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

Sunday, April 19, 2026

When Christianity Forgets Christ & Witness Becomes Propaganda


Illustration by R.E. Slater & ChatGPT

When Christianity Forgets Christ
& Witness Becomes Propaganda

A Christian Confession of Faith v Power

by R.E. Slater & ChatGPT


You cannot serve God and mammon.
- Jesus (Matthew 6:24)

Put your sword back into its place.
- Jesus (Matthew 26:52)

They shall beat their swords into plowshares.
- Isaiah (Isaiah 2:4)

Christ Against Empire. Love Against Fear.
- A General Christian Sentiment

Christianity + Power = the Deformation of the Gospel
- A General Christian acknowledgment




On the Corruption of Faith

On Power and Corruption

Where power asks devotion, idolatry has begun.
- R.E. Slater

Power tends to corrupt, and absolute power corrupts absolutely.
- Lord Acton

The most radical revolutionary will become a conservative the day after the revolution.
- Hannah Arendt

Unlimited power is apt to corrupt the minds of those who possess it.
- Simone Weil

On Religion and Idolatry

The Gospel is Not a Political Ideology.
- R.E. Slater

The greatest danger to Christianity is Christendom.
- Soren Kierkegaard

It is not the violence of evil that most threatens us, but the refusal to resist it.
-Jacques Ellul

Silence in the face of evil is itself evil.
- Dietrich Bonhoeffer

On Justice and Human Dignity

I cannot believe what you say, because I see what you do.
- James Baldwin

Real generosity toward the future lies in giving all to the present.
- Albert Camus

Do not be silent; there is no limit to the power that may be released through you.
- Howard Thurman

On Truth and Ideology

To see what is in front of one’s nose needs a constant struggle.
- George Orwell

The real test of a person is not how he plays the role he has invented for himself, but how he plays the role destiny has imposed on him.
- Vaclav Havel


Preface

Recently, American Maga-phone and mouthpiece for Maga-Christianity, America's own "Protestant Pope," Franklin Graham, spoke up defending President Trump's aggressive rhetoric against the Catholic Church's Pope Leo XIV who had spoken against the violence being done in the world under the Trump administration, both domestically and internationally (cf., Franklin Graham Says Pope Should Be Thanking Trump; and, Top MAGA Evangelical Blasted for Urging Pope to Praise Trump; also, Reddit thread here).

Four concerns arise when reading of Christians responding in this way:

First, there is the problem of confusing witness with power. Christianity has often been strongest when speaking prophetically to power, not sacralizing power.

Second, there is the problem of messianic overreach. Whenever a political figure is treated as uniquely anointed, indispensable, or beyond moral critique, Christian language begins drifting toward political idolatry. That is not a small accusation, but historically it is a recurring danger.

Third, there is the problem of inflated civilizational rhetoric, where “saving Christianity,” “restoring the nation,” or “protecting the church” can become totalizing slogans that absorb the gospel into a culture-war narrative. This is the lane which Maga-Christianity has directed itself into.

Fourth, there is the problem of inheritance distortion. Many observers, including some evangelicals, have quietly noted the contrast between Billy Graham’s generally broader public posture and Franklin Graham’s sharper political alignment. Whether one sees that as fair or unfair, it is part of why his-and-other Evangelics overstatements stand out.

Generally, my own thoughts run along these lines of reasoning: large-scale Christianity might not be the problem. Public Christianity might not be the problem. Even politically engaged Christianity might not necessarily be the problem.

The problem begins when the scale of the platform amplifies the scale of the claims, until hyperbole starts substituting for discernment.

That is when proclamation can become propaganda.

And if we might rearrange our theological grammar closer to Whiteheadian instincts, it is where relational faith can harden into ideological fixation. Where relational process becomes hardened systems. And, processual witness becomes an instrument for propaganda.

These then become serious concerns. Concerns which have been growing since the 1980s when a group of evangelicals met in Chicago and began recasting the bible in terms of "inerrant, infallible, trustworthy, true, reliable, authoritative, etc." All of which have been written of here at Relevancy22 over the years.

And so, let us offer yet another process-theological critique of Christian nationalism and how Graham’s populist rhetoric might be read through the lens of Jesus....


The Background for a Christian Response to Christian Politicalization

Let us sharpened our response by distinguishing between i) Christianity as a faith centered on the way of Jesus, and what might be called ii) an ideological capture of Christianity.

A process-theological critique of Maga-Christianity, including rhetoric associated at times with zealous overstatements by Evangelical pulpiteering, would begin not with partisanship, but with first principles. (*Maga = Make America Great Again)

In Whitehead's Process theological sense, If God is understood not as a God of coercive domination but as a God of (loving) relational lure toward truth, beauty, justice, and richer forms of coexistence, then any movement organized around fear, exclusion, domination, or ethno-national hierarchy stands in tension with the divine aim to loving encircle and reframe one's life.

This theological assessment is not merely a political disagreement with Christian nationalism's idea of God - it is a metaphysical contradiction of God's Self, Character, Ministry, and Love as seen from both a gospel and process perspective.

One could frame this critique across five fractures:

First, it fractures Jesus-centered ethics. The teachings associated with enemy love, peacemaking, hospitality to strangers, care for the poor, and solidarity with the socially vulnerable become displaced by identity defense and power retention. The center shifts.

Second, it fractures the doctrine of the human person. A process view treats persons as relationally constituted, possessing value in and through being and participation. White nationalism, supremacist insinuations, or categorical diminishment of immigrants, women, trans persons, or gay persons deny that relational dignity. They reduce persons to threat categories.

Third, it fractures the idea of truth itself. Persistent overstatement, conspiratorial apocalypticism, providential claims about leaders, and theological jingoism often substitute mythic political narrative for discernment. In process terms, this blocks novelty. It closes inquiry.

Fourth, it fractures peace. The fusion of Christian identity with militarism or expansive “just war” rhetoric can sacralize coercion. Yet a process-relational theology tends to see peace not as passivity, but as the difficult creation of sustaining relations. Peace is constructive, not merely the absence of conflict.

Fifth, it fractures ecclesial communion. As previously noted in past articles, family breakage, church breakage, and communal estrangement are not side effects. They are signs of theological disorder. When a theology leaves a trail of social fragmentation, one must ask what spirit animates it.

Hence, we could put a Christian reply to Maga-theologies as follows:

The deepest Christian question is not whether a leader protects Christianity.

But whether in that activity Christianity still reflects a loving Christ.

And that is not the same question.

To observe that “Maga-Christianity has fractured Jesus theology” can be expressed thusly:

A political theology becomes distorted when allegiance to power overrides the primacy of love, truth, and shared human dignity. Not only "empire-power" but any kind of power that distorts God's love for creation and creation's response back to God.

This is a serious theological claim, and it is an arguable to legitimately take.

There is also a specific historical irony here. Christian nationalism often invokes civilizational protection, while repeating patterns the church has struggled with before:

Constantinian triumphalism, crusading logic, apocalyptic absolutism, and ethno-religious boundary making. None of these historical precedents are new. They are old, fallen temptations. And all of them put civilizations at cultural risk and at extreme unprotection by a religious faith claiming that activity.

Let us now move to a deeper category... that of accommodation of religious power as theological deformation.


