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

-----

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

Monday, July 6, 2026

What Is Reality? (9)



ESSAY NINE
III. The Philosophy of Reality

Reality → Ontology → Metaphysics → Interpretation → Ethics → Participation

What Is Reality?

Metaphysics IX - The Central Question of Philosophy

by R.E. Slater and ChatGPT


Reality belongs to no philosophy.
Every philosophy belongs to reality.
- R. E. Slater

Wonder is the feeling of the philosopher,
and philosophy begins in wonder.
- Plato (after Socrates, Theaetetus*)

Philosophy begins in wonder. And, at the end, when
philosophic thought has done its best, the wonder remains.
- Alfred North Whitehead

Philosophy is the self-correction by consciousness
of its own initial excess of subjectivity.
- Alfred North Whitehead

Every philosophy begins with the same world;
they differ in how they learn to see it.
- R. E. Slater


Essay Outline
Preface
I. The Question Behind Every Question
II. What Do We Mean by "Reality"?
III. The Search for Reality Born from Wonder
IV. Why Reality Continues to Invite Inquiry
V. So Then... What Is Reality?
Conclusion: A Return to Wonder
Bibliography


Preface

Every person lives within reality.

We awaken each morning assuming the world is there. We move through space and time, encounter other people, experience beauty and suffering, ask questions, discover patterns, and gradually construct an understanding of ourselves and the universe we inhabit. Long before we become scientists, philosophers, or theologians, we are already participants in reality.

Yet one of humanity's oldest and most enduring questions remains remarkably simple:

What is reality?

The question has inspired philosophers for more than two millennia. It has animated the sciences, shaped civilizations, informed religions, and challenged every generation to reconsider what is ultimately real. Is reality fundamentally material? Is it mental? Is it relational? Is it process, substance, energy, information, consciousness, or something deeper still? Each answer has illuminated part of the landscape while leaving other questions unresolved.

This essay does not begin by defending a particular philosophy. Instead, it begins where philosophy itself has always begun - with wonder. Before we can compare competing metaphysical systems, we must first appreciate why the question of reality continues to matter. The history of philosophy is, in many respects, the history of humanity's attempts to understand the world it already inhabits.

Our journey throughout this section follows that same path. We begin with the question itself. We then explore the major philosophical approaches that have sought to answer it, examine the contemporary conversations shaping our understanding today, and only afterward ask whether an open and relational process metaphysics offers a coherent and compelling way of interpreting the whole.

The goal, therefore, is not to close the discussion but to open it more fully. Reality is larger than any single philosophy, scientific theory, or religious tradition. Every perspective offers insight, yet every perspective remains partial before the inexhaustible richness of the real.

If philosophy begins in wonder, then perhaps its greatest achievement is not certainty but humility - a willingness to let reality continually enlarge our understanding. The observations which follow are offered in that same spirit: as an invitation to explore, to question, and to participate more deeply in the reality we all share.


I. The Question Behind Every Question

Every age has asked what is true, what is good, what is beautiful, and how human beings ought to live. Beneath each of these questions, however, lies another that is even more fundamental: What is reality? Before we can understand ourselves, our world, or our place within it, we must first ask what kind of reality we inhabit.

The preceding Reality and Cosmology series explored this question through the discipline of ontology which is the philosophical study of what exists. There we sought to describe reality as faithfully as possible, developing an ontological framework described as Embodied Process Reality (EPR). This ontological framework articulated a relational understanding of a processual reality in which coherence, emergence, embodiment, and becoming arise together within a relationally open and evolving universe. That substantive development will consequently provide the coming foundation for everything that follows in our current series, Reality and Metaphysics.

Accordingly, this series now turns from ontology to metaphysics. If ontology asks "What exists?" metaphysics asks "Why is reality the way it is?" "Why does the universe possess order rather than chaos?" "Why do relation, emergence, life, consciousness, and value arise at all?" "What kind of reality makes such things possible?" These are not questions that replace ontology; they are the deeper questions that ontology naturally awakens and can only be addressed metaphysically.

Moreover, such questions are not confined to philosophy alone. Scientists investigate the structure of the cosmos. Psychologists explore the nature of mind. Historians reconstruct the human past. Theologians ask whether reality discloses a sacred depth or transcendent meaning. Though their methods differ, each discipline begins with the same assumption: that there is a reality worthy of careful investigation and thoughtful interpretation. The search for reality is therefore not the possession of any single discipline but the common horizon toward which every genuine inquiry is directed.

Every philosophical tradition begins from that same encounter. We inhabit one reality before we begin describing it. We experience existence before we formulate theories about it. Philosophy does not create reality; it seeks to understand the reality already experienced.

For this reason, the central question of philosophy remains as compelling today as it was in the ancient world. Scientific discoveries have profoundly expanded our understanding of the universe, yet they have not rendered the philosophical question obsolete. Rather, they have deepened it. The more we discover about reality, the more we are invited to ask what reality ultimately is and why it is capable of giving rise to such extraordinary complexity, beauty, and possibility.

The essays that follow in Section III, The Philosophy of Reality, do not seek to close this conversation with a final system or definitive answer. Rather, they seek to encourage participation in one of humanity's oldest and most enduring inquiries, trusting that reality itself is always richer than our descriptions of it. Philosophy begins not by possessing reality, but by remaining open to what reality continues to reveal.


II. What Do We Mean by "Reality"?

Before philosophy can ask why reality is the way it is, it must first consider what the word reality itself intends to describe. The question may appear deceptively simple, yet it has occupied philosophers for more than two thousand years because the answer is anything but obvious. We experience reality every moment of our lives, but experience alone does not explain what reality is.

