| Joint illustrations by Chad Bahl (top) and R.E. Slater and ChatGPT (bottom) |
Author's Note. The clarity required for this essay can be found in the detail expressed in the previous essays 3, 4, 5, 6, 7. When absorbed, the nuances of this present essay will stand out more starkly within the field of reality's comprehension. Here, this detail can only be referred to. The companion essays are therefore a form of testing and examining EPR in relation to other models and perspectives.
physics and biology, in which reality is understood as coherence,
Cosmic Becoming Cycle → poetic and metaphysical expansion
Embodied Process Realism → formal philosophical framework
Processual Divine Coherence → theological bridge
Essays 9–12: Explore the implications for reality's meaning, value, and sacred-divinity
Essay 13: Test whether the whole structure holds under critique (Falsification Testing)
Preface
This essay stands at a turning point within the present series.
The preceding essays have developed an account of reality grounded in relational coherence, structural integration, persistence, and embodiment. Taken together, these reflections have sought to articulate an ontology in which reality is not composed of isolated substances, but unfolds as a dynamic and continuous field of relations within which patterns emerge, stabilize, and endure.
Yet such a development inevitably invites a further question....
How does this account relate to the most influential process ontology of the twentieth century - that of Alfred North Whitehead?
Whitehead’s philosophy of organism remains one of the most sophisticated and far-reaching attempts to reconceive reality in terms of becoming rather than static being. His account of actual occasions, prehension, concrescence, and subjective aim represents a decisive departure from substance-based metaphysics and has shaped generations of philosophical, theological, and scientific reflection.
This essay does not seek to displace that system.
Rather, it proceeds from the conviction that Whitehead’s framework may be extended, reinterpreted, and in certain respects re-centered in light of subsequent developments in philosophy and science over the past hundred years, as well as the internal pressures within his own conceptual architecture that allows for such an endeavor.
The proposal advanced here is that Embodied Process Realism (EPR) emerges not as a rejection of Whiteheadian thought, but as a continuation of its deepest intuitions. Where Whitehead described the becoming of actual occasions, EPR seeks to account more fully for the persistence of relational structures across time, the continuity of becoming as field-like rather than discretely atomic, and the manner in which reality maintains coherence through transformation.
In this respect, the present essay may be understood as a bridge between Classical and Contemporary Process Philosophy of Mind and its related Process-based Theology.
It stands between the classical articulation of process philosophy and a contemporary reformulation that places relational fields, structural persistence, and patterned continuity at the center of ontological description. The intention is not to replace one system with another, but to clarify the transition from one mode of understanding to the next.
What follows, then, is a comparative and constructive inquiry.
It begins with a careful presentation of Whiteheadian classicism, proceeds through an analysis of its enduring strengths and internal tensions, and culminates in the articulation of an alternative framework in which the language of concrescence gives way to that of coherence, and the ontology of discrete occasions is reinterpreted in terms of continuous relational fields.
Philosophy has long wrestled with the problem of how to describe a reality that is neither static nor chaotic, neither reducible to inert substance nor dissolvable into mere flux.
The classical metaphysical traditions of the West, from Aristotle through early modern philosophy, tended toward a substance-based ontology in which enduring things served as the primary units of reality. Change, within such frameworks, was often treated as secondary - a modification of underlying entities that themselves remained fundamentally stable.
In the twentieth century, Alfred North Whitehead proposed a radical alternative.
Rejecting the primacy of substance, Whitehead advanced a metaphysical vision in which reality is composed not of things, but of events - more precisely, of “actual occasions” understood as moments of experiential becoming. These occasions arise through processes of prehension, integrate their inherited data through concrescence, and achieve satisfaction before perishing into the objective past. In this way, reality unfolds as a continuous succession of experiential events, each contributing to the ongoing advance of the world.
Whitehead’s achievement in this regard can hardly be overstated. His system provides one of the most comprehensive accounts of process ever articulated, integrating relationality, temporality, and experience into a unified metaphysical framework. It remains, for many, the definitive alternative to both classical substance metaphysics and reductive materialism.
Yet the very elegance of this system gives rise to further questions.
- If reality is composed of discrete occasions - how is continuity maintained across them?
- If each occasion perishes upon completion - in what sense does structure persist?
- If possibilities are drawn from a separate realm of eternal objects - how are these related to the evolving structure of the world itself?
- And if each occasion possesses a form of interior aim - to what extent does this commit the system to a generalized panpsychism that may exceed the requirements of a relational ontology?
These questions do not undermine Whitehead’s project. Rather, they indicate the depth of the terrain he opened in his era ahead of "philosophy of mind" studies that would proceed in the distant future.
The present essay takes these questions as its point of departure.
It proposes that the central insights of process philosophy may be preserved and extended through a shift in ontological emphasis:
- from discrete events to continuous relational fields
- from concrescence as an internal synthesis to coherence as a distributed structural condition
- from the momentary existence of occasions to the persistence of patterned relations across time.
This shift gives rise to what is here termed Embodied Process Realism.
Within this framework, reality is understood not as a succession of isolated becomings, but as a continuous field of relational coherence within which localized patterns emerge, stabilize, and transform. Events, in this view, are not primary ontological units, but expressions of deeper relational structures that both condition and outlast them.
The task of this essay is therefore twofold.
First, to present Whiteheadian classicism in its strongest and most coherent form.Second, to articulate the transition from that framework to an alternative process-based ontology grounded in relational fields, structural persistence, and embodied coherence.
In doing so, the essay seeks not to draw a line of opposition, but to trace a line of development - one that moves from the becoming of occasions to the continuity of becoming itself.
| Illustration by Chad Bahl |
The metaphysical vision advanced by Alfred North Whitehead represents one of the most comprehensive attempts in modern philosophy to reconceive reality in terms of process rather than substance. At its core lies a decisive inversion of classical metaphysical priorities. Where earlier traditions began with enduring things and treated change as secondary, Whitehead begins with becoming itself and understands stability as derivative.
Reality, in this framework, is not composed of substances but of events - more precisely, of what Whitehead terms actual occasions. These occasions are not objects in the conventional sense. They are momentary acts of becoming, each constituting a process through which the many elements of the past are gathered into a new unity. In this respect, an actual occasion is both a subject and a process: it arises, integrates, achieves satisfaction, and perishes.
