.

Information ontologies investigate underlying patterns.

Yet together they reveal a striking shift in philosophical attention. Increasingly, contemporary metaphysics is asking not simply What things exist? but How are things related? and What kinds of relationships make reality intelligible?

Whether these approaches ultimately succeed remains an open question. Yet they demonstrate that contemporary metaphysics is gradually moving beyond static conceptions of isolated substance toward more dynamic understandings of order, dependence, relation, and emergence. That shift will become increasingly significant as we continue surveying the remaining contemporary proposals.


V. Consciousness and Reality

Our normal waking consciousness... is but one special type of consciousness.
William James

Mind is no less a fact than matter.
R. E. Slater

For centuries, many philosophers assumed that consciousness could be understood only after reality itself had been explained. Contemporary metaphysics increasingly asks whether the opposite may also be true. Rather than treating consciousness as a secondary product of matter alone, many philosophers now ask whether consciousness reveals something fundamental about the nature of reality itself.

This renewed interest arises from what philosophers often call the hard problem of consciousness. While neuroscience has greatly advanced our understanding of brain function, many argue that the subjective experience of awareness - what it feels like to perceive color, experience beauty, suffer pain, or reflect upon one's own existence - remains resistant to purely physical explanation. The question is no longer simply how the brain functions, but why conscious experience exists at all.

One influential contemporary proposal is Analytic Idealism, most prominently associated with Bernardo Kastrup. Rather than viewing consciousness as something produced by physical matter, Analytic Idealism proposes that consciousness is the fundamental reality from which the physical world emerges. Individual minds are understood not as isolated substances but as localized expressions within a larger field of universal consciousness. Although many philosophers remain unconvinced by its conclusions, Analytic Idealism has reopened serious philosophical discussion concerning the relationship between mind and reality.

Closely related discussions include Panpsychism and Cosmopsychism. Panpsychism suggests that some elementary form of experience or subjectivity may be a pervasive feature of reality itself rather than an accidental product appearing only in highly evolved brains. Cosmopsychism, by contrast, proposes that consciousness belongs fundamentally to the universe as a whole, with individual minds participating as localized expressions within a larger cosmic consciousness. These proposals remain highly debated, yet they demonstrate that contemporary metaphysics is increasingly willing to reconsider questions that many earlier philosophers regarded as settled.

Other philosophers approach consciousness through theories of information and complexity. Some argue that consciousness emerges wherever information becomes sufficiently integrated or organized, suggesting that awareness reflects not merely biological processes but deeper principles governing the organization of complex systems. Whether such approaches ultimately succeed remains uncertain, yet they illustrate the increasingly interdisciplinary character of contemporary metaphysical inquiry.

What unites these otherwise diverse proposals is not agreement concerning the nature of consciousness but a shared recognition that consciousness cannot simply be ignored. Every account of reality must eventually explain why a universe capable of producing galaxies, living organisms, self-awareness, moral reflection, imagination, and scientific inquiry exists at all. Consciousness therefore remains one of the most significant frontiers in contemporary metaphysics.

The importance of these discussions extends well beyond the field of philosophy of mind. They challenge contemporary metaphysics to reconsider the relationship between matter and mind, subject and object, observer and observed. Whether consciousness proves fundamental, emergent, relational, or something not yet adequately conceived, it has become impossible to discuss the nature of reality without also confronting the mystery of conscious experience itself.


VI. Process, Emergence, and Relational Becoming

The art of progress is to preserve order amid change,
and to preserve change amid order.
Alfred North Whitehead

Among the most significant developments in contemporary metaphysics has been a renewed appreciation for process, emergence, and relational becoming. While earlier philosophies often sought reality's permanence in enduring substances, many contemporary thinkers have become increasingly interested in understanding how stable identities arise, persist, transform, and occasionally disappear within an ever-changing universe.

This shift reflects more than a renewed interest in Alfred North Whitehead's process philosophy. It also arises from broader developments across philosophy, ecology, systems thinking, evolutionary theory, and studies of complexity. Increasingly, reality appears less like a collection of independently existing objects and more like an unfolding web of dynamic relationships whose patterns continually generate new forms of order.

The concept of emergence has become especially important. Emergence proposes that genuinely new properties may arise through increasingly complex relationships without being reducible to the individual components from which they emerge. Life cannot be understood merely by listing its chemical constituents. Consciousness cannot be adequately described simply by cataloging neurons. Ecological systems exhibit patterns that exceed the behavior of individual organisms. Reality appears capable of generating novelty through relational organization itself.

Closely related to emergence is the growing influence of systems thinking. Rather than isolating individual parts for analysis alone, systems philosophy investigates how wholes arise through networks of interacting relationships. Identity increasingly becomes understood not as an isolated possession but as a consequence of participation within larger communities of relation. Organisms exist within ecosystems. Persons exist within societies. Galaxies exist within cosmic structures. Reality reveals itself through patterns of mutual dependence rather than isolated independence.

These developments have naturally renewed philosophical interest in process metaphysics. Alfred North Whitehead argued that reality is fundamentally composed not of static substances but of occasions, events, and ongoing processes of becoming. Enduring objects are understood not as permanently fixed entities but as relatively stable patterns arising from continual relational activity. Nicholas Rescher and other contemporary process philosophers have continued developing these insights, emphasizing that change, creativity, and emergence are not secondary features of reality but belong to its very structure.