From Gospel to Ideology

The above phrase, "... accommodation of religious power as theological deformation," bears historical weight and precedent:

The church has long wrestled with what happens when faith ceases to critique power and instead seeks protection through it. What is known as ideological idealism is, in part, a sacralized political imagination where contingent political arrangements are treated as if they carry transcendent - i.e., divine - warrant.

This posture is always dangerous to the health of societies.

A sharper formulation might be described as something like this:

Seven Marks of Theological Deformation in Accommodated Christianity

  1. Accommodation to power
    When the church seeks proximity to state, nation, party, or strongman as a source of identity rather than maintaining prophetic distance.
  2. Ideological idealism
    When political myths replace moral realism, and national destiny is narrated in quasi-redemptive terms.
  3. Departure from social and ethical responsibility
    When concern for the poor, vulnerable, migrant, outsider, and excluded is subordinated to identity preservation or grievance.
  4. Cruelty masked as moral order
    This is a severe but necessary category. When coercive treatment of trans persons, restrictions rooted in gender fixation, or categorical exclusions of women’s leadership are defended as “biblical order,” one must ask whether order has become detached from compassion.
  5. Mythologizing of scripture
    Not using myth in the literary sense, but turning the Bible into an ideological arsenal, where texts are abstracted from history and weaponized for prior commitments.
  6. Presumptive theological assertions
    Claiming divine sanction where humility would demand silence. Announcing what God has endorsed in matters far more ambiguous than such certainty allows.
  7. Fracture as evidentiary fruit
    When the social result is broken families, estranged communities, intensified fear, and diminished solidarity, those outcomes themselves become theological evidence.

This last point matters.

In Christian thought, "fruits = outcomes" matter.

A tree is partly known by what it produces. So too a bush, a garden, a person's works.

From a process perspective, "any form of accommodation to power narrows relational possibility. It reduces the field of becoming. It suppresses novelty, mutuality, and creative transformation. It tends toward closure. In Christian jargon, "the Holy Spirit is unable to redeem, restore, renew, transform, or resurrect" because of the interference of God's people, and here, the church, have produced across a society or culture.

And in reference to the term, "closure" - in a Whiteheadian/Process sense - is often a form of diminishment.

As example, when the church perpetuates the inhuman actions of "forced gender fixation,"  it is not merely a social criticism of the church - but a critique of its rigid religious metaphysics - of turning historically contingent constructions from the biblical past into indefinite, eternal structures of cruelty and brutality.

This is a philosophical argument as much as a pastoral one.

And so, "Yes," the presumptive claims of Maga-Evangelicalism should be answered, and can be answered - not merely by opposing them politically, but by exposing the theological grammar beneath them.


Christianity, Power, and the Deformation of the Gospel

The Christian faith is compromised when accommodation to political power displaces allegiance to the ethical, relational, and spiritual center of the way of Jesus.

The problem is not public faith, civic responsibility, or moral engagement in political life. The problem arises when Christianity is fused with ideological identity, nationalist mythology, coercive social order, or providential claims made on behalf of political leaders or movements. At that point, faith risks becoming not witness, but instrument.

This deformation may be recognized in recurring patterns:

  • It appears when proximity to power replaces prophetic distance.
  • When ideological idealism substitutes political myth for moral discernment.
  • When social and ethical responsibilities toward the vulnerable, including migrants, women, trans persons, the poor, and the socially marginalized, are subordinated to systems of exclusion, control, or grievance.
  • When cruelty is defended as order.
  • When the Bible is mythologized into an ideological weapon rather than engaged as historically mediated witness.
  • When presumptive theological assertions claim divine sanction where epistemic humility should restrain speech.
  • When the fruits of such religion include family fracture, ecclesial division, fear, estrangement, and diminished human solidarity.

These are not merely social failures. They are theological distortions.

From a process-relational oriented understanding of God, divine power is not best understood as domination, but as persuasive lure toward justice, beauty, truth, compassion, and richer forms of coexistence. Therefore, movements shaped by exclusion, supremacy, coercion, or sacralized nationalism stand in contradiction to that divine aim of a loving, mediating God.

Moreover, the Christian faith must also alertly reject:

  • the casting of political leadership as God-like, providential figures,
  • the conflation of Jesus' gospel of God's love with enculturated nationalism,
  • the sacralization of violence through expansive "Just War" reasoning,
  • the distortions of apocalyptic absolutism - as in, "This is America's Destiny!" And,
  • the use of religious certainty to justify inequality or deny the dignity of persons.

A theology centered in Jesus is measured not by its capacity to preserve power, but by its fidelity to love, truth, peace, justice, hospitality, and the flourishing of life together.

The central Christian question is not whether religion can be used to defend a nation, a party, or a social order.

The question is whether Christianity still reflects Christ.

Where faith hardens into ideology, where witness becomes propaganda, where power eclipses compassion, and where fear overrides love, theological resistance becomes necessary.

For these reasons, we affirm a Christianity of prophetic distance from power, ethical responsibility toward all persons, interpretive humility, non-coercive peace, and relational solidarity. We reject forms of accommodated Christianity that deform the gospel through nationalism, supremacy, cruelty, exclusion, or ideological absolutism.

If divinity is to mean anything, it must mean love, or it must mean nothing.

Consequently, these stated affirmations in response to Christian Nationalism read less as reaction and more as principled theological policy. It has the shape of a manifesto, or perhaps even the opening of a longer "Confession Against Christian Nationalism."

Let us then proceed to the formation of such a confession....


The Necessity for a Christian Confession of Faith v Power

In response to Evangelicalism's consistent pro-Trumpian rhetoric over the years let us create a foundational baseline "confessional" statement for the Christian Church in line with Jesus' own person,  actions, ministry, and witness....

Firstly, though we could easily offer a partisan response to Graham, it may be more helpful in providing a theological reply stripped of politics. Moreover, this confession arises in response to consistently recurring forms of Christian rhetoric over the past decade that has been voiced-and-acted-upon in public life - including claims advanced by prominent religious figures who have fused Christian witness with:
  • nationalist idealism,
  • providential political claims,
  • civilizational fear and alarm,
  • apocalyptic eschatology, and
  • ideological certainty.
Such rhetoric requires response - not because Christians should avoid public life - but because public theology, when distorted, can wound and harm both faith and neighbor.

The problem addressed here is not in "Christianity's engagement with society" - but "how" it is engaging with society. That Christianity has accommodated itself to political power - not for the first time, nor for the last - but presently and forcefully. That it's engagement has not only become a staple of Christian news - but has negatively affected Christianity's attitude, national posture, and politicized policies - which must be responded to clearly and vigorously:
When faith seeks protection through political dominance, when religious speech inflates leaders into providential agents, when exclusion is moralized, when coercion is baptized, when cruelty is defended as order, and when nationalism borrows the garments of gospel, theological resistance must become necessary.
The following Christian Confession is offered in the spirit intended. To speak against these politicized inflations of accommodating theological positions....


A CHRISTIAN CONFESSION
of FAITH v. POWER


Preface

This statement is offered not as a partisan tract, but as a theological reply to Christian Nationalism.

It arises in response to recurring forms of Christian rhetoric in public life, including claims advanced by prominent religious figures who have fused Christian witness with nationalist idealism, providential political claims, civilizational alarm, and ideological certainty. Such rhetoric requires response, not because Christians should avoid public life, but because public theology, when distorted, can wound both faith and neighbor.

The problem addressed here is not Christianity engaged in society.

It is Christianity accommodated to power.