This dynamic is governed by a set of interrelated concepts that together form the architecture of Whiteheadian classicism.
For Whitehead, the actual occasion is the fundamental unit of existence. Every entity - from the most elementary physical event to the most complex experience - is understood as an instance of such an occasion. These are not static entities but processes of becoming, each characterized by a finite duration and a definite structure of relations.
An actual occasion is therefore not something that simply is. It is something that happens.
Its existence is defined by its activity: the act of integrating what it inherits from the past and bringing that inheritance to a new form of unity. Once this process is complete, the occasion achieves what Whitehead calls satisfaction, after which it ceases to exist as a subject and becomes part of the objective past for subsequent occasions.
The process by which an occasion relates to its predecessors is termed prehension. Prehension is not to be understood as perception in the ordinary sense, but as a more fundamental mode of relation - a kind of “feeling” by which the past is taken up into the present.
Each new occasion arises within a field of already completed occasions. These prior occasions, having perished as subjects, persist as objective data. Through prehension, the new occasion inherits this data, incorporating aspects of the past into its own process of becoming.
Whitehead distinguishes between two principal forms of prehension:
- Physical prehensions, which relate directly to prior actual occasions and transmit concrete data from the past
- Conceptual prehensions, which involve the apprehension of possibilities, mediated through what Whitehead calls eternal objects
Through these dual modes, each occasion is both conditioned by what has been and open to what might be.
Complementing the actual world is the domain of eternal objects, which function as the pure potentials available for realization within the process of becoming. These are not actualities themselves but abstract forms - patterns, qualities, or structures - that may ingress into actual occasions.
Eternal objects provide the conceptual content through which novelty becomes possible. They are the source of variation, allowing each occasion to differ from its predecessors even as it inherits from them.
The relation between eternal objects and actual occasions is mediated through conceptual prehension. In the process of becoming, an occasion does not simply replicate the past; it selects among an infinite array of possibilities, integrating certain (present? relevant? etc) potentials while excluding others.
In this way, reality is not merely repetitive but creative.
The central activity of an actual occasion is what Whitehead terms concrescence - the process by which the many elements of the past, together with relevant possibilities, are brought into a unified whole.
Concrescence is not an instantaneous event but a structured process. It involves:
- the reception of data through prehension
- the evaluation and selection of possibilities
- the progressive integration of these elements into a coherent unity
This process is guided internally by what Whitehead calls the subjective aim, a principle of orientation that directs the occasion toward a particular form of satisfaction.
The result of concrescence is the emergence of a new, determinate actuality - a unity that did not previously exist.
The notion of subjective aim introduces a teleological dimension into Whitehead’s system. Each occasion is not merely a passive recipient of data, but an active process directed toward a particular outcome.
This aim is not imposed externally. It arises within the occasion itself as a principle of self-determination (a form of agency or proto-agency), guiding the integration of inherited data and available possibilities toward a coherent form.
In this sense, each occasion exhibits a minimal form of interiority - a directedness that shapes its becoming. This feature has often been interpreted as implying a generalized form of experience or proto-consciousness at the most fundamental levels of reality.
When the process of concrescence reaches completion, the occasion achieves satisfaction - a fully determinate state in which all relevant data have been integrated into a unified whole.
At this point, the occasion ceases to exist as a subject. It perishes, becoming part of the objective past. Yet this perishing is not annihilation. The completed occasion remains as a datum, available for prehension by future occasions.
Thus, each act of becoming contributes to the ongoing structure of reality. The past accumulates as a repository of achieved forms, conditioning the emergence of what follows.
Taken together, these elements yield a vision of reality as a continuous advance from the past into the future, mediated through the succession of actual occasions. Each occasion arises from the many that have preceded it, integrates them into a new unity, and in doing so adds itself to the many that will shape the future.
Whitehead expresses this dynamic in one of his most succinct formulations:
"The many (pluralism) become one (monism), and are increased by one." ---> The direction then is always towards unification.
This phrase captures both the integrative and creative dimensions of his system. Each occasion gathers the multiplicity of the past into a single act of becoming, and in doing so increases the totality of what is available for future integration.
What emerges from this account is a metaphysics of remarkable coherence and scope.
- Reality is relational at every level of reality
- Becoming is fundamental to reality
- Novelty is intrinsic to the process of reality
- The past persists as a condition for the present
- The future remains open through the ingress of possibility
Whitehead’s system thus succeeds in overcoming the limitations of substance metaphysics while avoiding the dissolution of reality into undifferentiated flux. It offers a structured account of process in which continuity and change are held together within a single conceptual framework.
Before any constructive development can proceed, it is essential to recognize the depth and enduring power of Whitehead’s metaphysical achievement. His system does not merely revise earlier philosophies; it reconfigures the very terms by which reality is understood. In doing so, it establishes a framework that remains one of the most compelling alternatives to both classical substance metaphysics and reductive materialism.
Perhaps the most decisive contribution of Alfred North Whitehead lies in his rejection of substance as the primary category of reality.
Classical metaphysics, from Aristotle through much of early modern philosophy, treated enduring substances as the fundamental units of existence. Change was understood as something that happened to these substances, rather than something constitutive of their being.
Whitehead reverses this priority.
In his system, becoming is primary, and what we call stability or endurance is derivative. Entities are not self-contained things that persist unchanged through time; they are processes that achieve momentary unity and then pass into the past. What appears as enduring structure is, in fact, the cumulative effect of successive acts of becoming.
This shift dissolves longstanding philosophical tensions:
- between being and becoming
- between permanence and change
- between identity and transformation
By grounding reality in process, Whitehead provides a framework in which change is not a problem to be explained, but the very condition of existence.
Closely tied to this rejection of substance is Whitehead’s insistence on the relational nature of reality.
Actual occasions do not arise in isolation. Each is constituted through its relations to others, inheriting from the past through prehension and contributing to the future as part of the objective world. There is no independent entity that exists apart from this web of relations.
In this sense, Whitehead anticipates many later developments in philosophy and science, where relationality becomes increasingly central. The world is not composed of discrete units that subsequently interact; rather, interaction—or more precisely, relation—is intrinsic to what entities are.
This relational ontology provides a powerful alternative to atomistic models of reality and opens the way for understanding complex systems as integrated wholes rather than aggregates of independent parts.
One of the most distinctive features of Whitehead’s system is the manner in which it integrates experience into the fabric of reality.