Yet contemporary process thinking extends well beyond the boundaries of classical process philosophy. Ecological philosophy increasingly emphasizes the interdependence of living systems. Complexity studies investigate self-organization and adaptive change. Network theory explores the significance of relationships across biological, sociological, technological, and informational systems. Although these fields employ different vocabularies and pursue different questions, many converge upon a common intuition: reality is remarkably dynamic, relational, and continuously creative.

None of these developments establishes process metaphysics as the final or universally accepted interpretation of reality. Significant philosophical questions remain concerning persistence, identity, causation, consciousness, and the nature of enduring order. Nevertheless, contemporary philosophy increasingly recognizes that any adequate metaphysical account must explain not only why stable structures exist, but also how novelty continually emerges within them.

For this reason, process, emergence, and relational becoming have become indispensable themes within contemporary metaphysical discussion. Whether they ultimately prove foundational or complementary to other approaches remains an open question. What is increasingly clear, however, is that reality cannot be understood adequately through static categories alone. The world we inhabit continually exhibits movement, development, creativity, and transformation alongside persistence, continuity, and order.


VII. Emerging Patterns within Philosophy

Reality is one. Our descriptions are many.
Yet, if we listen carefully enough, those many descriptions
sometimes begin to reveal the same horizon.
- R. E. Slater

Having surveyed several of the principal metaphysical proposals shaping contemporary philosophy, an interesting observation begins to emerge. Although these approaches often differ profoundly in both method and conclusion, many are gradually converging upon similar questions concerning the nature of reality itself.

Few contemporary philosophers now understand reality as a completely isolated collection of independent substances existing without relation. Instead, increasing attention is given to networks of interaction, structural organization, explanatory dependence, emergence, information, consciousness, ecology, and process. Even where conclusions differ, the language of relation appears with remarkable frequency.

Likewise, the classical opposition between permanence and change has become increasingly nuanced. Rather than choosing between static being or perpetual becoming, many contemporary proposals seek to understand how enduring stability and continual transformation coexist within the same reality. Persistence is no longer understood as the absence of change, nor is change regarded as the negation of order. Instead, philosophers increasingly investigate how stable identities emerge, develop, adapt, and endure through ongoing relational processes.

Another noteworthy development concerns the relationship between philosophy and the sciences. Earlier generations sometimes viewed metaphysics and science as competing explanations of reality. Contemporary inquiry increasingly regards them as complementary forms of investigation. Science describes the observable structures, processes, and regularities of the universe with extraordinary precision. Metaphysics asks what those discoveries may imply concerning the nature, organization, and intelligibility of reality itself. Neither discipline replaces the other; each illuminates dimensions of the same world.

At the same time, philosophical inquiry has become unmistakably global. Western traditions increasingly engage Eastern philosophies. Process thinkers converse with phenomenologists, analytic philosophers with continental philosophers, philosophers of mind with cognitive scientists, ecologists with systems theorists, and theologians with contemporary cosmologists. The result is not philosophical uniformity but an expanding conversation in which previously isolated traditions increasingly become conversation partners.

Perhaps the most significant pattern, however, lies elsewhere. Contemporary metaphysics appears increasingly reluctant to explain reality through a single isolated principle alone. Matter, mind, structure, information, relation, consciousness, emergence, and process are no longer treated as entirely separate domains but as interconnected aspects of a reality whose richness continually exceeds every individual philosophical system. The search has become less about defending comprehensive ideologies and more about discovering correspondences capable of honoring the complexity of the world itself.

These observations do not establish a new metaphysical system. They simply suggest that contemporary philosophy may be approaching a new metaphysical horizon. The question is no longer merely which historical system should prevail. Increasingly, philosophers ask whether a more comprehensive understanding of reality might emerge through careful dialogue among the many perspectives now contributing to humanity's shared search for truth.

The observations offered here do not constitute a new metaphysical system. They simply suggest that contemporary philosophy may be approaching a new horizon. If the recurring patterns noted throughout this essay continue to appear across diverse traditions, they may reveal not merely similarities of language but deeper correspondences within reality itself. The next essay therefore turns from contemporary proposals toward these emerging patterns, asking whether they point beyond individual theories toward a more comprehensive understanding of reality.


BIBLIOGRAPHY

Contemporary Metaphysics

Ferraris, Maurizio. Manifesto of New Realism. Albany: State University of New York Press, 2014.

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Process Philosophy

Cobb, John B., Jr. A Christian Natural Theology. 2nd ed. Louisville, KY: Westminster John Knox Press, 2007.

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———. Religion in the Making. New York: Fordham University Press, 1996.

———. Science and the Modern World. New York: Free Press, 1967.


Consciousness Studies

Chalmers, David J. The Conscious Mind: In Search of a Fundamental Theory. New York: Oxford University Press, 1996.

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Information, Structure, and Complexity

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Philosophy of Science and Scientific Realism

Bhaskar, Roy. A Realist Theory of Science. Leeds: Leeds Books, 1975.

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