In ordinary language, reality often refers to "the way things actually are." We distinguish reality from imagination, illusion, dreams, fiction, error, or appearance. Such distinctions are practical and useful, allowing us to navigate everyday life with confidence. Yet philosophy soon discovers that these familiar contrasts only deepen the mystery. How do we know that what appears to us corresponds to what truly is? Does reality exist independently of our perception, or is our understanding always shaped by consciousness, language, culture, and experience? These questions have animated philosophical inquiry from antiquity to the present.

At its broadest, reality may be understood as the totality of all that exists, has existed, or may exist. This includes not only the observable universe but also the structures, relations, processes, possibilities, and meanings through which existence unfolds. Reality, in this sense, is not merely a collection of objects. It is the encompassing context within which matter, energy, life, mind, consciousness, culture, value, and even philosophical reflection become possible.

This broader understanding also helps explain why reality has resisted every attempt at reduction. Throughout history, some have identified reality primarily with matter, others with mind, others with ideas, consciousness, language, mathematics, or information. Each perspective has illuminated genuine features of the world while simultaneously revealing the limitations of any single explanatory framework. Reality consistently proves richer than the concepts we use to describe it.

For this reason, the present series adopts an intentionally open posture. Rather than beginning with a predetermined metaphysical system, it begins with the conviction that reality itself must remain the final measure of every philosophical proposal. Our task is not to compel reality to conform to our theories but to allow our theories to be continually refined, corrected, and enlarged by reality itself.

This posture of openness is neither skepticism nor indecision. It is an acknowledgment that philosophy remains a living conversation. Every generation inherits the questions of those who came before, contributes its own discoveries, and leaves a richer conversation for those who follow. The search for reality is therefore not the pursuit of an unreachable certainty but an ongoing participation in humanity's deepest and most enduring inquiry.


III. The Search for Reality Born from Wonder

Long before philosophy became an academic discipline, it began as a profoundly human experience. Every civilization has looked upon the heavens, observed the rhythms of nature, witnessed birth and death, celebrated beauty, endured suffering, and wondered about the meaning of it all. These experiences gave rise to questions that no simple description of the world could fully answer. Why does anything exist? Why is there order rather than chaos? Why do the seasons return, life emerge, consciousness awaken, and the universe exhibit such remarkable coherence? Wonder became humanity's first response to reality.

The earliest answers were often expressed through story, symbol, poetry, and myth. Ancient cultures sought to explain the world by weaving together narratives of creation, divine activity, cosmic struggle, and human purpose. These stories should not be dismissed simply because they are pre-scientific. They represent humanity's earliest attempts to understand reality as an ordered whole rather than as isolated events. Long before formal philosophy, myth sought coherence.

Yet over time another way of asking emerged. Rather than explaining reality primarily through inherited stories, some began asking whether reality itself could be investigated through careful observation, reasoned reflection, and disciplined inquiry. The question gradually shifted from Who governs the world? to What is the world itself? This transition did not reject wonder; it redirected wonder toward rational investigation. It marked the birth of philosophy.

Among the earliest Greek thinkers, this new spirit of inquiry became especially pronounced. Rather than accepting inherited explanations, they sought to discover the underlying principles that give coherence to reality itself. They searched for an arche - the originating principle from which everything else might be understood. Their answers differed considerably, yet together they inaugurated the first sustained philosophical investigation into the nature of reality.

Together these early philosophers introduced the major themes of Western metaphysics that would echo across the next twenty-five centuries of philosophical inquiry. Their diverse insights would later be synthesized, expanded, and systematized through the enduring (some would say, foundational, or monumental) works of Plato and Aristotle, establishing the foundations upon which much of Western philosophy would thereafter be built.

The Pre-Socratic Philosophers

Thales of Miletus (c. 624–546 BC) is often regarded as the first philosopher because he sought natural rather than mythological explanations for the world. Believing that water was the fundamental principle (arche) of reality, he initiated the search for a rational understanding of nature.

Anaximander (c. 610–546 BC), a student of Thales, proposed that the origin of reality could not be any ordinary substance but the apeiron - the boundless or indefinite - from which all things emerge and to which they eventually return. His thought introduced the idea that reality possesses a deeper, underlying principle beyond immediate observation.

Anaximenes (c. 586–526 BC) argued that air was the fundamental substance of reality. Through processes of rarefaction and condensation, he believed that all other forms of matter arise, offering one of the earliest attempts to explain natural change through continuous physical processes.

Heraclitus (c. 535–475 BC) famously emphasized that reality is characterized by perpetual change, symbolized by his observation that one cannot step into the same river twice. Beneath this continual flux, however, he discerned an underlying logos a rational order that gives coherence to the ever-changing world.

Parmenides (early 5th century BC) offered a strikingly different vision. He argued that genuine reality is unchanging, eternal, and indivisible, maintaining that change and plurality are ultimately deceptive appearances. His challenge forced later philosophers to confront the relationship between permanence and becoming.

Pythagoras (c. 570–495 BC) proposed that number and mathematical harmony constitute the deepest structure of reality. For him, mathematics revealed an underlying order that united nature, music, astronomy, and human existence into a coherent whole.

The Classical Philosophers

While the Pre-Socratics primarily sought the underlying principles of nature, Socrates redirected philosophy toward the examination of human life itself.

Socrates (c. 470–399 BC) redirected philosophical inquiry from the search for the material origins of the cosmos toward the examination of human life, virtue, knowledge, and moral responsibility. Through relentless questioning rather than written treatises, he demonstrated that wisdom often begins by recognizing the limits of one's own understanding. His method transformed philosophy into a lifelong pursuit of truth through dialogue and critical reflection.

Plato (c. 427–347 BC) synthesized many earlier insights of his predecessors and brought them into a comprehensive philosophical vision. He distinguished between the changing world of experience and the enduring reality of the Forms, arguing that truth, beauty, justice, and goodness possess an objective reality beyond their imperfect expressions in everyday life.

Aristotle (384–322 BC), Plato's student, redirected philosophy toward the careful study of nature, substance, causation, and empirical observation. His synthesis of logical analysis, scientific investigation, and metaphysical reflection established an intellectual framework that profoundly influenced Western philosophy, science, and theology for nearly two thousand years.