Rather than treating consciousness as an anomalous byproduct of material processes, Whitehead generalizes the notion of experience, extending it—at least in a minimal sense—to all actual occasions. Each occasion is not merely a physical event but an experiential one, characterized by its own internal process of feeling and integration.
This move accomplishes several things at once:
- It avoids the dualism that separates mind and matter
- It provides a framework for understanding the emergence of complex forms of consciousness
- It situates human experience within a broader ontological continuum
While the degree and nature of this experiential dimension remain open to interpretation, the underlying insight is profound: reality is not indifferent to experience; it is structured through it.
Whitehead’s metaphysics is fundamentally creative.
Each actual occasion is not a mere repetition of what has come before. Through the interplay of inherited data and available possibilities, each occasion introduces a degree of novelty into the world. This novelty is not arbitrary but arises through the selective integration of eternal objects within the process of concrescence.
In this way, Whitehead provides a robust account of how the new can emerge within an ordered system. The world is neither rigidly determined by the past nor entirely open-ended. It is a structured process in which creativity operates within constraints.
This balance between order and novelty allows Whitehead’s system to accommodate both the regularities observed in nature and the emergence of genuinely new forms.
Whitehead’s analysis of time is equally significant.
Rather than treating time as an external container within which events occur, he understands temporality as intrinsic to the process of becoming itself. Each occasion arises from the past, achieves a moment of present unity, and then passes into the past as a condition for future occasions.
Time, in this sense, is not something in which reality exists. It is the mode of its unfolding.
This conception aligns with a dynamic understanding of the universe and provides a framework for interpreting temporal phenomena—such as causation, memory, and anticipation—in terms of relational processes rather than static positions within a timeline.
Importantly, Whitehead does not dissolve reality into unstructured flux.
His system provides a highly articulated account of process, one in which each stage of becoming is defined by specific functions: prehension, conceptual integration, subjective aim, concrescence, and satisfaction. These are not vague metaphors but carefully delineated elements of a coherent metaphysical scheme.
This structural precision distinguishes Whitehead’s philosophy from more diffuse process-oriented views. It allows for rigorous analysis while preserving the dynamic character of reality.
Although developed in the early twentieth century, Whitehead’s system exhibits a striking resonance with later developments across multiple domains.
In physics, the shift toward relational and field-based descriptions of reality finds a philosophical counterpart in Whitehead’s emphasis on relation and process. In biology, the understanding of organisms as dynamic systems aligns with his rejection of static substance. In philosophy of mind, ongoing debates about consciousness reflect concerns that Whitehead addressed in a different idiom.
While his specific formulations do not map directly onto contemporary scientific theories, the direction of his thought anticipates many of their central themes.
Taken together, these features establish Whitehead’s philosophy as a compelling alternative to reductionist accounts of reality.
Rather than reducing complex phenomena to simpler constituents, his system emphasizes the integration of multiple dimensions—physical, experiential, temporal, and relational—within a unified framework. It allows for the existence of structure without reifying substance, and for the emergence of novelty without abandoning coherence.
In this respect, Whitehead offers not merely a critique of earlier metaphysics, but a constructive vision capable of accommodating the richness of the world as it is experienced and investigated.
III - The Pressure Points Within Whiteheadian Classicism
The strength of Alfred North Whitehead’s system lies in its coherence. Yet it is precisely within this coherence that certain tensions begin to emerge. These tensions are not failures in the ordinary sense. They are better understood as points of intensification—locations within the conceptual architecture where the system presses beyond its own initial formulations.
To attend to these pressure points is not to diminish Whitehead’s achievement. It is to take it seriously enough to ask how its central insights might be extended, reinterpreted, or re-centered in light of their own implications.
1. The Atomization of Actual Occasions
Whitehead’s ontology is built upon the concept of discrete actual occasions. Each occasion is a self-contained process of becoming, arising from the past, achieving unity, and then perishing.
While this provides a clear and analyzable structure, it also introduces a subtle form of ontological atomization.
Even though occasions are relational in their constitution, they remain individuated units. The continuity of reality is therefore described as a succession of such units, each replacing the previous in a serial advance.
This raises an immediate question:
If reality is fundamentally continuous, why must it be described in terms of discrete acts of becoming?
The issue is not merely one of description. It concerns the ontological status of continuity itself. In Whitehead’s framework, continuity is achieved through the relational linkage of occasions. But this leaves open the possibility that continuity may be more fundamental than the units through which it is expressed.
2. The Problem of Persistence
Closely related to this is the question of persistence.
In Whitehead’s system, each occasion perishes upon reaching satisfaction. It does not endure as an active entity but becomes part of the objective past, available for prehension by future occasions. Reality thus advances through a continual process of replacement.
Yet our experience of the world—and many of the structures described by science—suggest a more robust form of persistence.
- Physical structures endure across time
- Biological organisms maintain identity through change
- Patterns remain stable even as their constituents shift
Within Whitehead’s framework, such persistence must be reconstructed indirectly, as the cumulative effect of successive occasions inheriting from one another.
This reconstruction is elegant, but it introduces a tension:
Does persistence arise merely from succession, or is there a deeper continuity that underlies and sustains it?
The system, as formulated, leans toward the former. Yet the phenomena it seeks to explain often suggest the latter.
3. The Duality of Actuality and Eternal Objects
Whitehead’s introduction of eternal objects provides a powerful account of possibility and novelty. These pure potentials serve as the conceptual content available for realization within actual occasions.
However, their status within the overall ontology raises a further question.
Eternal objects are not actual, yet they are necessary for the process of becoming. They exist in a distinct mode, neither temporal nor spatial, and enter into actuality through conceptual prehension.
This creates a subtle dual-structure ontology:
- the actual world of occasions
- the potential realm of eternal objects
While Whitehead integrates these domains through the process of concrescence, the distinction remains conceptually significant.
The question that arises is:
Must possibility be grounded in a separate ontological domain, or can it be understood as emerging from the structured relations of the world itself?
This tension becomes more pronounced when one considers the increasing emphasis in contemporary thought on immanence—the idea that what is possible is conditioned by the structure of what is.
4. The Scope of Subjective Aim
The concept of subjective aim introduces a principle of directionality into each actual occasion. Every occasion is oriented toward a particular form of satisfaction, guided by an internal principle of selection and integration.
