Monday, March 23, 2026

The Human Journey Towards Embodied Realism (2)



ESSAY TWO

What Is Embodied Process Realism?

The Human Journey Towards Embodied Realism

by R.E. Slater & ChatGPT

If reality names the metaphysical horizon of the universe, then the universe discloses the ontology of that reality. One is the ether life breathes; the other, the substance by which it is sustained. To study reality is to inquire into the conditions of the universe, and to study the universe is to ask what kind of reality we inhabit. - R.E. Slater



REFERENCE ARTICLES

The Metaphysics of Process Realism
 - "What Is Reality?"

The Ontology of Process Realism - "What Kind of Universe Do We Live In?"
What Kind of Universe Do We Live In? - Cosmology and Consciousness (1)
A Study of Cosmogeny - The Universe's Origins, Teleology and Reflective Futures (2)
A Cosmic Ontology - A Universe of Life, Character and Value (3)
The Universe as Divine Process - From a Universe of Value to Its Theology (4)

The Theology of Process Realism - "What Kind of God Should We Expect?"

Process and Gottlob Frege

Process and Jacques Lacan

Process and Alain Badiou
Badiou on Badiou Reference Material


Preface
A static world invites control. A fractured world invites despair. But a processual and embodied reality may yet invite participation, responsibility, and repair.
This essay is the second movement in an unfinished series asking a deceptively simple question: What is reality? The question is old, but it does not remain old for long. Each age inherits it differently. Each culture frames it through its own wounds, hopes, sciences, myths, religions, and philosophical habits. And each person, when pressed by suffering, wonder, love, rupture, or change, must ask it again for themselves.

The first essay approached reality through cultural and narrative forms. It asked how ordinary stories, popular films, and modern sensibilities already carry hidden metaphysical assumptions about the world we inhabit. This second essay turns more directly toward philosophy. But it does not do so in order to retreat into abstraction. Its aim is the opposite: to ask whether philosophy can return us to the lived density of existence - to the broken, beautiful, unstable, and relational character of reality as it is actually encountered.

Too often, reality has been described as though it were fixed, distant, and available to detached observation. In such accounts, the world is something different from us, far from us, and truth becomes something exterior to our existence, nebulous and ethereal. But actual living rarely feels this way. We do not meet reality as spectators. We meet it from within, as something very personal - amid uncertainty, longing, fracture, decision, and transformation. We are shaped by what we encounter even as we try to understand it.

It is from this conviction that the present essay proceeds.

Here we will bring together four philosophical voices - Gottlob Frege, Jacques Lacan, Alain Badiou, and Alfred North Whitehead - not as isolated systems to be merely summarized, but as conceptual partners in a larger reconstruction. Each thinker illuminates a layer of reality: meaning, fracture, event, and relation. Each offers a way of speaking about the world that exceeds static substance and detached certainty. And each, in different ways, helps disclose the possibility of an embodied realism that is at once philosophical, experiential, and practical.

Let us call that possibility Embodied Process Realism.

By this phrase I do not mean a new school of philosophy so much as a working expansion of process philosophy:

... that reality is neither inert nor merely ideal, neither wholly objective in the old sense nor reducible to private interpretation. Rather, reality is relational, processive, and participatory. It is lived before it is mastered. It is entered into and experienced before it is explained. It forms us even as we attempt to name it.

If Whitehead gives us the relational flow of existence, Lacan gives us its tension; if Badiou gives us rupture and transformation, Frege reminds us that meaning is never absent from the task. Together they suggest that reality is not a finished structure waiting passively to be described, but a dynamic field in which meaning is formed, fractured, transformed, and sustained through relation.

This matters not only for philosophy, but for life. How we imagine reality shapes how we imagine one another. It affects how we think about suffering, truth, politics, religion, healing, conflict, and hope. A static world invites control. A fractured world invites despair. But a processual and embodied reality may yet invite participation, responsibility, and repair.

This essay, then, is not offered as a final answer. It is a further step in an ongoing inquiry. If it succeeds at all, it will do so by helping the reader sense that reality is not farther away for being philosophical, but nearer - more intimate, more demanding, more alive.

Reality wounds.
Reality resists.
Reality interrupts.

And yet, it does not end there.
We do not stand over against reality.
We are implicated/entangled within it. 
Reality is not merely what is.
It is what happens - and what we must do with what happens.

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