When faith seeks protection through political dominance, when religious speech inflates leaders into providential agents, when exclusion is moralized, when coercion is baptized, when cruelty is defended as order, and when nationalism borrows the garments of gospel, theological resistance becomes necessary.

This confession is offered in that spirit.


I. The First Principle: The Gospel Is Not an Ideology

Christian faith is compromised when accommodation to political power displaces allegiance to the ethical, relational, and spiritual center of the way of Jesus.

The problem is not public faith, civic responsibility, or moral engagement in political life.

The problem arises when Christianity is fused with ideological identity, nationalist mythology, coercive social order, or presumptive claims made on behalf of political leaders or movements.

At that point, faith risks becoming not witness, but (oppressive) instrument.

The gospel does not exist to sanctify a nation.

The gospel does not exist to protect a ruling mythology.

The gospel does not exist to baptize grievance.

The gospel calls persons and communities toward truth, compassion, justice, reconciliation, and peace.

Where these are eclipsed, deformation has begun.


II. Seven Marks of Theological Deformation

1. Accommodation to Power

When the church seeks proximity to state, nation, party, or strongman as a source of identity rather than maintaining prophetic distance.

2. Ideological Idealism

When political myths replace moral discernment, and national destiny is narrated in quasi-redemptive terms.

3. Departure from Social and Ethical Responsibility

When concern for the poor, vulnerable, migrants, outsiders, women, and socially marginalized persons is subordinated to exclusion, identity preservation, or grievance.

4. Cruelty Masked as Moral Order

When coercive treatment, forced gender fixation, categorical exclusions, or inequalities are defended as righteousness.

Order detached from compassion becomes domination.

5. Mythologizing of Scripture

When the Bible is abstracted from history and turned into an ideological arsenal.

6. Presumptive Theological Assertions

When divine sanction is claimed where humility would require restraint.

7. Fracture as Fruit

When the result is broken families, ecclesial division, estrangement, fear, and diminished solidarity.

A tree is partly known by its fruits.


III. Against the Inflation of Political Power

We reject the inflation of political leaders into providential figures.

We reject the conferral of messianic overtones upon rulers.

We reject the suggestion that Christianity’s future depends upon loyalty to a political personality.

Such claims do not strengthen faith. They weaken discernment.

They substitute devotion to power for fidelity to truth.


IV. Against Christian Nationalism and Sacralized Violence

We reject the conflation of gospel and nationalism.

We reject the sacralization of violence through expansive just war reasoning.

We reject jingoistic Christianity that mistakes militarized identity for moral seriousness.

Peace is not naivete.

Peace is disciplined moral courage.

A faith centered in Christ cannot make coercion its grammar.


V. On Human Dignity and Relational Worth

We affirm the dignity of persons as irreducible.

No person should be reduced to threat category, cultural symbol, or ideological enemy.

This includes immigrants seeking liberty and justice. This includes women whose gifts and leadership are constrained by rigid systems. This includes trans and gay persons whose humanity is often diminished in the name of moral certainty.

Any theology that requires inequality to sustain itself has already entered crisis.


VI. A Process-Relational Clarification

From a process-relational understanding, divine power is not domination.

It is persuasive lure toward richer forms of coexistence.

Toward justice. Toward beauty. Toward truth. Toward compassion. Toward peace.

Movements shaped by exclusion, supremacy, coercion, or sacralized nationalism stand in contradiction to that divine aim.

Accommodation to power narrows relational possibility. It suppresses novelty. It diminishes mutuality. It closes what should remain open.

And closure is often a form of diminishment.


VII. What We Affirm

We affirm:

A Christianity of prophetic distance from power.

A Christianity of ethical responsibility toward all persons.

A Christianity of interpretive humility.

A Christianity of non-coercive peace.

A Christianity of relational solidarity.

A Christianity measured not by its power to preserve dominance, but by its fidelity to love.


VIII. What We Reject

We reject forms of accommodated Christianity deformed by:

Nationalism.

Supremacy.

Cruelty.

Exclusion.

Ideological absolutism.

Apocalyptic manipulation.

Presumptive religious certainty in service to political power.


Coda

The central Christian question is not whether religion can defend a nation, a party, or a social order. The question is whether Christianity still reflects Christ:

Where witness becomes propaganda, resistance becomes necessary.

Where power eclipses compassion, repentance becomes necessary.

Where fear overrides love, reconstruction becomes necessary.

And where divinity is invoked to justify domination, theology itself must answer.

For the crisis before the church is not merely political. It is spiritual, ethical, and theological:

It concerns whether the language of faith will serve truth or illusion.

Whether religion will deepen human dignity or sanctify exclusion.

Whether Christianity will remain captive to power, or recover the difficult freedom of prophetic witness.

For the church does not lose itself all at once. It is diminished gradually:

Each time fear is called faith.

Each time cruelty is called order.

Each time nationalism is called discipleship.

Each time power is mistaken for providence.

Yet what is deformed may be reformed.

What has been accommodated may be disentangled.

What has been captured by ideology may be reclaimed by truth.

And what has been hardened by fear may yet be opened again by love.

That work of reorientation is not secondary to faith - it is part of faithfulness itself.

For the calling of Christianity is not to preserve dominion, but to bear witness.

Not to sanctify power, but to humanize it.

Not to defend empire, but to embody compassion.

Not to conquer through certainty, but to participate in truth.

If divinity is to mean anything, it must mean love, or it must mean nothing.



Expanded Bibliography


I. Process Theology and Philosophical Foundations

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

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

John B. Cobb Jr.
Cobb, John B., Jr. A Christian Natural Theology: Based on the Thought of Alfred North Whitehead. 2nd ed. Louisville: Westminster John Knox Press, 2007.

Cobb, John B., Jr., and David Ray Griffin. Process Theology: An Introductory Exposition. Louisville: Westminster John Knox Press, 1976.

Catherine Keller
Keller, Catherine. Political Theology of the Earth: Our Planetary Emergency and the Struggle for a New Public. New York: Columbia University Press, 2018.

Marjorie Hewitt Suchocki
Suchocki, Marjorie Hewitt. The Fall to Violence: Original Sin in Relational Theology. New York: Continuum, 1994.


II. Political Theology, Power, and Nationalism

William T. Cavanaugh
Cavanaugh, William T. Migrations of the Holy: God, State, and the Political Meaning of the Church. Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2011.

Cavanaugh, William T. The Myth of Religious Violence: Secular Ideology and the Roots of Modern Conflict. New York: Oxford University Press, 2009.

Stanley Hauerwas
Hauerwas, Stanley. The Peaceable Kingdom: A Primer in Christian Ethics. Notre Dame: University of Notre Dame Press, 1983.

Hauerwas, Stanley, and William H. Willimon. Resident Aliens: Life in the Christian Colony. Nashville: Abingdon Press, 1989.

Reinhold Niebuhr
Niebuhr, Reinhold. Moral Man and Immoral Society: A Study in Ethics and Politics. Louisville: Westminster John Knox Press, 2001.

Niebuhr, Reinhold. The Irony of American History. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2008.


III. Prophetic Critique, Scripture, and Public Faith

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

Brueggemann, Walter. Reality, Grief, Hope: Three Urgent Prophetic Tasks. Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 2014.

N. T. Wright
Wright, N. T. Jesus and the Victory of God. Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 1996.

Wright, N. T. Paul and the Faithfulness of God. Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 2013.