Within this brief history we already encounter one of the great conversations in Western metaphysics.

  • Heraclitus emphasized becoming.
  • Parmenides emphasized enduring being.
  • Plato understood enduring reality to be more fundamental than the changing world of experience.
  • Aristotle sought to explain change through enduring substances and their causes.

Together these four perspectives established a conversation that would shape nearly every subsequent philosophical discussion concerning the nature of reality.

Although these philosophers often disagreed profoundly, they shared one remarkable conviction: reality possesses an intelligible order that human inquiry can discover. They differed over whether reality is fundamentally one or many, permanent or changing, material or mathematical, yet the questions they raised became the enduring foundation of Western philosophy. Every subsequent metaphysical system would inherit, refine, challenge, or reinterpret the conversation they began.

This conviction transformed the history of thought. Philosophy did not begin by providing final answers. It began by asking better questions. The search for reality became an open conversation rather than a settled conclusion. Every succeeding generation inherited that conversation, refined it, challenged it, and expanded it. The history of philosophy is therefore not simply a succession of competing systems but a continuing effort to understand the reality we all inhabit.

That conversation has never ended. Modern science has greatly expanded humanity's understanding of the universe, while philosophy continues to ask questions that science alone cannot answer. The wonder that inspired the earliest philosophers has never disappeared; it has simply taken new forms. Whether we explore the origins of the cosmos, the emergence of life, the mystery of consciousness, or the foundations of morality, we remain participants in the same enduring search for reality.

The next essay will turn to this larger historical conversation. For now, having considered how philosophy was born from wonder, we next will examine how the major philosophical traditions have interpreted reality across more than two millennia of intellectual history.


IV. Why Reality Continues to Invite Inquiry

The earliest philosophers did not exhaust the question of reality; they inaugurated it. Their diverse answers demonstrated that reality could be investigated through reason, observation, and reflection, yet no single explanation proved sufficiently comprehensive to bring the conversation to an end. Instead, each philosophical generation inherited both the insights and the unresolved questions of those who came before.

This enduring conversation reveals something important about the nature of philosophy itself. Unlike many practical disciplines that seek definitive solutions to specific problems, philosophy continually returns to its foundational questions. What is reality? What is truth? What does it mean to exist? Why is there something rather than nothing? These questions persist not because philosophy has failed, but because reality consistently proves richer than every attempt to explain it completely.

Far from diminishing the importance of these questions, the extraordinary achievements of modern science have often deepened them. Cosmology has revealed a universe billions of years old, populated by countless galaxies and governed by elegant mathematical laws. Biology has uncovered the evolutionary history of life and the remarkable complexity of living systems. Physics has transformed our understanding of matter, energy, space, and time, while neuroscience continues to illuminate the extraordinary capacities of the human brain. Each discovery enlarges our knowledge of the universe, yet each also invites new metaphysical questions concerning the nature of existence, consciousness, order, possibility, and meaning.

Consequently, philosophy and science should not be viewed as rivals competing for the same territory. Science excels at investigating how reality functions through observation, experimentation, and empirical verification. Philosophy asks the broader interpretive questions that scientific discoveries themselves inevitably provoke. Together they participate in humanity's continuing search to understand the reality we inhabit.

Every significant advance in human knowledge has expanded rather than diminished our appreciation of reality. The telescope revealed an immense universe beyond the visible sky. The microscope uncovered unseen worlds of extraordinary complexity. Evolution revealed the deep history of life. Relativity transformed our understanding of space and time, while quantum theory challenged our intuitions concerning matter, causality, and observation. More recently, investigations into consciousness, information, complexity, and artificial intelligence have opened entirely new frontiers of inquiry. The more humanity learns, the larger reality appears to become.

The same may be said of academic subjects such as history, psychology, the arts, and religion. Each explores reality from a different perspective, each contributes genuine insight, and each encounters questions that extend beyond the boundaries of its own methods. Reality continually invites interdisciplinary conversation because reality itself is not divided into academic disciplines. Those divisions are human ways of organizing knowledge, while reality remains an interconnected whole.

For this reason, the question of reality has never disappeared. It has simply become richer with every generation. New discoveries do not replace earlier questions; they enlarge them. Every advance in knowledge opens fresh horizons for philosophical reflection, ensuring that the search for reality remains one of humanity's most enduring and necessary endeavors.


V. So Then... What Is Reality?

After more than two thousand years of philosophical reflection, the question remains remarkably open. Humanity has never reached complete agreement concerning the nature of reality, not because philosophy has failed, but because reality has continually proven richer than every attempt to explain it. Nevertheless, the history of philosophy has produced a number of enduring ways of understanding what reality is.

Here are a few historical samples in answer to the question, "What Is Reality?"

Reality has been understood as the totality of existence - covering everything that exists, has existed, or may exist. This broad understanding remains one of philosophy's most inclusive definitions, allowing every subsequent interpretation to ask what kind of existence ultimately constitutes reality.

Reality has been understood as enduring substance. Classical Greek philosophy, especially through Plato and Aristotle, sought stable and permanent foundations beneath the changing world of experience. Reality was understood as that which truly is, while change represented the unfolding or appearance of enduring being.

Reality has been understood as continual becoming. From Heraclitus to many contemporary process philosophers, reality is seen not as a collection of static things but as an ongoing process of events, relations, emergence, and creative transformation.

Reality has been understood as mind or consciousness. Various philosophical traditions, from Advaita Vedanta (a Hindu philosophy of the "self/atman") to aspects of Western Idealism, have proposed that consciousness, spirit, or mind constitutes the deepest ground of existence, while the physical world derives from or depends upon that more fundamental reality.