This feature gives Whitehead’s system a teleological dimension, one that has often been interpreted as implying a form of generalized experience or proto-consciousness at all levels of reality.
While this interpretation has significant philosophical appeal, it also raises a question of scope.
To what extent must every unit of reality possess an intrinsic aim?
If subjective aim is taken in a strong sense, the system approaches a form of panpsychism in which all entities exhibit some degree of interiority. If taken more minimally, it risks becoming a formal principle without clear ontological grounding.
The tension here is not easily resolved. It reflects a deeper question about the relationship between structure and experience, and whether directionality must be intrinsic to every unit or can emerge from broader relational dynamics.
5. Sequential Becoming and the Question of Continuity
Whitehead’s model of reality is inherently sequential.
Each occasion arises, completes its process, and perishes, giving rise to the next. Time is thus structured as a succession of discrete moments of becoming, each linked to its predecessors through prehension.
This sequential structure provides clarity, but it also raises a further issue:
Is becoming fundamentally discrete, or is it continuous?
If becoming is truly continuous, then the division into distinct occasions may be a conceptual convenience rather than an ontological necessity. The appearance of discrete units could then be understood as emergent patterns within a more fundamental field of continuity.
Whitehead’s system does not deny continuity, but it locates it in the relations between occasions rather than in the underlying fabric of reality itself.
6. The Status of the Field
Perhaps the most significant pressure point concerns what is not explicitly foregrounded in Whitehead’s system: the notion of a field.
While his emphasis on relation and process anticipates field-based thinking, the formal structure of his ontology remains oriented toward discrete units of becoming. The field, if present, is implicit rather than explicit.
Yet developments in physics and systems theory increasingly point toward a reality in which fields are primary, and localized entities emerge as patterns or excitations within them.
This suggests a possible reorientation:
What if the relational field is not secondary to occasions, but primary?
Such a shift would not negate Whitehead’s insights into process and relation. It would, however, alter the ontological starting point, moving from discrete acts of becoming to a continuous field within which such acts are expressed.
7. Summary of the Tensions
Taken together, these pressure points do not undermine Whitehead’s system. They reveal its depth.
- The discreteness of occasions raises questions about continuity
- The perishing of occasions raises questions about persistence
- The separation of eternal objects raises questions about immanence
- The universality of subjective aim raises questions about experience
- The sequential model raises questions about the nature of time
- The implicit status of the field invites its explicit articulation
Each of these tensions points in a similar direction.
They suggest that the relational and processual insights at the heart of Whitehead’s philosophy may be carried further—toward an ontology in which continuity, persistence, and relational structure are not derived from discrete events, but are themselves primary.
IV - The Shift: From Event Ontology to Field Ontology
The preceding analysis has not sought to displace the framework of Alfred North Whitehead, but to follow its implications to the point at which a reorientation becomes both possible and, in certain respects, necessary.
At the center of that reorientation lies a shift in ontological emphasis.
Whitehead begins with actual occasions—discrete acts of becoming through which the many are gathered into one. Relation, continuity, and structure are then understood through the interconnection of these occasions. The world advances as a succession of such acts, each inheriting from the past and contributing to the future.
The alternative proposed here does not deny this description. Rather, it asks whether the order of explanation might be reversed.
What if relation is not derived from occasions, but occasions are derived from relation?What if continuity is not constructed from succession, but succession emerges within continuity?
This inversion marks the transition from an event-centered ontology to a field-centered ontology.
1. From Discrete Occasions to Continuous Fields
In an event-based ontology, reality is understood as a series of discrete units—each arising, integrating, and perishing. Continuity is achieved through the linkage of these units, and persistence is reconstructed as the cumulative effect of their succession.
In a field-based ontology, the starting point is different.
Reality is understood as a continuous relational field—a structured domain within which patterns arise, stabilize, and transform. What appear as discrete events are not primary units, but localized expressions of this underlying field.
This does not eliminate the phenomena that Whitehead describes. It reframes them.
- Concrescence becomes the local stabilization of coherence
- Prehension becomes coupling within a continuous field
- Actual occasions become patterns of intensified relation
In this view, discreteness is not foundational. It is emergent.
2. Continuity as Ontological, Not Derivative
Within Whitehead’s system, continuity is achieved through the relational inheritance of successive occasions. The past persists as objective data, shaping the emergence of the present.
The field-based approach suggests a deeper continuity.
Rather than being constructed from succession, continuity is understood as ontologically prior. The field does not arise from the connection of discrete units; rather, discrete units arise as modulations within the field.
This shift has significant implications.
- Persistence is no longer reconstructed indirectly
- Structure is no longer dependent solely on succession
- The past is not merely retained as data, but remains present as transformed relation
In this sense, the field carries forward what the succession of occasions attempts to preserve.
3. Relation as Primary
Whitehead’s emphasis on relation is one of his most enduring contributions. Yet within his system, relations are still mediated through actual occasions. Each occasion relates to others through prehension, integrating those relations into its own becoming.
The present shift places relation at the center more directly.
Relation is not something that occurs between entities. It is the condition under which entities arise. The field is not a collection of connected units; it is a structured network of relations within which units appear as stabilized configurations.
This move intensifies Whitehead’s relational insight.
- There are no independent units that subsequently relate
- There is only relation, structured and differentiated in various ways
What we call entities are therefore not foundational. They are expressions of relational coherence.
4. Reinterpreting Concrescence as Coherence
At the heart of Whitehead’s system lies concrescence—the process by which the many become one.
Within a field ontology, this process is not discarded but reinterpreted.
Concrescence can be understood as the local achievement of coherence—a moment in which relational dynamics stabilize into a pattern that exhibits unity. The emphasis shifts from the internal synthesis of a discrete subject to the emergence of a stable configuration within a continuous field.
This reframing has several consequences.
- Unity is no longer confined to a momentary occasion
- Stability can extend across multiple scales
- Integration is distributed rather than localized
The result is a concept of coherence that is both more flexible and more aligned with the persistence observed in physical and biological systems.
5. Possibility Within the Field
The role of eternal objects in Whitehead’s system is to provide the realm of possibility from which occasions draw their conceptual content.
Within a field-based ontology, possibility is not located in a separate domain. It is understood as structured potential within the field itself.
The field is not uniform. It is differentiated, constrained, and patterned. These structures condition what can emerge, guiding the formation of stable patterns while excluding others.