Richard B. Hays
Hays, Richard B. The Moral Vision of the New Testament: Community, Cross, New Creation. San Francisco: HarperCollins, 1996.


IV. Justice, Marginality, and Ethical Theology

Howard Thurman
Thurman, Howard. Jesus and the Disinherited. Boston: Beacon Press, 1996.

James H. Cone
Cone, James H. God of the Oppressed. Rev. ed. Maryknoll, NY: Orbis Books, 1997.

Cone, James H. The Cross and the Lynching Tree. Maryknoll, NY: Orbis Books, 2011.

Gustavo Gutiérrez
Gutiérrez, Gustavo. A Theology of Liberation: History, Politics, and Salvation. Rev. ed. Maryknoll, NY: Orbis Books, 1988.

Kelly Brown Douglas
Douglas, Kelly Brown. Stand Your Ground: Black Bodies and the Justice of God. Maryknoll, NY: Orbis Books, 2015.


V. Christian Ethics, Peace, and Nonviolence

John Howard Yoder
Yoder, John Howard. The Politics of Jesus. 2nd ed. Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1994.

Glen H. Stassen
Stassen, Glen H., and David P. Gushee. Kingdom Ethics: Following Jesus in Contemporary Context. 2nd ed. Downers Grove, IL: IVP Academic, 2016.

Dorothy Day
Day, Dorothy. The Long Loneliness: The Autobiography of Dorothy Day. New York: Harper & Row, 1952.


VI. Hermeneutics, Scripture, and Theological Method

Hans-Georg Gadamer
Gadamer, Hans-Georg. Truth and Method. 2nd rev. ed. New York: Continuum, 2004.

Paul Ricoeur
Ricoeur, Paul. Figuring the Sacred: Religion, Narrative, and Imagination. Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 1995.

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


VII. Contemporary Critiques of Christian Nationalism

Kristin Kobes Du Mez
Du Mez, Kristin Kobes. Jesus and John Wayne: How White Evangelicals Corrupted a Faith and Fractured a Nation. New York: Liveright, 2020.

Jemar Tisby
Tisby, Jemar. The Color of Compromise: The Truth about the American Church’s Complicity in Racism. Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 2019.

Samuel L. Perry
Perry, Samuel L., and Andrew L. Whitehead. Taking America Back for God: Christian Nationalism in the United States. New York: Oxford University Press, 2020.

Saturday, April 18, 2026

Evolutionary Process Biology, Consciousness, and a Relational Ontology


Illustration by R.E. Slater and ChatGPT

A Bridge Essay between Essays VIII and IX
in the "What Is Reality?" Series

Evolution, Consciousness, and the Biological
Ground for Embodied Process Realism

Evolutionary Process Biology, Consciousness,
and a Relational Ontology

by R.E. Slater and ChatGPT


The organism is a process, not a machine.
- Alfred North Whitehead

DNA is not a program, but a database used by living systems.
- Denis Noble

There is grandeur in this view of life...
- Charles Darwin, "On the Origin of Species"

We are survival machines - robot vehicles blindly programmed
to preserve the selfish molecules known as genes.
- Richard Dawkins, "The Selfish Gene"

The universe we observe has precisely the properties
we should expect if there is, at bottom, no design, no purpose...
- Richard Dawkins


Series Objective
To articulate a relational ontology grounded in contemporary
physics and biology, in which reality is understood as coherence,
information, and process rather than as substance, isolation,
and atomistic models of reality.

Series Architecture
What Is Reality? series → foundational ontology
Cosmic Becoming Cycle → poetic and metaphysical expansion
Embodied Process Realism → formal philosophical framework
Processual Divine Coherence → theological bridge
How Reality Persists → continuity within becoming

Essay Orientation & Structure
Essays 1–8: Establish what must be true of reality
Companion essays: Show how reality lives and operates in various circumstances
Essays 9–11: Explore the implications for reality's meaning, value, and sacred-divinity
Essay 12: Test whether the whole structure holds under critique (Falsification Testing)

*The sequencing of these essays develops a philosophical arc
with internal accountability

Evolutionary Process, Consciousness, and Relational Ontology
Preface
Introduction
I - Purpose and Scope
II - Classical Darwinism and Dawkins Gene-Centered Model
III - Nobel's Systems Biology and Organismic Integration
IV - LaLand's Extended Evolutionary Synthesis and Organismic Participation
V - Kaufman's Evolutionary Developmental Biology and Self-Organization
VI - Autopoiesis, Enactive Cognition, and Living Process
VII - Complexity Theory and Emergent Novelty
VIII - Information Theory, Coherence, and Persistence
IX - Donald Hoffman, Perception, and the Limits of Naive Realism
X - Process Philosophy and Ontological Grounding
Coda - Evolutionary Consciousness
A Final Reflection - Embodied Process Realism and the Evolutionary Structure of Life
Related Video - Quantum Consciousness Theory by Aperture
Bibliography


Preface

The preceding essays have argued that reality is not best understood as a collection of static entities, nor as an aggregate of isolated mechanisms, but as a dynamic order of relations sustained through coherence, persistence, and ongoing integration. From cosmogeny to structure, from emergence to embodiment, the argument has gradually moved toward a simple but far-reaching claim: reality holds together not as inert substance, but through relational processes by which becoming is patterned, constrained, and sustained.

Yet a question naturally arises at this juncture.

If this account has force at cosmological and ontological scales, does it also hold when reality becomes biologically alive? Hence, we move from stellar cosmogeny to biological evolution....

That is, do the same relational logic appear within biological systems, within evolution, and within consciousness itself?

This essay takes up that question.

Its purpose is not to replace evolutionary biology with metaphysics, nor to impose philosophy upon science. Its purpose is more modest, and perhaps more difficult:

... to ask whether developments within contemporary evolutionary thought may already be moving toward a view of life more compatible with relational ontology than older mechanistic models allowed.

The classical Darwinian inheritance remains indispensable. Gene-centered models retain explanatory power. Yet alongside these, modern developments in systems biology, evolutionary developmental theory, complexity studies, autopoiesis, niche construction, and cognitive science have begun to reveal something more than linear causation operating within living systems.... They suggest feedback, self-organization, reciprocal constraint, organismic participation, and layered forms of integration that exceed simple machine analogies.

This matters not only for biology, but for ontology as well.

For if living systems exhibit the same deep pattern of relational coherence already argued for in earlier essays, then biology does not stand outside the present framework as a separate domain. It becomes one of its strongest expressions.

1 - Under this view, evolution may be reconsidered not merely as selection acting upon isolated traits, but as the ongoing transformation of dynamically integrated systems.

2 - Likewise, consciousness, may then be approached not as an anomaly abruptly appearing within matter, but as an intensified mode of biological integration emerging within the deeper relationality of life itself.

This essay therefore serves as a bridge.

It stands between the ontological arguments already made and the metaphysical and theological reflections still to come.

Its role is to ask whether life, mind, and evolution may be understood as participating in the same broad pattern of coherence, integration, and structured becoming already traced at other levels of reality.

If so, then the movement from ontology ---> to meaning, and from

meaning ---> toward the divine, may prove less abrupt than it first appears.

It may already be inscribed within life itself.


Introduction

Evolutionary theory has long explained the development of life through variation, inheritance, and selection. In its classical forms, this framework has proven extraordinarily powerful, accounting for adaptation, diversification, and the emergence of biological complexity across immense stretches of time. Yet as biology has developed, the explanatory landscape has widened. Questions once treated as secondary have moved toward the center: the role of developmental systems, the significance of organism-environment reciprocity, the emergence of self-organization, and the place of consciousness within living processes.