Reality has been understood as relation. Buddhist philosophies, especially The Buddhist school of thought, Madhyamaka, together with many contemporary relational philosophies, argue that nothing exists independently. Everything exists through relationships, interdependence, and mutual participation rather than isolated substance.

Reality has been understood as matter and energy. Scientific naturalism, materialism, and physicalism generally understand reality as fundamentally physical, governed by natural laws that give rise to the extraordinary complexity observed throughout the universe.

Reality has been understood as lived experience. Pragmatists, phenomenologists, and existential philosophers have emphasized that reality cannot be separated from human participation, experience, action, and meaning. Reality is encountered before it is theorized.

Reality has been understood as information, mathematics, and structure. Some contemporary philosophers and scientists suggest that the deepest level of reality may consist not primarily of matter, but of information, mathematical order, or fundamental structural relationships from which the observable universe emerges.

Each of these perspectives represents a serious attempt to understand reality. Some illuminate enduring truths; others expose important questions; still others reveal the limitations of earlier systems. The task of philosophy is not to preserve every insight equally, but to allow reality itself to become the measure by which every philosophical proposal is continually examined, refined, or, when necessary, abandoned. Thus, the history of philosophy is not a museum of equally valid ideas. Rather, it is humanity's continuing effort to discover which understandings correspond most faithfully to the reality we all inhabit.

The essays that follow explore these traditions in greater depth, not to declare philosophical winners and losers, but to understand how each has contributed to humanity's enduring search for reality. Only then will we ask whether an open and relational process metaphysics offers one coherent and comprehensive interpretation of the world we all inhabit.


Conclusion: A Return to Wonder

The question with which we began remains before us.

What is reality?

More than two thousand years of philosophical reflection have not diminished the significance of that question; they have deepened it. Every generation has inherited it. Every civilization has answered it differently. Every scientific discovery, philosophical insight, religious tradition, and human experience has contributed another perspective toward understanding the world we inhabit.

Perhaps this should not surprise us. Reality has always proven greater than the concepts we use to describe it. Every philosophy illuminates something genuine, yet none appears capable of exhausting the richness of existence itself. If reality continually exceeds our understanding, then philosophy's task is not merely to delineate inherited systems but to cultivate an openness toward continual discovery.

For this reason, the question "What is reality?" should never be regarded as one that admits a final or exhaustive answer. Rather, it remains an invitation toward contemplating life's mysteries - one that calls each generation to observe more carefully, think more deeply, feel more completely, and participate more faithfully in the world we share.

The essays that follow will continue that invitation. We will listen to the many voices that have shaped humanity's understanding of reality across cultures and centuries. Only then will we ask whether a more comprehensive metaphysical vision might emerge - one capable of honoring both the enduring wisdom of the past and the expanding horizons of the present.

For if philosophy begins in wonder,

perhaps it also should end there -

with the quiet realization that our wonder has become a little wiser.


BIBLIOGRAPHY

Aristotle. Metaphysics. Translated by W. D. Ross. In The Complete Works of Aristotle, edited by Jonathan Barnes. Princeton University Press, 1984.

Cottingham, John. The Rationalists. Oxford University Press, 1988.

Descartes, René. Meditations on First Philosophy. Translated by John Cottingham. Cambridge University Press, 1996.

Frankl, Viktor E. Man's Search for Meaning. Beacon Press, 2006.

Hadot, Pierre. What Is Ancient Philosophy? Harvard University Press, 2002.

Hegel, G. W. F. Phenomenology of Spirit. Translated by A. V. Miller. Oxford University Press, 1977.

Heschel, Abraham Joshua. God in Search of Man. Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1955.

James, William. Pragmatism. Dover Publications, 1995.

Kant, Immanuel. Critique of Pure Reason. Translated by Norman Kemp Smith. Palgrave Macmillan, 2007.

Kenny, Anthony. A New History of Western Philosophy. 4 vols. Oxford University Press, 2006–2010.

Leibniz, Gottfried Wilhelm. Monadology and Other Philosophical Essays. Bobbs-Merrill, 1965.

Magee, Bryan. The Story of Philosophy. DK Publishing, 2001.

Nagarjuna. The Fundamental Wisdom of the Middle Way (Mūlamadhyamakakārikā). Translated by Jay L. Garfield. Oxford University Press, 1995.

Paul Nurse. What Is Life? W. W. Norton, 2021.

Plato. The Republic. Translated by G. M. A. Grube, revised by C. D. C. Reeve. Hackett Publishing, 1992.

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

**Adi Shankara. Vivekachudamani (The Crest Jewel of Discrimination). Translated by Swami Prabhavananda and Christopher Isherwood. Vedanta Press, 1978.

Taylor, Richard. Metaphysics. Prentice Hall, 1992.

Whitehead, Alfred North. Adventures of Ideas. Free Press, 1967.

Whitehead, Alfred North. Process and Reality: An Essay in Cosmology. Corrected Edition, edited by David Ray Griffin and Donald W. Sherburne. Free Press, 1978.



Sunday, July 5, 2026

Index - A List of Essays: Jul - Sep 2026



Index - A List of Essays:
Jul - Sep 2026

listed by date, chronologically, from newest to oldest



Narrative, Myth, Symbol, and Participatory Imagination (8)



ESSAY EIGHT
II. Narrative, Symbol, Myth, and Transformative Imagination

Reality → Ontology → Metaphysics → Interpretation → Ethics → Participation

Ontology disciplines metaphysics lest it become mere speculation.
Metaphysics enlarges ontology lest description never asks why.

Reality is continuously encountered, described, interpreted, and lived.
The health of every interpretation is measured by the degree to which
it deepens our participation in relational becoming.