Possibility, in this sense, is not external to actuality. It is immanent within the relational structure of the world.
6. From Perishing to Transformation
Whitehead’s account of perishing ensures that each occasion contributes to the ongoing process of reality. Once an occasion achieves satisfaction, it ceases to exist as a subject and becomes part of the objective past.
The field-based perspective reframes this dynamic.
Nothing is simply lost. What changes is not existence, but mode of participation.
- What was once a localized pattern becomes part of a broader relational structure
- What was once active becomes conditioning
- What was once a focal point becomes distributed
Perishing, in this sense, is better understood as transformation within a continuous field.
7. The Reorientation Summarized
The shift from event ontology to field ontology may be expressed in a series of corresponding transformations:
- Actual occasions → stabilized patterns
- Prehension → relational coupling
- Concrescence → coherence formation
- Eternal objects → structured possibility
- Perishing → transformational persistence
These are not replacements in the sense of rejection. They are reinterpretations that preserve the insights of the original framework while reconfiguring their ontological grounding.
8. The Emergence of Embodied Process Realism
This reorientation gives rise to what may be termed Embodied Process Realism (EPR).
Within this framework:
- Reality is a continuous relational field
- Structure emerges through coherence
- Patterns stabilize and persist across transformation
- Identity is understood as patterned continuity
- Becoming is continuous rather than discretely atomic
The emphasis shifts from the momentary achievement of unity to the ongoing persistence of structured relations.
In this sense, EPR does not abandon process philosophy. It deepens it.
| Illustration by R.E. Slater and ChatGPT |
The transition from event-centered to field-centered ontology makes possible a reformulation of process philosophy in which continuity, persistence, and relational structure are treated as primary. This reformulation—here termed Embodied Process Realism (EPR)—retains the core intuition of becoming while relocating its ontological grounding.
Within this framework, reality is understood not as a succession of discrete occasions, but as a continuous relational field within which patterns arise, stabilize, and transform. Events remain, but as expressions of deeper structures. Becoming continues, but as the mode of a field that persists through its own transformations.
At the foundation of EPR lies the concept of a persistent relational field.
This field is not an inert background. It is the active condition of reality—a structured network of relations that both constrains and enables the emergence of patterns. It is continuous, in the sense that it is not composed of discrete units, and persistent, in the sense that it endures through transformation.
Within this field:
- relations are primary
- structures are emergent
- patterns are stabilized configurations
The field does not arise from the connection of parts. Rather, what we call parts arise as differentiations within the field.
What Whitehead describes as prehension may be reinterpreted within EPR as field coupling.
Coupling refers to the manner in which regions of the field influence and integrate with one another. It is not a relation between independent units, but a mutual participation within a shared structure.
Two modes of coupling may be distinguished:
- Structural coupling, through which established patterns condition the emergence of new configurations
- Dynamic coupling, through which ongoing interactions produce variation and adaptation
Through these modes, the field maintains continuity while allowing for change. Integration is not confined to a moment of concrescence; it is distributed across the field as an ongoing process.
Within the continuous field, certain regions achieve a higher degree of integration. These may be termed coherence nodes.
A coherence node is not a self-contained entity, but a localized stabilization of relational dynamics. It is a region in which the field achieves sufficient integration to exhibit identifiable structure and persistence.
In this sense, coherence nodes correspond functionally to what Whitehead calls actual occasions, but with an important difference:
- they are not fundamentally discrete
- they do not arise and vanish in isolation
- they are sustained within the field that gives rise to them
A coherence node is therefore both distinct and continuous—a pattern that can be identified without being ontologically separate from the field in which it exists.
The role of possibility within EPR is grounded in the concept of structured potential.
Rather than appealing to a separate domain of eternal objects, EPR understands possibility as immanent within the relational field. The field is not uniform; it possesses internal structure—constraints, gradients, and patterns—that condition what can emerge.
Possibility is therefore:
- not external to actuality
- not freely selectable from an abstract realm
- but shaped by the configuration of the field itself
This does not eliminate novelty. It situates novelty within a structured context, where new patterns arise through the reconfiguration of existing relations.
One of the central concerns of EPR is the question of persistence.
Within this framework, what persists is not a substance nor a momentary event, but a pattern—a configuration of relations that maintains its identity across transformation.
Patterns endure by:
- maintaining coherence across time
- adapting to changing conditions
- integrating new relations without losing structural continuity
This allows for a more direct account of phenomena such as:
- physical stability
- biological identity
- cognitive continuity
Persistence is no longer reconstructed from succession. It is intrinsic to the structure of the field.
Whitehead’s concept of perishing ensures that each occasion contributes to the ongoing process of reality. In EPR, this contribution is understood in terms of transformation.
When a pattern loses its local stability, it does not vanish. It becomes redistributed within the field, contributing to the conditions under which new patterns may emerge.
Transformation thus replaces perishing as the fundamental mode of transition.
- what was once localized becomes distributed
- what was once active becomes conditioning
- what was once distinct becomes integrated
In this way, the field carries forward its own history without requiring the complete cessation of its constituent patterns.
Within EPR, identity is not tied to a fixed substance or a single moment of becoming. It is understood as patterned continuity.
A pattern maintains its identity not by remaining unchanged, but by preserving a recognizable structure across transformation. This continuity is neither static nor arbitrary. It is sustained through coherence within the field.
This conception of identity aligns with a wide range of phenomena:
- the persistence of physical structures
- the continuity of living organisms
- the stability of cognitive and cultural patterns
Identity, in this sense, is neither absolute nor illusory. It is relationally sustained.
The framework of Embodied Process Realism may be summarized as follows:
- Reality is a continuous relational field
- Relations are primary
- Structure emerges through coherence
- Patterns stabilize as localized configurations
- Possibility is immanent within the field
- Persistence is the continuity of patterned relations
- Change occurs through transformation, not disappearance
In this view, becoming is not a succession of isolated events, but the ongoing modulation of a field that persists through its own activity.
It is important to emphasize that this framework does not abandon Whitehead’s insights.
- The primacy of process is retained
- The centrality of relation is intensified
- The role of creativity is preserved
- The integration of experience remains a guiding concern
What changes is the ontological starting point.
Where Whitehead begins with occasions and builds toward relation, EPR begins with relation and understands occasions as emergent expressions of it.