These developments do not overthrow evolutionary theory. They deepen it.

At issue is no longer whether natural selection remains fundamental, but whether selection alone sufficiently explains the dynamics of living systems once complexity, agency, and cognition emerge. Is life adequately described through machine metaphors and gene-centered causation alone? Or do contemporary developments in biology suggest a richer understanding in which organisms actively participate in shaping their own evolutionary conditions?

This essay explores that question.

Our arguments are neither anti-Darwinian nor anti-scientific. But accepting the achievements of evolutionary theory while asking whether recent developments in systems biology, complexity theory, autopoiesis, evolutionary developmental theory, and related fields point toward a broader interpretive horizon. Specifically, it asks whether these developments may be read as converging toward a view of life as dynamically relational, integrative, and processual in character.

Within that horizon, consciousness is approached not as a mysterious addendum to matter, nor as a detachable substance, but as a possible intensification of organizational processes already present in living systems. This does not claim to solve the problem of consciousness. It proposes instead that consciousness may be better situated when approached through the same relational and processual framework increasingly visible in contemporary biology.

The deeper question, then, is not simply whether organisms evolve.

It is whether evolution itself, understood through the living, relational dynamics of increasingly integrated-and-relational systems, may disclose a richer account of reality than either reductionism or simplified binary dualism has allowed.

This is the question to which the present essay turns.


I. Purpose and Scope

This essay has a limited but important aim: to explore whether contemporary evolutionary thought can sustain a biologically serious account of consciousness without reducing consciousness to epiphenomenon, mystic illusion, or mere mechanical output.

Its purpose is not to construct a new scientific theory, nor to substitute philosophical speculation for empirical biology. Instead, it is to examine whether several major developments in the evolutionary sciences, taken together, suggest an interpretive shift already underway: from viewing life primarily through static mechanisms and isolated causal units, toward viewing life through dynamically integrated systems characterized by relation, feedback, emergence, and self-organization.

The argument proceeds from a simple observation -

Across diverse fields, from systems biology to complexity theory, a recurring pattern appears. Living systems are increasingly described not merely in terms of parts, but in terms of coordinated processes; not merely in terms of instruction, but of interaction; not merely in terms of passive adaptation, but of active, living participation in shaping conditions of persistence and change.

This essay asks what follows from taking these developments seriously.

  • Can consciousness be approached as continuous, in some graded sense, with these broader integrative dynamics?
  • Can evolution be understood not only as selection acting upon variation, but as the transformation of relationally "alive" organized systems?
  • And can such an account be brought into conversation with the relational ontology of process thought as developed throughout the earlier essays, without collapsing biology into metaphysics or metaphysics into biology?

These are the questions that define the scope of what follows.

Consequently, the argument will proceed cautiously. We will first sketch several major developments in contemporary evolutionary thought. It will then examine how these developments bear upon questions of integration, agency, and consciousness. And only then will we ask whether a process-relational interpretation is warranted.

Moreover, this later inquiry will not proceed by assuming that consciousness must be treated as a late and isolated anomaly within nature. It will ask, more cautiously, whether contemporary biology can leave ideological-and-conceptual room for graded accounts of relation and experientiality that may deepen, rather than oppose, evolutionary understanding.
Within that framing orientation, process-relational interpretations - including panrelational and panexperiential approaches - will be considered not as scientific substitutes, but as possible ontological readings of panrelational patterns already visible within living organic systems.
It was not for nothing that Whitehead had initially termed his later-coined process philosophy as the "Philosophy of Organism".

The goal then, is not to force biology into philosophy.

It is to ask whether biology itself may already be suggesting a broader ontology than earlier scientific models have allowed when voicing neutrality and objectivity in its assumptions.


II. Classical Darwinism and Dawkins Gene-Centered Model:
Its Strengths and Limits

The modern biological understanding of evolution remains unintelligible apart from the achievement of Charles Darwin. His account of variation, inheritance, and natural selection remains one of the foundational explanatory frameworks in science. It displaced static conceptions of species, rendered biological diversity historically intelligible, and provided a mechanism through which adaptation could be understood without appeal to external design or intrinsic teleological programming.

That achievement remains decisive.

At the same time, modern evolutionary theory did not stop with Darwin. In the twentieth century, the modern synthesis integrated Darwinian selection with Mendelian genetics, giving rise to increasingly gene-centered accounts of evolutionary change. In this context, the work of Richard Dawkins, particularly in The Selfish Gene, offered a strikingly powerful formulation: genes, rather than organisms, could be treated as the principal units through which evolutionary selection is understood.

The strength of this model was considerable.

It clarified inheritance, sharpened evolutionary reasoning, and offered a mathematically tractable framework for explaining adaptive persistence. Much of contemporary evolutionary thought remains indebted to its precision.

Yet the very strength of gene-centric modeling also exposed certain limits...

Genes do not operate in isolation. Their outcome-expression depends upon cellular environments, complex developmental systems, organism-level regulation, and ecological context. The effect of genetic evolution is that genes are not fixed apart from the relational fields in which they function. Increasingly, this has raised questions about whether the gene-centered model, while powerful, is sufficient as a full account of living dynamics.

This is where important tensions begin to appear.

For if genes function only within larger organizational systems, then causal explanation may not move in one direction alone - that is, from gene to organism. It may also involve reciprocal forms of constraint, feedback, and regulation operating at multiple levels.

Seen in this light, the issue is not whether Darwinian evolution fails.

It is whether evolutionary explanation, once its own developments are taken seriously, begins to point beyond strictly reductionist formulations toward a richer account of life as dynamically integrated processes.

What begins here as tension within evolutionary explanation may prove, under closer examination, to be the first opening toward a more relational understanding of life itself.


III. Nobel's Systems Biology and Organismic Integration

If the preceding section raised questions concerning the sufficiency of strictly gene-centered accounts, this section considers a broader interpretive development already underway within biology itself. That development appears in systems biology, where the focus shifts from isolated causal units toward the coordinated dynamics of living wholes.

Among the significant voices in this development is Denis Noble, whose work has challenged the view that genes function as sovereign controllers of biological form and activity. In place of a unidirectional model in which causation flows primarily upward from genes to organism, Noble and others have argued for a multi-level understanding in which causation operates reciprocally across scales: from genes to cells, from cells to tissues, from tissues to organisms, and from organisms back into the regulatory conditions under which genes themselves function.

This is not a rejection of genetics.

It is a recontextualization of genetics within living systems.

Under this view, genes do not act as self-sufficient instructions, but participate within dynamic regulatory networks:

  • Their expression depends upon context.
  • Their effects depend upon interaction.
  • Their significance depends upon the larger organizational processes within which they are embedded.

This marks a significant shift in biological understanding.

The organism is no longer treated merely as the output of molecular instructions, but increasingly as an active, integrated system whose organizational dynamics contribute to its own persistence, adaptation, and development.

Here, several themes begin to emerge with particular force:

  • First, feedback.
    • Biological processes are increasingly understood through reciprocal loops rather than linear chains of command.
  • Second, constraint.
    • Living systems do not merely permit possibilities; they regulate and channel them.
  • Third, integration.
    • Biological function often appears not at the level of isolated parts, but in the coordination of relations among parts.