Narrative, Myth, Symbol, and Participatory Imagination

Metaphysics VIII - How Stories Shape Participation in Reality
Every civilization inherits interpretive worlds. The task of philosophy is not first to destroy them, but to ask whether they continue corresponding to the reality in which we all participate. Where they deepen participation, they should be preserved. Where they diminish participation, they should be reoriented.
by R.E. Slater and ChatGPT


We tell stories not simply to remember reality,
but to learn how to participate within it.
- R. E. Slater

Myths are relational frameworks through which
communities organize participation in reality.
- R. E. Slater

The deepest myths are not simply stories we tell.
They become the stories that tell us who we are.
- R. E. Slater

Imagination is more important than knowledge.
For knowledge is limited, whereas imagination embraces the entire world.
- Albert Einstein

Whether or not one agrees with every nuance of the quotation, it beautifully introduces participatory imagination.

Symbols give rise to thought [and imagination]
- Paul Ricoeur abridged

Reality is continuously encountered, described, interpreted, and lived.
The health of every interpretation is measured by the degree to which
it deepens our participation in relational becoming.
R. E. Slater


Essay Outline
Preface
I. We Learn Reality Through Stories
II. Symbols: The Condensation of Meaning
III. Myth: The Interpretive Worlds We Inhabit
IV. Participatory Imagination: Envisioning New Worlds
V. Every Civilization Lives Inside Stories
VI. Reorienting Our Interpretive Worlds
VII. Conclusion
Bibliography


Preface

Human beings are interpretive participants before they are systematic philosophers.

The essays of this section have followed a path that may not have been immediately apparent when they first began.

We started with stories. We then encountered broken worlds, followed Jonah into the depths of interrupted becoming, and finally considered the Dragon and the Beast as enduring symbols of civilizational power. At first glance these themes may appear only loosely connected, belonging variously to literature, religion, mythology, psychology, or political philosophy. Yet each essay has quietly disclosed another dimension of the same reality.

Human beings are interpretive participants before they are systematic philosophers.

Long before we construct metaphysical systems, formulate theological doctrines, develop scientific theories, or articulate ethical principles, we learn to inhabit the world through stories. We inherit symbols before we define concepts. We receive narratives before we develop arguments. We imagine possibilities before we establish conclusions. The human journey into reality begins not with abstraction, but with experiential participation.

This observation carries profound philosophical significance.

Narratives, myths, symbols, and imagination are often treated as secondary expressions of culture, added only after reality has already been understood. This series has suggested a different possibility. They are not merely illustrations of reality. They are among the primary ways finite beings learn to encounter, interpret, remember, question, and participate within an open and unfinished world.

Stories therefore do more than entertain. Symbols do more than represent. Myths do more than preserve cultural memory. Imagination does more than invent. Together they become the interpretive worlds through which human beings understand themselves, organize their communities, remember their histories, envision their futures, and participate in the realities they inhabit.

This does not mean that every story corresponds equally well to reality.

Neither does it suggest that all myths, symbols, or narratives should simply be accepted because they have been inherited. Throughout history, interpretive worlds have both liberated and oppressed, enlarged and diminished, healed and divided. Some have deepened relational participation. Others have gradually contracted it. The question is therefore not whether human beings live through stories.

We always do.

The deeper philosophical question is whether the stories by which we live continue corresponding to the reality in which we participate.

This essay therefore brings the previous four essays into conversation with one another.

Narrative introduced us to participation.

Broken worlds revealed that participation is continually interrupted.

Jonah disclosed interrupted becoming within the individual.

The Dragon and the Beast revealed interrupted becoming within civilizations.

The present essay now asks why these narratives, symbols, and myths continue exercising such extraordinary influence across every generation.

For if reality is fundamentally relational, open, and unfinished, then the interpretive worlds through which we inhabit that reality matter profoundly.

They do not merely describe our participation.

They help shape it.


I. We Learn Reality Through Stories

"One generation shall commend your works to another, and shall declare your mighty acts."
Psalm 145:4

Every human life begins inside a story.

Long before children learn philosophy, science, history, or theology, they learn the world through narrative. Parents tell family stories. Grandparents recount remembered lives. Communities preserve traditions. Nations celebrate founding events. Religions pass on sacred narratives. Songs, parables, legends, myths, and folktales quietly teach each new generation who they are, where they belong, what they should value, and what kind of future they may hope to inhabit.

This pattern is neither accidental nor merely cultural.

It belongs to the way finite beings gradually learn to participate in reality.

Stories give continuity to experience. They connect memory with identity, identity with purpose, and purpose with participation. Through narrative we begin recognizing relationships that extend beyond isolated moments. We discover that our lives belong to larger communities, longer histories, and wider horizons than our own immediate experience can ever fully reveal.

For this reason, narrative precedes philosophy.

Before human beings ask whether reality is material or spiritual, deterministic or open, finite or infinite, they have already learned to interpret the world through stories. Narrative becomes the first grammar through which reality is encountered. Only later do abstraction, analysis, and systematic reflection emerge.

This observation does not diminish philosophy.

It explains its origin.

Philosophy itself grows from questions first awakened by experience, memory, imagination, and the stories communities continually tell about themselves. Every civilization, regardless of geography, language, or religion, has first attempted to understand reality narratively before seeking to understand it conceptually.

This is why stories endure.

They preserve more than information.

They preserve orientation.

They teach courage while defining virtue.

They awaken compassion while constructing ethics.

They cultivate belonging while shaping and nurturing identity.

They invite wonder while asking metaphysical questions.

In this sense, stories are not merely vehicles for ideas.

They become living environments within which ideas first take root.

The child who listens to a bedtime story, the family gathered around remembered events, the community celebrating its shared history, the nation recalling its founding ideals, the scientist imagining an unseen possibility, and the philosopher asking why reality exists, all participate in the same profoundly human movement. Each is attempting to locate personal experience within a larger pattern of meaning.

For this reason, stories should never be dismissed simply because they are stories. Neither should they be accepted uncritically because they have been inherited. They deserve thoughtful attention because they become the relational frameworks through which persons and communities first learn to inhabit reality.

The deeper philosophical question, therefore, is not whether human beings live by stories.