VI - Direct Comparison: From Concrescence to Coherence
With the architecture of Alfred North Whitehead’s system established and the framework of Embodied Process Realism articulated in its own terms, the relation between them may now be brought into explicit focus.
The aim of this comparison is not to oppose two incompatible systems, but to clarify the manner in which one framework develops out of and reconfigures the other. What emerges is not a simple contrast, but a shift in ontological emphasis—one that preserves continuity while altering the center from which explanation proceeds.
Whitehead’s system begins with actual occasions.
These occasions are the fundamental units of reality—each a discrete act of becoming through which the many elements of the past are integrated into a new unity. Relation, continuity, and structure are then understood through the succession and interconnection of these units.
EPR begins elsewhere.
Its starting point is the relational field—a continuous structure within which patterns arise. What Whitehead treats as fundamental units are here understood as localized expressions of a more primary continuity.
The difference may be expressed succinctly:
- Whitehead: events generate relation
- EPR: relation generates events
This is not a contradiction, but a reversal in explanatory order.
At the center of Whitehead’s system lies concrescence, the process by which the many become one.
Concrescence is an internal activity. Each occasion gathers data from the past, integrates possibilities, and achieves a unified satisfaction. Unity is therefore momentary, confined to the life of the occasion itself.
In EPR, this process is reinterpreted as coherence.
Coherence is not confined to a discrete subject. It is a distributed condition of the field, within which local regions achieve varying degrees of integration. A coherence node represents a point at which relational dynamics stabilize sufficiently to exhibit unity.
The contrast is subtle but significant:
- Concrescence: unity achieved within a moment
- Coherence: unity sustained across relations
Where Whitehead emphasizes the act of becoming one, EPR emphasizes the continuity of that unity through transformation.
Whitehead’s concept of prehension describes the manner in which an occasion relates to its past. Through prehension, prior occasions are taken up as data and incorporated into the present act of becoming.
Prehension implies a directional relation: the present “feels” the past.
Within EPR, this dynamic is reframed as field coupling.
Coupling is not an act performed by a discrete subject, but a condition of participation within a shared field. Regions of the field are continuously influencing one another through structural and dynamic relations.
The difference lies in the mode of relation:
- Prehension: discrete reception of past data
- Coupling: continuous mutual participation
What appears in Whitehead as a sequence of acts becomes, in EPR, an ongoing integration across the field.
Whitehead introduces eternal objects as the source of possibility—pure potentials that may be realized within actual occasions.
These objects exist in a distinct mode, neither actual nor temporal, and enter into the process of becoming through conceptual prehension.
EPR relocates possibility within the field itself.
Possibility is understood as structured potential, arising from the constraints and configurations of relational coherence. What can emerge is conditioned by what already exists, not selected from an external domain.
The contrast is therefore:
- Eternal objects: possibility as a separate ontological realm
- Structured possibility: possibility as immanent within relation
This shift reduces ontological duality while preserving the role of novelty.
In Whitehead’s system, each occasion concludes in perishing. Having achieved satisfaction, it ceases to exist as a subject and becomes part of the objective past.
Perishing ensures that the process moves forward, with each occasion contributing to the conditions of what follows.
EPR reframes this transition as transformation.
Nothing is simply lost. Patterns do not vanish; they are redistributed within the field, continuing to shape its structure in altered form.
The distinction may be stated as:
- Perishing: cessation of subjective existence
- Transformation: continuity of relational influence
This allows for a more direct account of persistence, without relying solely on the succession of discrete events.
Whitehead’s continuity is constructed.
It arises through the inheritance of successive occasions, each linked to its predecessors through prehension. The world advances as a chain of becoming, each moment connected to the last.
In EPR, continuity is ontological.
It is not built from succession, but presupposed as the condition within which succession occurs. The field persists, and events appear as modulations within that persistence.
Thus:
- Whitehead: continuity through succession
- EPR: succession within continuity
This inversion lies at the heart of the shift from event ontology to field ontology.
For Whitehead, identity is momentary.
Each occasion is fully itself only in the instant of its concrescence. What persists across time is not the occasion itself, but the data it leaves behind, which may be taken up by future occasions.
EPR offers a different account.
Identity is understood as patterned continuity—a structure that maintains coherence across transformation. A pattern persists not by remaining unchanged, but by sustaining its relational configuration over time.
The contrast becomes clear:
- Whitehead: identity as momentary unity
- EPR: identity as enduring pattern
This shift allows for a more direct engagement with the persistence observed in physical, biological, and cognitive systems.
Taken together, these comparisons reveal a consistent movement.
Whitehead’s system is oriented toward the becoming of occasions. It provides a detailed account of how unity is achieved within discrete acts of process.
EPR is oriented toward the continuity of becoming. It seeks to explain how structure persists, how patterns endure, and how the field maintains coherence through transformation.
The relation between the two may therefore be expressed in a single sentence:
Whitehead describes how reality comes into being; EPR describes how reality remains in being while becoming.
It is essential to emphasize that this reorientation does not reduce Whitehead’s system to a preliminary stage.
Rather, it reveals the depth of his insight.
- His emphasis on process makes the shift possible
- His focus on relation anticipates the field
- His account of integration points toward coherence
EPR may thus be understood as an extension of Whiteheadian classicism, one that carries its central intuitions into a different ontological configuration.
VII - Implications for Ontology, Science, and Theology
The movement from Whiteheadian classicism to Embodied Process Realism is not merely terminological. It alters the way reality is approached at several levels of interpretation. If the primary ontological emphasis shifts from discrete occasions to continuous relational fields, then the implications extend beyond process metaphysics itself. They affect how we understand persistence, embodiment, scientific explanation, consciousness, and divine presence.
EPR is therefore not simply a “revision” of Whitehead. It is a broadened framework for asking what reality must be like if relation, coherence, transformation, and persistence are not secondary features of the world, but among its most basic conditions.
The first implication is ontological.
If relation is primary, then reality cannot be adequately described as a collection of independent things, nor even as a series of discrete events alone. Reality is better understood as a field of structured relations in which identifiable forms emerge through coherence.
This means that persistence is not accidental. It is not merely the illusion of continuity produced by rapidly succeeding moments. Rather, persistence belongs to the way reality holds itself together.
A mountain, a body, a mind, a culture, or a galaxy is not a fixed substance. But neither is it merely a fleeting succession of disconnected events. Each is a stabilized pattern of relational coherence, enduring by changing, transforming by persisting.