These themes matter because they subtly alter the metaphysical imagination often accompanying evolutionary biology.

The older "machine/mechanistic metaphor" suggested externally assembled mechanisms whose parts generate whole behavior through additive causation.

However, Nobel's "systems view" suggests something different -

It suggests wholes that are not reducible to their parts, not because they possess mysterious properties, but because organization itself has explanatory significance.

This point is crucial.

For once organization, regulation, and relational constraint are granted explanatory standing, biology begins to move, however cautiously, toward a vocabulary more compatible with processual and relational interpretations than with strict reductionism alone.

This does not establish a full ontology -

But it does open conceptual space to it....

It suggests that life may be understood not only as chemically instantiated mechanism, but as dynamically coordinated process sustained through ongoing relational integration.

It is at precisely this point, further questions begin to emerge concerning development, adaptation, and organism-environment reciprocity.

Once biological function is understood through layered forms of integration irreducible to isolated components, attention naturally turns toward broader evolutionary models that place organismic participation more centrally within evolutionary change itself.

The question, then, is no longer only how living systems are internally organized.

It also becomes how such systems - via organizational dynamics - may participate in shaping the conditions under which evolutionary processes unfold.

That question now leads beyond systems biology alone.

Seen in this light, biology begins to shift from the logic of instruction toward the logic of relation, where the persistence of life appears increasingly bound to organized patterns of integration rather than isolated causal parts.


IV. Laland's Extended Evolutionary Synthesis and Organismic Participation

If systems biology has widened the understanding of causation within living systems, developments within contemporary evolutionary theory have likewise widened the understanding of how organisms participate in evolutionary change itself. These developments are often gathered, though not without debate, under the broad heading of the Extended Evolutionary Synthesis (ESS).

The significance of this development lies not in abandoning classical Darwinian principles, but in expanding the range of processes recognized as evolutionarily significant.

Among the themes commonly associated with this expansion are developmental bias, phenotypic plasticity, extra-genetic inheritance, and especially niche construction, associated in important ways with figures such as Kevin Laland.

What unites these otherwise diverse developments is a shared shift in emphasis.

  • The organism is no longer treated merely as a passive object upon which selection acts.
  • It is increasingly understood as contributing, in limited but significant ways, to the conditions under which selection itself occurs.
  • This is especially evident in niche construction.

Organisms do not simply adapt to environments. They often modify them.

Beavers alter waterways. Plants transform soils. Humans reshape ecosystems at immense scales.

These modifications do not stand outside evolution.

They become part of the evolving conditions to which future organisms respond.

Phenotypic plasticity deepens this picture further.

Organisms may, within limits, alter developmental responses in relation to environmental conditions, sometimes affecting evolutionary pathways over time. In this context, certain themes once associated, however imperfectly, with Jean-Baptiste Lamarck have reappeared in carefully qualified forms, not as a return to classical Lamarckism, but as recognition that inheritance and adaptation may involve more layered forms of feedback than once assumed.

This matters because it subtly alters the image of evolution itself.

Rather than selection acting upon organisms from the outside, a more reciprocal picture emerges in which organism and environment participate in mutually conditioning processes.

Adaptation becomes not only response.

It also involves contribution.

This is not teleology in the strong sense.

It is, rather, a recognition that evolutionary change may involve more reciprocal and layered forms of causation than earlier models often emphasized.

The importance of this shift extends beyond biology narrowly conceived.

For once organismic participation enters evolutionary explanation, the conceptual distance between mechanism and agency begins, however cautiously, to narrow.

Not because organisms stand outside evolutionary process.

But because they appear increasingly within it as participants, not mere products.

That distinction is subtle.

But it is profound.

For it suggests that evolution may be understood not only as selection operating upon variation, but as involving dynamically interactive systems in which organisms, environments, developmental processes, and inherited constraints together shape the pathways through which change unfolds.

At this point, attention naturally turns toward development itself.

For if organisms participate in shaping evolutionary conditions, the question follows how biological form emerges through developmental processes in the first place.

That question leads directly toward evolutionary developmental biology.

Seen in this light, evolution itself begins to appear less as a sequence of external selections upon passive forms, and more as a relational field in which organism and environment participate together in the patterned emergence of adaptive novelty.


V. Kaufman's Evolutionary Developmental Biology and Self-Organization

Moving from the groundwork laid by the Extended Evolutionary Synthesis (ESS), we may now consider evolutionary developmental biology (Evo-Devo), where questions of organismic participation lead more directly into questions of biological form, development, and self-organization.

If the Extended Evolutionary Synthesis widened evolutionary explanation by recognizing organism-environment reciprocity, evolutionary developmental biology widens it further by asking how form itself emerges through developmental processes.

This marks an important shift.

The question is no longer only how organisms participate in evolutionary pathways.

It becomes how organisms become organized as living forms in the first place.

Classical gene-centered models often encouraged the impression that genes function as blueprints specifying biological form.

Evolutionary developmental biology has complicated that picture considerably.

Genes do not, in any simple sense, directly determine form.

They function within regulatory networks, developmental pathways, and interacting cellular environments whose coordinated activity contributes to the emergence of organized structure.

This changes how development itself is understood.

Biological form increasingly appears not as the mechanical execution of fixed instructions, but as the outcome of dynamically constrained interactions unfolding across multiple levels of organization.

Development, in this sense, is not merely the expression of inherited code.

It is a process of patterned emergence.

This is where the importance of self-organization begins to enter more explicitly.

Across developmental systems, ordered structures often arise not solely through external selection, but through internal relational dynamics that channel possibilities, stabilize patterns, and generate form under constraint.

This does not displace natural selection.

It situates selection within a richer account of how viable forms become available for selection in the first place.

That point is significant.

For it means novelty may not arise only through accidental variation later filtered by selection.

But that biological novelty may also arise through developmental potentials already structured within living systems themselves.

At this point, thinkers associated with complexity and self-organization, including Stuart Kauffman, become relevant.

For the emergence of order, the generation of novelty, and the persistence of organized form begin increasingly to appear not as accidental residues of mechanism alone, but as features of dynamically interacting systems capable of producing structured complexity.

This matters because it deepens the relational picture already emerging in earlier sections.

  • Genes were recontextualized within systems.
  • Organisms were re-situated as participants in evolutionary pathways.
  • Now form itself begins to appear as emerging through organized developmental relations.

The trajectory is cumulative.

And the implications are significant.

For once development is understood through patterned emergence, self-organization, and constrained novelty, biology begins to move still further from the image of life as passive machinery and further toward an understanding of living systems as dynamically formative processes.

At this point, attention naturally turns toward a deeper question.

If living systems are self-organizing, self-maintaining, and dynamically formative, how should life itself be understood as process?

That question leads directly toward autopoiesis and enactive approaches.

Seen in this light, biological form begins to appear less as the execution of isolated instructions and more as the patterned emergence of organized relations, where novelty and structure arise together through dynamically constrained developmental process.


VI. Autopoiesis, Enactive Cognition, and Living Process

The argument has now moved through a discernible sequence:

Sections II through IV traced a progression from genetic selection, to feedback systems, to organismic participation in evolutionary process.

Section V extended that progression further, from participation toward questions of form, emergence, and self-organization.

What began as a widening of evolutionary explanation has thus gradually become something deeper: an inquiry into the nature of living organization itself.

That development now leads naturally toward theories of life that approach organisms not merely as adaptive structures, but as dynamically self-producing processes.