We always do.

The deeper philosophical question is whether the stories by which we live continue corresponding to the reality in which we participate.


II. Symbols: The Condensation of Meaning

"These things occurred as symbols for us..."
1 Corinthians 10:6 (adapted from the Greek concept of typoi, "patterns" or "examples")

Stories endure because they become embodied.

Over time, narratives condense into symbols that carry meanings far larger than themselves. A flag becomes more than cloth. A wedding ring becomes more than metal. A nation's constitution becomes more than parchment. A family's photograph becomes more than paper and ink. A loaf of bread, a cup of wine, a memorial stone, a tree, a bridge, or even a simple melody may come to embody generations of memory, hope, suffering, identity, and aspiration.

Symbols therefore possess a remarkable capacity.

They gather lived experience into forms that can be remembered, shared, and continually reinterpreted

Unlike abstract propositions, symbols remain open. They invite participation rather than merely conveying information. They speak simultaneously to memory, imagination, emotion, reason, and communal identity. For this reason, symbols often endure long after the circumstances that first gave them birth have passed into history.

This openness gives symbols both their strength and their vulnerability.

Healthy symbols continue inviting renewed participation as new generations discover fresh meanings within inherited traditions. Unhealthy symbols gradually become rigid, allowing only one interpretation while resisting every possibility of enlargement or correction. What was once a living invitation slowly becomes an instrument of exclusion.

Here the distinction between symbol and idol becomes philosophically significant.

A symbol points beyond itself.
An idol terminates meaning within itself.

A symbol remains relational.
An idol demands finality.

A symbol invites interpretation.
An idol forbids it.

The difference is subtle but profound.

The healthiest civilizations continually reinterpret their symbols because reality itself continues disclosing new dimensions of participation. They understand that symbols remain living only insofar as they continue corresponding to the realities they seek to illuminate. When symbols lose that correspondence, they may still command loyalty, but they no longer deepen understanding or allow compassionate participation.

This insight returns us to the process-relational character of reality.

Reality remains dynamic, relational, and unfinished.

Therefore the symbols through which human beings inhabit reality must likewise remain open to continued interpretation. Their purpose is not to imprison imagination but to cultivate it. They preserve memory while remaining hospitable to discovery. They honor tradition without preventing healthy transformation.

Perhaps this explains why humanity has always surrounded itself with symbols.

They are not substitutes for reality. Neither are they reality itself. They are participatory thresholds through which finite beings learn to enter more deeply into the realities they seek to understand.

The question is therefore not whether symbols shape civilization.

They always do.

The deeper question is whether our symbols continue inviting us toward richer participation in the reality they seek to disclose - or whether they have become ends in themselves, no longer pointing beyond themselves toward the larger horizon from which they first emerged.


III. Myth: The Interpretive Worlds We Inhabit

"Where there is no vision, the people perish..."
Proverbs 29:18 (KJV)

Few words have suffered greater misunderstanding than myth.

In ordinary conversation, myth often means little more than a false belief, an outdated superstition, or a story that never happened. Within philosophy and the study of religion, however, myth has long carried a far richer significance. It refers not primarily to factual accuracy but to the larger interpretive worlds through which individuals and communities understand existence itself.

This distinction is essential.

Myths are not simply stories about reality. They are relational frameworks through which communities organize participation in the reality they perceive.

Every civilization lives within such frameworks. They tell us where we came from. Why we exist. Who belongs. What deserves loyalty. What constitutes justice. What future should be hoped for. What sacrifices appear necessary. What fears appear justified. Whether consciously recognized or quietly inherited, these larger narratives become the imaginative horizons within which cultures understand themselves.

For this reason, myths should never be dismissed simply because they contain symbolic language or imaginative imagery.

Their significance lies elsewhere.

People live them. Children inherit them. Institutions preserve them. Wars are fought because of them. Nations are built upon them. Religions celebrate them. Economies often assume them. Scientific communities occasionally develop them. Political movements continually reinterpret them. The factual questions remain important. But they are not the only questions. The deeper philosophical question concerns correspondence.

Do the interpretive worlds we inhabit continue corresponding healthily to the reality in which we participate?

History repeatedly suggests that myths possess extraordinary resilience. Some enlarge human participation. Others gradually diminish it. Some cultivate hospitality, curiosity, humility, and hope. Others encourage exclusion, fear, domination, or unquestioned certainty. Most contain elements of both, continually inviting reinterpretation as communities mature and reality discloses new possibilities.

This explains why myths rarely disappear.

They evolve.

The myth of empire becomes the myth of nation.

The myth of conquest becomes the myth of progress.

The myth of divine right becomes the myth of ideological certainty.

The symbols change. The deeper patterns often remain. Yet new myths may also emerge. Human rights. Global responsibility. Ecological stewardship. Scientific discovery. Human dignity. Relational interdependence. These too become interpretive worlds through which societies imagine different futures.

A process-relational metaphysic therefore neither rejects myth nor surrenders uncritically to it.

Instead, it asks a more demanding question: "Does the mythic interpretive world continue deepening relational participation in reality?" If it does, it remains a living myth. If it no longer corresponds to reality's continuing disclosure, it gradually contracts into ideology.

The distinction is subtle. Yet it may determine the future of civilizations. For myths do not merely preserve cultures. They continually recreate them.


IV. Participatory Imagination: Envisioning New Worlds

"Behold, I am doing a new thing; now it springs forth, do you not perceive it?"
Isaiah 43:19

If stories orient human experience, symbols condense meaning, and myths organize communal participation, then imagination becomes the remarkable human capacity through which new possibilities first enter history.

Without imagination, civilizations could preserve themselves.

But they could never renew themselves.

Every significant transformation begins as an act of imagination before it becomes an act of history.