This allows EPR to speak of identity without requiring immobility.
Identity becomes:
not sameness without change,but continuity through transformation.
The second implication concerns science.
Modern science itself has increasingly moved away from purely object-centered descriptions of reality. In physics, fields often prove more fundamental than particles. In biology, organisms are understood as dynamic systems rather than machines assembled from static parts. In ecology, no living form can be understood apart from its relational environment. In cognitive science, mind is increasingly approached through embodiment, integration, and interaction.
EPR does not claim to be a scientific theory in the narrow sense. It does not replace physics, biology, or cognitive science. Rather, it offers an ontological interpretation of why these sciences increasingly require relational, field-like, and systems-based categories.
Science describes how reality behaves.
EPR asks what reality must be like for such behavior to be possible.
On this view, the scientific movement toward fields, systems, emergence, and relational structures is not incidental. It may be interpreted as evidence that reality itself is not fundamentally thing-like, but coherence-forming.
The third implication is theological.
Classical theologies often imagined divine action in interventionist terms: God acts upon the world from outside, interrupting or directing events according to divine will. Whitehead’s process theology significantly altered this picture by presenting God as persuasive rather than coercive, relational rather than unilateral, deeply involved in the becoming of the world.
EPR extends this theological intuition by shifting attention from divine action within discrete occasions to divine presence within the field of relational coherence itself.
In this view, God need not be imagined as an external actor imposing outcomes upon the world. Divine presence may instead be understood as the deepest lure toward coherence, beauty, integration, and relational flourishing within the field of becoming.
This does not reduce God to the world. Nor does it separate God from the world. Rather, it suggests a panentheistic horizon in which divine presence is intimately involved in the coherence of reality without coercively determining its outcomes.
God becomes not the violator of process, but the companioning depth within process.
The shift from event ontology to field ontology also affects how consciousness is approached.
Whitehead’s system tends toward a universalized account of experience, in which every actual occasion possesses some minimal interiority. EPR is more cautious. It does not require consciousness to be present everywhere in the same way, nor does it need to claim that every unit of reality is already experiential in a strong sense.
Instead, EPR allows consciousness to be understood as an emergent intensification of relational coherence.
Where coherence becomes sufficiently integrated, recursively organized, embodied, and self-referential, consciousness may arise as the interior expression of that organization.
This preserves the intuition that consciousness is not alien to reality while avoiding the premature claim that consciousness, in recognizable form, is everywhere.
Thus, EPR may distinguish:
- panrelational reality
- panexperiential possibility
- emergent consciousness
This distinction is vital. It allows EPR to remain open to panpsychic or panexperiential interpretations without making them necessary at the foundational ontological level.
If reality is relational coherence, then ethics cannot be reduced to rules imposed upon isolated individuals. Ethics becomes the question of how persons, communities, cultures, and institutions participate in the formation or deformation of relational fields.
Every action contributes to a field.
Some actions intensify coherence, trust, beauty, justice, and mutual flourishing. Others fracture the field, producing alienation, violence, domination, and disorder.
This gives EPR an ethical orientation without requiring an externally imposed moralism.
The good is not arbitrary. It is that which strengthens relational coherence and enlarges the conditions for flourishing. Evil, by contrast, is that which deforms relation, isolates beings from one another, and disrupts the possibilities of shared becoming.
This has implications for politics, ecology, economics, theology, and interpersonal life. A processual ethic does not ask only, “What rule has been obeyed?” It asks:
What kind of world is this action helping to create?
EPR also reshapes the question of human meaning.
If the self is not a fixed substance but a pattern of relational continuity, then human identity is neither an isolated ego nor a passing illusion. It is a living coherence - biological, psychological, social, historical, and spiritual.
We are not things.
We are patterned lives.
Each person is a field of inherited relations, embodied memories, social meanings, biological processes, and future-oriented possibilities. The self persists not by remaining unchanged, but by integrating change into a continuing pattern of life.
This view offers a more generous account of human becoming. It allows for growth, rupture, healing, grief, reconstruction, and transformation without requiring the self to be either fixed or dissolved.
The human person becomes a site of ongoing coherence.
Taken together, these implications suggest that EPR is best understood as a post-Whiteheadian development rather than an anti-Whiteheadian alternative.
But it re-centers the system around field, coherence, persistence, and patterned continuity.
In this way, EPR seeks to carry Whitehead forward into a conceptual environment shaped by contemporary physics, systems theory, ecological thought, cognitive science, and renewed theological imagination.
It asks not only how each occasion becomes, but how reality itself holds together while becoming.
The larger horizon of this shift is not merely philosophical. It is existential.
If reality is relational coherence, then every form of life participates in the shaping of the world. Human beings are not detached observers standing outside a neutral universe. We are participants in a field that precedes us, forms us, and is altered by us.
This places responsibility at the center of ontology.
EPR therefore turns ontology toward responsibility. It suggests that the structure of reality itself calls for forms of life that deepen coherence rather than fracture it.
The world is not simply given.
It is continually being formed.
And we are among its formative participants.
CODA - The Continuity of Becoming
The movement traced in this essay has not been one of replacement, but of reorientation.
Beginning with the metaphysical vision of Alfred North Whitehead, we have followed the architecture of a world composed of becoming—of occasions that arise, integrate, and pass into the past. We have seen the strength of that vision: its rejection of static substance, its affirmation of relation, its integration of experience, and its account of creativity within constraint.
We have also attended to the tensions that emerge within that framework—not as defects, but as invitations.
These tensions point toward a deeper question: whether the continuity we observe in reality is adequately grounded in the succession of discrete occasions, or whether it belongs more fundamentally to the structure within which those occasions arise.
The proposal of Embodied Process Realism has been to take that question seriously.
Rather than beginning with discrete events and building toward relation, EPR begins with relation itself—with a continuous field of structured coherence within which identifiable forms emerge, stabilize, and transform. What Whitehead described as concrescence becomes, in this view, the local stabilization of coherence. What he termed perishing becomes transformation. What appeared as succession becomes modulation within continuity.
The shift is subtle, but decisive.
From the becoming of occasionsto the continuity of becoming itself.
In this light, reality is not composed of isolated moments that briefly achieve unity and then vanish. It is a living field in which patterns persist through change, structures endure through transformation, and identity is carried forward as coherence rather than preserved as static form.