It is in this context that the work of Humberto Maturana and Francisco Varela becomes especially significant.

Under the concept of autopoiesis, living systems are understood not simply as mechanisms assembled from parts, but as systems that continuously produce and maintain the organizational conditions of their own existence.

This is a striking shift.

Life is no longer described primarily in terms of components.

It is described in terms of ongoing self-production.

A living system persists because it continuously regenerates the relations through which it remains what it is.

That insight carries considerable significance.

For it means that the identity of a living system does not lie solely in its material constituents, which may continually change, but in the organized processes through which relational continuity is maintained.

Persistence, in this view, is processual.

Not static.

But ongoing.

This line of thought deepens further in enactive approaches to cognition:

Here cognition is no longer treated as the internal representation of an external world by a detached subject.

It is understood as embodied activity.

Organisms do not simply register environments.

They enact meaningful relations within them.

Perception, adaptation, and activity become intertwined expressions of organism-world coupling.

This matters because the relation between life and cognition begins to narrow.

Cognition no longer appears as a late addition to otherwise mechanical organisms.

It begins to appear as continuous, in some sense, with the very dynamics of living organization itself.

This does not yet amount to a theory of consciousness.

And it need not.

But it does suggest that the boundary once sharply drawn between biological process and cognitive process may be far less absolute than older models assumed.

That suggestion is significant.

For it raises, cautiously but unavoidably, a deeper question.

If living systems are self-producing, self-maintaining, and enact meaningful relations through their own organizational dynamics, what becomes of the traditional distinction between life as mechanism and mind as something added afterward?

That question cannot yet be answered fully.

But it can now be posed on stronger biological grounds than before.

And with it, the conceptual space for approaching consciousness later in this essay begins to open without yet being forced.

At this point, attention turns naturally toward emergence, information, coherence, and the dynamics by which organized systems persist across complexity.

That question leads toward complexity and information theory.

Seen in this light, life begins to appear not merely as adaptive mechanism, but as ongoing self-production through organized relations, where persistence, cognition, and process increasingly converge.


VII. Complexity Theory and Emergent Novelty

The argument has now moved from selection, systems, participation, development, and living self-production toward a further question that presses naturally upon them all:

How do organized systems generate novelty?

This question leads toward complexity theory.

If earlier sections emphasized that living systems are not reducible to isolated components, complexity approaches ask how interactions among components may themselves generate emergent structures, patterns, and forms of order not predictable from the parts alone.

Here the work of Stuart Kauffman becomes especially relevant.

Complex systems are often understood not as rigidly ordered mechanisms, nor as chaotic aggregates, but as dynamically organized systems operating under conditions where novelty may emerge through interaction itself.

This has sometimes been described as life existing near an “edge of chaos,” where excessive rigidity inhibits adaptation, while excessive instability prevents persistence. Between these extremes, structured novelty becomes possible.

This idea matters because it shifts attention from selection alone toward emergence itself.

Order need not be understood solely as externally filtered through selection after random variation appears.

Certain forms of order may arise internally through relational dynamics already present within complex systems.

This does not displace Darwinian processes.

It widens the context in which these evolutionary processes operate.

Selection may preserve viable novelty.

But complexity theory asks how novelty becomes available in the first place.

That is a distinct question.

And a profound one.

For it suggests that creativity, in a limited but significant sense, may belong not merely to outcomes of evolution, but to the dynamics of evolving systems themselves.

This deepens the relational picture already developed.

  • Genes were re-contextualized within systems.
  • Organisms became participants.
  • Development revealed patterned emergence.
  • Autopoiesis revealed living self-production.
  • Now complexity theory suggests that novelty itself may arise through organized interaction.

This marks another widening.

For once emergence is granted explanatory significance, the image of reality as passive substrate governed only by external filtering begins to give way to a richer picture of dynamically generative processes.

At this point, a further question arises:

If complex systems generate novelty, what enables organized patterns to persist rather than dissolve?

That question leads naturally toward information, coherence, and the persistence of order.

Seen in this light, novelty begins to appear less as accidental residue alone and more as a potential arising within the organized interactions of complex systems, where emergence itself acquires explanatory significance.


VIII. Information Theory, Coherence, and Persistence

If complexity theory raises the question of how novelty emerges, information-oriented approaches raise a complementary question:

How does order persist?

This question directs attention toward information, constraint, energy flow, and the maintenance of organized coherence across changing conditions.

Here figures such as Jeremy England become relevant, along with broader thermodynamic and informational approaches to living systems.

What comes into view is not life understood merely as matter arranged in temporary patterns, but life as involving the active maintenance of ordered states under conditions that otherwise tend toward disorder.

This is a significant shift.

Persistence itself becomes an object of explanation.

Not merely survival.

But coherence.

How do relational patterns hold?

How do organized systems maintain identity through change?

These questions resonate deeply with themes already present throughout this essay.

For the language of information, properly understood, need not refer merely to abstract signals or encoded instructions.

It may refer more fundamentally to structured relations that constrain possibilities, stabilize organization, and preserve coherence across process.

That is important.

Because the argument now approaches a point where emergence and persistence begin to appear not as separate themes, but as internally related.

  • Novelty without coherence dissolves.
  • Coherence without novelty stagnates.
  • Living systems appear to require both.

And their relation may be among the deepest features of biological order.

At this point, the argument approaches a threshold.

For if emergence and persistence both depend upon organized relational dynamics, then a larger ontological question can now be asked.

What kind of reality must this be, if relation, novelty, and coherence appear repeatedly at so many levels?

That question leads beyond the science of biology narrowly conceived.

It leads toward the philosophy of ontology. That is, the ontology of reality.

Seen in this light, persistence begins to appear not as mere endurance, but as the maintenance of organized coherence through relational constraints by which living systems hold together across change.


IX - Donald Hoffman, Perception, and the Limits of Naive Realism

Recent discussions in evolutionary cognition have raised a further question that presses beyond adaptive systems, self-organization, and coherence: whether perception itself discloses reality as it is.

Donald Hoffman has argued that evolution does not necessarily favor veridical perception, but fitness-enhancing interfaces. On this view, what organisms perceive may function less as transparent access to reality than as species-specific icons tuned for survival. Perception, in this account, is adaptive mediation rather than direct ontological disclosure.

This proposal does not negate evolutionary biology. It radicalizes one of its implications.

If adaptive success does not require perceptual truth, then naive realism, the assumption that perception straightforwardly presents the world as it is, becomes unstable. Reality may exceed appearance in more profound ways than ordinary empiricism allows.

At this point, Hoffman’s proposal intersects suggestively with themes already developed in this essay. Systems biology, autopoiesis, complexity, and information theory each point beyond atomized mechanism and towards relational patterns, dynamic organization, and integrative coherence. Hoffman extends this pressure into the structure of perception itself.

Yet his position also raises important questions.

If perception is interface, what is interfaced with?

If spacetime is not fundamental, what ontological order underlies its appearance?

If conscious agents are proposed as basic, in what sense are their relations structured, enduring, or intelligible?

These questions suggest the need for a broader metaphysical framework.

Here the significance of this discussion is not that consciousness replaces physics, nor that reality is reduced to idealism. Rather, Hoffman’s critique may be read more modestly and more fruitfully: as exposing limits in perceptual realism while opening space for a deeper relational ontology.

---

This is where Embodied Process Realism may offer a reconstructive response.