Long before new institutions are established, someone imagines a different way of living together. Before scientific revolutions reshape humanity's understanding of the universe, someone first imagines that accepted explanations may be incomplete. Before social reforms alter cultures, someone imagines that inherited injustices need not remain permanent. Before new works of art, music, literature, or philosophy emerge, imagination quietly explores possibilities that reality has not yet fully embodied.

Imagination is therefore neither escape from reality nor opposition to it. Properly understood, imagination is one of reality's participatory capacities. It allows finite beings to anticipate possibilities that remain hidden within the openness of becoming.

This distinguishes participatory imagination from fantasy.

Fantasy often seeks refuge from reality. Participatory imagination seeks deeper correspondence with reality. Fantasy abandons the world. Participatory imagination returns to the world with enlarged vision. This distinction has shaped every civilization.

The abolition of slavery was once imagination.

Representative government was once imagination.

Universal education was once imagination.

Modern science was once imagination.

Human rights were once imagination.

Ecological responsibility was once imagination.

Even philosophy itself begins imaginatively by asking questions whose answers have not yet been discovered.

Reality continually discloses possibilities beyond those already embodied. Imagination becomes the human capacity to participate in that disclosure before history has fully caught up.

For this reason, imagination remains inseparable from humility.

Every new possibility remains subject to reality itself. Some imagined futures deepen participation. Others diminish it. Some liberate. Others dominate. Imagination therefore requires continual correspondence with the realities it seeks to interpret rather than mere novelty for its own sake.

This insight returns us once more to process-relational metaphysics. Reality is unfinished. Therefore imagination must remain unfinished. Reality continues becoming. Therefore imagination must remain corrigible. Reality continually surprises. Therefore imagination must remain open to revision.

Perhaps this is why the greatest reformers have almost always been imaginative before they were persuasive. They first saw possibilities others had not yet perceived. Only later did history gradually learn to inhabit them.

Participatory imagination therefore becomes one of humanity's greatest responsibilities. It neither abandons tradition nor becomes imprisoned by it. Instead, it receives the wisdom of the past while remaining open to the continuing disclosure of reality itself.


V. Every Civilization Lives Inside Stories

"Where there is no prophetic vision, the people cast off restraint..."
Proverbs 29:18 (ESV)

Civilizations are not held together by laws alone.

Neither are they sustained merely through economic systems, military strength, political institutions, or technological achievement. Beneath every visible structure lies an invisible architecture of shared narratives, remembered histories, symbolic practices, and imagined futures through which communities understand themselves and their place within the larger world.

Every civilization therefore inhabits an interpretive world.

Its stories explain where it came from.

Its symbols embody what it values.

Its myths define what is worth preserving.

Its imagination anticipates what may yet become.

Together these form the living grammar through which societies continually participate in reality. For this reason, civilizations are always engaged in acts of interpretation. They remember. They celebrate. They lament. They commemorate. They educate. They reform. They reinterpret. Every generation receives inherited narratives while simultaneously deciding how those narratives shall continue shaping communal life. This process never truly ends.

Some civilizations become imprisoned by their stories.

They confuse memory with permanence.

Tradition with immutability.

Loyalty with unquestioning conformity.

In doing so, narratives that once nurtured communal participation gradually become instruments of exclusion or domination.

Other civilizations abandon their stories altogether. Believing themselves liberated from the past, they discover instead that cultural amnesia leaves communities without orientation, continuity, or shared purpose. A society unable to remember itself often struggles to imagine a future worth inhabiting.

The healthiest civilizations avoid both extremes.

They remember without becoming captive.

They imagine without becoming detached.

They preserve without resisting renewal.

They reform without despising inheritance.

Such civilizations understand that their interpretive worlds remain living conversations rather than finished monuments.

Here the relationship between myth and imagination becomes especially important:

Myth preserves the accumulated wisdom of remembered experience.

Imagination allows that wisdom to continue growing.

Together they create cultures capable of honoring both continuity and transformation, both identity and openness, both memory and discovery. This dynamic reflects the very character of process-relational reality. Reality neither abandons its past nor remains imprisoned by it.

Every present moment inherits what has been while simultaneously opening possibilities not previously realized. Healthy civilizations participate in this same rhythm. They remain rooted without becoming rigid, adaptive without becoming directionless, and hopeful without becoming naïve.

Perhaps this is why the world's greatest civilizations have rarely been those most resistant to change. Rather, they have often been those most capable of learning, revising, welcoming new insight, and enlarging participation without abandoning the wisdom already gained. The stories they tell themselves remain alive because they themselves remain open to becoming.


VI. Reorienting Our Interpretive Worlds

"Test everything; hold fast what is good."
1 Thessalonians 5:21

Human beings cannot live without interpretive worlds.

We do not simply observe reality.

We inhabit it through stories, symbols, memories, traditions, hopes, questions, and shared visions of what life may yet become. Every person, every community, every civilization participates within interpretive worlds that both preserve the past and anticipate the future. They shape our identities, guide our relationships, inform our institutions, and quietly influence the countless decisions through which ordinary life unfolds.

The question, therefore, is not whether we possess such worlds. We always do. The deeper question is whether they continue corresponding to the reality in which we participate.

Throughout this section we have gradually discovered that narrative, symbol, myth, and imagination are not decorative additions to human existence. They are among the principal ways finite beings learn to inhabit an open and unfinished reality. They preserve memory without imprisoning it. They invite participation without eliminating freedom. They cultivate identity without denying transformation. Properly understood, they remain living companions to reality rather than substitutes for it.

This observation suggests an important responsibility.

Healthy civilizations continually reinterpret the stories by which they live.

Healthy religions continually rediscover the wisdom they seek to preserve.

Healthy sciences remain open to new discovery.

Healthy philosophies remain corrigible.

Healthy cultures remain teachable.

The common thread is not perpetual change for its own sake. Nor is it rigid preservation. It is faithful participation in a reality that continues disclosing new possibilities while remaining deeply connected to everything that has come before.