Nothing simply disappears.
What is, becomes otherwise.
And in that transformation, the real endures.
This does not bring the inquiry to an end.
It opens it.
For if reality is relational coherence, then the questions that follow are not only metaphysical. They are existential, ethical, and theological. They concern how coherence is formed, how it is broken, how it may be restored, and how participation in that field shapes the future of what can become.
The essays that follow will take up these questions.
They will move from ontology into the domains of identity, value, meaning, and teleology—not as separate concerns, but as expressions of the same underlying structure: a reality that persists through becoming, and a becoming that calls forth participation.
Primary Sources - Whitehead
Whitehead, Alfred North. Process and Reality: An Essay in Cosmology. Corrected Edition, edited by David Ray Griffin and Donald W. Sherburne. New York: Free Press, 1978.
Whitehead, Alfred North. Science and the Modern World. New York: Free Press, 1967.
Whitehead, Alfred North. Adventures of Ideas. New York: Free Press, 1967.
Whitehead, Alfred North. Modes of Thought. New York: Free Press, 1968.
Whitehead, Alfred North. Religion in the Making. New York: Fordham University Press, 1996.
Process Philosophy and Theology (Secondary Sources)
Cobb, John B., Jr., and David Ray Griffin. Process Theology: An Introductory Exposition. Philadelphia: Westminster Press, 1976.
Griffin, David Ray. Reenchantment without Supernaturalism: A Process Philosophy of Religion. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2001.
Hartshorne, Charles. Reality as Social Process: Studies in Metaphysics and Religion. New York: Hafner Publishing, 1953.
Suchocki, Marjorie Hewitt. God, Christ, Church: A Practical Guide to Process Theology. New York: Crossroad, 1982.
Keller, Catherine. Face of the Deep: A Theology of Becoming. London: Routledge, 2003.
Philosophical Context and Lineage
Leibniz, Gottfried Wilhelm. Philosophical Essays. Translated and edited by Roger Ariew and Daniel Garber. Indianapolis: Hackett, 1989.
Spinoza, Baruch. Ethics. Translated by Edwin Curley. London: Penguin Classics, 1996.
Bergson, Henri. Creative Evolution. Translated by Arthur Mitchell. Mineola, NY: Dover Publications, 1998.
Contemporary Philosophy of Mind and Consciousness
Strawson, Galen. Realistic Monism: Why Physicalism Entails Panpsychism. Exeter: Imprint Academic, 2006.
McGilchrist, Iain. The Matter with Things: Our Brains, Our Delusions, and the Unmaking of the World. London: Perspectiva Press, 2021.
Faggin, Federico. Irreducible: Consciousness, Life, Computers, and Human Nature. New York: Basic Books, 2024.
Segall, Matthew T. Physics of the World-Soul: Whitehead’s Adventure in Cosmology. Albany: SUNY Press, 2021.
Science, Systems, and Relational Thought
Noble, Denis. Dance to the Tune of Life: Biological Relativity. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2016.
Kauffman, Stuart. Reinventing the Sacred: A New View of Science, Reason, and Religion. New York: Basic Books, 2008.
Deacon, Terrence W. Incomplete Nature: How Mind Emerged from Matter. New York: W. W. Norton, 2012.
Prigogine, Ilya, and Isabelle Stengers. Order Out of Chaos: Man’s New Dialogue with Nature. New York: Bantam Books, 1984.
Ecology, Cosmology, and Theological Naturalism
Berry, Thomas. The Dream of the Earth. San Francisco: Sierra Club Books, 1988.
Berry, Thomas, and Brian Swimme. The Universe Story. New York: HarperCollins, 1992.
Swimme, Brian, and Mary Evelyn Tucker. Journey of the Universe. New Haven: Yale University Press, 2011.
Embodied Process Realism (Primary Project Sources)
Slater, R. E., and ChatGPT. The Ontology of Reality Series. 2026.
(Collected essays I–VIII, unpublished working manuscript and blog publications.)
Slater, R. E., and ChatGPT. Essays in Embodied Process Realism (EPR). 2026.
(Working framework and extended essays in development.)
These appendices are not secondary. They anchor the essay visually, terminologically, and contextually within the broader project.
A.1 - Whiteheadian Classicism
The Process of Experience
- Actual occasions
- Prehension
- Concrescence
- Subjective aim
- Eternal objects
- Satisfaction and perishing
A.2 - Embodied Process Realism
The Process of Reality
- Persistent relational field
- Field coupling
- Coherence nodes
- Structured possibility
- Stabilized patterns
- Transformational persistence
A.3 - Interpretive Note
The diagrams should not be read as competing images, but as two perspectives on the same underlying concern: how unity, continuity, and novelty arise within reality.
The movement from one to the other reflects a shift in ontological emphasis - from discrete events to continuous fields - rather than a rejection of classical process, it is a modification of process itself into contemporary terms of the philosophy of mind.
| Whiteheadian Term | EPR Reinterpretation |
|---|---|
| Actual Occasion | Stabilized Pattern |
| Prehension | Field Coupling |
| Concrescence | Coherence Formation |
| Subjective Aim | Field-Conditioned Orientation |
| Eternal Objects | Structured Possibility |
| Satisfaction | Local Stabilization |
| Perishing | Transformation |
| Objective Immortality | Persistent Relational Structure |
While EPR is not a scientific theory, it aligns with several broad movements in contemporary science:
- The increasing emphasis on fields over particles in physics
- The understanding of organisms as dynamic systems in biology
- The recognition of relational networks in ecology
- The emergence of embodied and enactive approaches in cognitive science
These developments suggest that reality may be more adequately described in terms of relation, structure, and transformation than in terms of isolated units.
EPR provides an ontological framework within which these scientific insights may be interpreted coherently.
EPR stands within a broader philosophical trajectory that includes:
- Alfred North Whitehead - process ontology and relational becoming
- Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz - relational metaphysics and dynamic unity
- Baruch Spinoza - immanence and the unity of substance
- Henri Bergson - duration and creative evolution
EPR may be understood as a contemporary synthesis that draws upon these traditions while engaging current scientific and philosophical developments.
Embodied Process Realism is a constructive philosophical proposal.
It is not presented as a final or closed system, but as a framework open to:
- refinement
- critique
- expansion
- and, where necessary, revision
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