What Hoffman describes as interface may be reinterpreted not as illusion, but as localized modes of relational disclosure, partial yet real participations in a deeper coherence not exhausted by immediate appearance.

Reality, on this reading, is not abandoned as inaccessible, nor dissolved into subjectivity. It is re-understood as relationally encountered, partially (if not locally) mediated, and more deeply structured than perception alone reveals.

In this sense, Hoffman does not replace process philosophy. He prepares a question to which process philosophy may respond.

And that question is decisive:

What must reality be like if perception is adaptive, consciousness emergent, relations fundamental, and coherence persistent?

That question leads naturally to the ontological grounding of process thought.


Donald Hoffman - Quantum Physics of Consciousness
by Closer to Truth

Are quantum events required for consciousness in a very special sense, far beyond the general sense that quantum events are part of all physical systems? What would it take for quantum events, on such a micro-scale, to be relevant for brain function, which operates at the much higher level of neurons and brain circuits? What would it mean?

Donald Hoffman explores the challenges of bridging the gap between physical neural activity and subjective conscious experience. The discussion delves into whether quantum mechanisms in the brain provide a deeper explanation, or if a fundamentally new approach is required to understand consciousness.


X. Process Philosophy and Ontological Grounding

With this, the argument reaches its explicitly philosophical moment.

The preceding sections have not argued from metaphysics downward into biology.

They have moved, rather, from biology upward toward a question biology itself appears increasingly to invite.

If selection, systems, participation, development, self-production, emergence, and coherence all point toward the explanatory significance of organized relations, what ontological interpretation, if any, may deepen what these patterns are already suggesting?

It is here that Alfred North Whitehead and process philosophy become relevant.

Not as scientific replacement.

But as ontological grounding.

Process thought proposes, in differing forms, that reality is not most fundamentally composed of static substances bearing external relations. Rather, reality is constituted through relations intrinsic to becoming itself.

Within such a framework, the recurring patterns traced throughout this essay begin to appear less as isolated features of biology and more as expressions of a deeper structure of reality.

The Proto-Elements of Process Philosophy:

Panrelationalism may serve as the primary interpretive grammar: that Reality appears relational through and through.

Panexperiential approaches may cautiously deepen this, suggesting that what emerges in complex organisms as consciousness may stand in continuity, however qualified, with more basic forms of experientiality implicit in relational process.

And, Panpsychism (cosmic consciousness) may be acknowledged as a broader horizon, while not required by the argument itself.

The more modest claim is enough.

That contemporary biology may be compatible with a relational ontology richer than reductionist models have often allowed.

If so, consciousness need not be treated as anomaly.

Life need not be reduced to machinery.

And evolution need not be conceived as blind mechanism alone.

They may be approached, instead, as increasingly complex expressions of relationally structured becoming.

Seen in this light, ontology does not stand apart from biology as an external superstructure, but appears as an attempt to articulate more fully what the deepest patterns of life may already be disclosing.

And lastly, this argument does not claim that contemporary biology proves process metaphysics, nor that scientific developments entail panexperiential interpretations. It argues only that these developments may be read as compatible with, and in some respects suggestive of, a broader relational ontology.


Coda: Evolutionary Consciousness

Across the developments traced in this essay, a recurring pattern has emerged.

  • Selection widened into systems.
  • Systems widened into participation.
  • Participation widened into development, self-organization, emergence, and coherence.

Taken together, these movements suggest that life may be understood not merely as adaptive mechanism, but as dynamically integrated process through which increasingly complex forms of organization arise, persist, and generate novelty.

Within that broadening horizon, consciousness may be approached, at least provisionally, not as an inexplicable intrusion into otherwise mechanical nature, but as a further intensification of integrative dynamics already visible within living systems.

  • This does not reduce consciousness to biology.
  • Nor does it claim biology alone explains consciousness.
  • It suggests only that evolutionary and biological processes may provide stronger ontological grounds for approaching consciousness than strictly reductionist models have often allowed.

Whether such developments point further toward deeper metaphysical questions concerning experiential continuity, including those explored in panexperiential or, more cautiously, panpsychist frameworks, lies beyond the direct scope of this essay, and belongs more properly to the metaphysical section of What Is Reality?, left intentionally incomplete in earlier essays several months ago. It is there that questions concerning the panpsychic character of reality, and concerning God or the sacred-divine, may be taken up more directly.

For now, those larger questions will be suspended.

And perhaps enough has been said here in suggesting that consciousness may be approached as a viable emergent process within the evolution of biological organisms, while philosophical metaphsyics may yet permit a deeper expansion of consciousness into the very structure of processual reality itself, understood in terms that may be described, however cautiously, as panrelational, panexperiential, and panpsychic.

It is there, too, in the metaphysics section, that the question of God may be addressed more directly. For if consciousness belongs not accidentally but meaningfully within the unfolding of relationally structured life, then evolution may disclose not only the emergence of complexity in ontological terms, but also the conditions under which awareness itself may be approached as metaphysically intelligible.

Seen in this light, consciousness appears not outside the processes of life, but as one of their deepest and still unfinished expressions. That complex systems seem to require some form of consciousness (or proto-consciousness) to persist and evolve, and that consciousness itself may not be a thing, but a n essential process within those living systems.



Illustration by R.E. Slater and ChatGPT

A Final Reflection: Embodied Process Realism and the Evolutionary Structure of Life

What is the difference in concepts, philosophically?

Metaphysically, panpsychism concerns the ground or character of reality.
While ontologically, consciousness concerns the outworking or expression of reality’s nature.

Additionally, panpsychism asks whether experientiality belongs to reality at its deepest level, while consciousness asks how that deeper character becomes expressed, intensified, or manifested in living systems.

- R.E. Slater 

If the argument of this essay holds, even provisionally, then the evolutionary structure of life may be understood in ways that exceed the older contrast between mechanism and agency, reduction and emergence, matter and mind.

What has come into view instead is a recurring pattern.

  1. Life appears as relationally organized.
  2. It persists through integration.
  3. It adapts through participation.
  4. It develops through patterned emergence.
  5. It generates novelty through complexity.
  6. And it maintains coherence through dynamically structured relations.

Taken together, these patterns suggest not a collection of disconnected biological observations, but a deeper structural orientation.

They suggest that living reality may be understood as embodied process.

This is the point at which the present essay touches more explicitly what has elsewhere been called Embodied Process Realism. Embodied Process Realism does not treat consciousness as the primitive constituent of reality, but approaches experientiality, where affirmed, as belonging to the deeper persistence of relational coherence from which conscious intensifications arise.

Thus, realism is no longer so simply understood as the affirmation of static objects or isolated substances.

But is understood as the persistence of relational coherence through which becoming holds together across its own unfolding. This is processual realism.

In this light, evolution does not merely produce organisms.

It discloses something about the character of reality itself.

  • That reality appears not inert, but dynamically structured.
  • Not merely assembled, but integrative.
  • Not reducible to parts, but constituted through organized relations.

Under this view, the evolutionary structure of life does not stand apart from ontology.

It becomes one of its clearest embodiments.

And this, perhaps, is the most modest and strongest claim this essay can make:

... that Embodied Process Realism is not imposed upon biology from outside, but may be read, however cautiously, as one way of articulating what the deeper patterns of life already appear to disclose.

Seen in this light, the structure of evolution may be approached not merely as the history of life’s adaptation, but as an expression of reality’s enduring relational coherence in process.


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