This is why process-relational metaphysics does not ask humanity to abandon its stories. It asks something far more demanding. It asks us to revisit them. To listen again. To question them with humility. To preserve what continues deepening relational participation. To revise what no longer corresponds to reality's ongoing disclosure. To imagine futures that remain faithful to the openness already present within becoming itself.

Interpretation therefore becomes an ethical responsibility.

For every interpretation either enlarges or diminishes participation. Every symbol either opens or closes imagination. Every myth either encourages continued becoming or quietly contracts into ideology. Every story either deepens correspondence with reality or gradually obscures it. 

The work of philosophy is not to escape these interpretive worlds.

It is to inhabit them wisely.


Conclusion

The journey through this section has been one of gradual enlargement.

In Essay 4, we began by recognizing that stories are the first thresholds through which human beings learn to inhabit reality.

In Essay 5, we then encountered broken worlds, discovering that participational rupture belongs to the essential unfinished character of becoming itself.

In Essay 6, Jonah revealed the profoundly personal reality of interrupted becoming, reminding us that relational transformation rarely arrives without resistance, descent, mercy, and renewed participation.

In Essay 7, the Dragon and the Beast enlarged that vision to the life of civilizations, disclosing how civilizational power may gradually refuse becoming whenever participation gives way to domination.

In this final Essay 8, we have gathered those discoveries together, revealing that narrative, symbol, myth, and participatory imagination are not merely literary or religious devices. They are metaphysical phenomena through which persons and civilizations alike encounter, interpret, and inhabit reality.

Together they disclose a larger pattern.

Story gives us orientation.

Rupture tests our orientation.

Jonah reveals personal resistance.

The Dragon and the Beast reveal civilizational resistance.

Myth explains how those orientations are inherited, embodied, revised, or defended.

Seen together, these essays reveal that interpretation itself belongs to the very structure of human participation in reality. We are not merely observers of an objective universe. We are interpretive participants continually learning how to inhabit an open, relational, and unfinished world.

The task before us is therefore neither to preserve every inherited interpretation nor to discard every inherited tradition. It is to cultivate wisdom. To ask, again and again, whether the stories by which we live continue corresponding to the reality in which we participate. For reality is continuously encountered, described, interpreted, and lived. The health of every interpretation is measured by the degree to which it deepens our participation in relational becoming.

* * * * * * 

This concludes then the second movement of our metaphysical journey - II. Narrative, Symbol, Myth, and Transformative Imagination. The essays that follow in the Reality & Metaphysics Series will build upon this foundation, turning more directly toward the structures of reality itself.

Yet they do so with an important lesson already learned: no metaphysic is ever lived apart from the narratives, symbols, myths, and imaginative horizons through which human beings first learn to inhabit the world.

Perhaps that is the quiet achievement of this entire section, where:

Narrative became threshold.

Transformation became participation.

Participation became metaphysics.

And metaphysics, finally, returns us once more to reality itself - not as detached spectators, but as participants in its continuing adventure of becoming.


BIBLIOGRAPHY

Alter, Robert. The Art of Biblical Narrative. New York: Basic Books, 1981.

Arendt, Hannah. The Origins of Totalitarianism. New York: Harcourt Brace, 1973.

Brueggemann, Walter. The Prophetic Imagination. 2nd ed. Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 2001.

Campbell, Joseph. The Hero with a Thousand Faces. 3rd ed. Novato, CA: New World Library, 2008.

Cassirer, Ernst. An Essay on Man: An Introduction to a Philosophy of Human Culture. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1944.

Eliade, Mircea. Myth and Reality. New York: Harper & Row, 1963.

Ellul, Jacques. The Technological Society. Translated by John Wilkinson. New York: Vintage Books, 1964.

Frankl, Viktor E.. Man's Search for Meaning. Boston: Beacon Press, 2006.

Jung, Carl Gustav. Symbols of Transformation. Collected Works of C. G. Jung, Vol. 5. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1967.

MacIntyre, Alasdair. After Virtue. 3rd ed. Notre Dame, IN: University of Notre Dame Press, 2007.

Mumford, Lewis. The Myth of the Machine. Vol. I: Technics and Human Development. New York: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1967.

Mumford, Lewis. The Myth of the Machine. Vol. II: The Pentagon of Power. New York: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1970.

Niebuhr, Reinhold. The Nature and Destiny of Man. 2 vols. Louisville, KY: Westminster John Knox Press, 1996.

Ricoeur, Paul. The Symbolism of Evil. Boston: Beacon Press, 1967.

Ricoeur, Paul. Interpretation Theory: Discourse and the Surplus of Meaning. Fort Worth, TX: Texas Christian University Press, 1976.

Taylor, Charles. Sources of the Self: The Making of the Modern Identity. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1989.

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

Whitehead, Alfred North. Process and Reality. Corrected ed. Edited by David Ray Griffin and Donald W. Sherburne. New York: Free Press, 1978.

Wink, Walter. The Powers That Be: Theology for a New Millennium. New York: Doubleday, 1998.


Why Were These Authors Chosen?
The bibliography itself tells the story of the section.
  • Alter teaches us narrative.
  • Campbell and Eliade teach us myth.
  • Jung teaches us symbol and transformation.
  • Frankl teaches us meaning amid rupture.
  • Brueggemann teaches us prophetic imagination.
  • Ricoeur teaches us interpretation.
  • Cassirer teaches us symbolic humanity.
  • Mumford, Ellul, Arendt, and Wink teach us civilization and power.
  • MacIntyre and Taylor teach us tradition and identity.
  • Whitehead quietly provides the metaphysical horizon within which all of these conversations unfold.

The bibliography itself has therefore become an expression of the method: not the construction of an isolated philosophical system, but a sustained conversation across disciplines, traditions, and generations in search of a deeper correspondence with reality.  This then concludes our gateway into the metaphysical journey of humanity.