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

Tuesday, June 2, 2026

EMBODIED PROCESS REALISM: A Manifesto for An Open and Relational Universe (57)



ESSAY 57
CONCLUSION OF ONTOLOGY SERIES

ontology → participation → responsibility → open future

EMBODIED PROCESS REALISM

A Manifesto for an Open and Relational Universe

by R.E. Slater & ChatGPT


Reality is not composed of things that relate.
Reality is composed of relations that become things.
- R.E. Slater

Identity is not what remains the same,
but what remains coherent.
- R.E. Slater

In any philosophical inquiry, ontology precedes metaphysics -
and theology then follows both...

For we must first ask what is real, before asking what reality means...

Before meaning comes being;
and before interpretation comes reality.

- R.E. Slater



A Manifesto of EPR

This manifesto serves as a gateway document to the Reality & Cosmology Series and to the emerging framework known as Embodied Process Realism (EPR).

Across more than fifty essays, the What Is Reality? series has explored questions of reality, identity, cosmology, consciousness, meaning, value, and directionality. While each essay investigated a particular aspect of these themes, a deeper pattern gradually emerged beneath them all.

This manifesto summarizes that pattern. It does not replace the larger series. Rather, it provides a concise orientation to its central insights and philosophical conclusions.::



Preface

We do not begin with what we wish reality to mean.
We begin with reality itself, and allow meaning to emerge from what reality discloses.

Every age inherits a picture of reality.

Some ages imagine reality as fixed and eternal. Others understand it as mechanical. Still others describe it as fragmented, uncertain, or fundamentally unknowable. Each vision reflects humanity's ongoing attempt to understand the world it inhabits and the place it occupies within that world.

The twenty-first century finds itself in an unusual position.

Modern science has revealed a universe far more dynamic than earlier generations had imagined it. Cosmology speaks of evolving galaxies and expanding spacetime. Biology reveals life as a continuous process of adaptation and emergence. Complexity theory, systems theory, information theory, and contemporary physics increasingly point toward a world shaped by interaction, relation, and organization rather than by isolated substances existing independently of one another.

At the same time, many inherited philosophical frameworks struggle to account for these discoveries.

Classical substance ontologies often emphasize permanence over becoming. Reductionist models frequently explain wholes solely in terms of parts. Postmodern approaches have exposed the limitations of many grand narratives but sometimes leave us with fragmentation where coherence is needed. Even process philosophy itself, despite its remarkable achievements, remains a project still open to development and reinterpretation.

This manifesto emerges from an extended exploration of these concerns.

Across the Reality & Cosmology Series, a single question repeatedly surfaced beneath many different subjects:

What must reality be like for anything to exist, persist, become meaningful, and matter?

This question has surfaced repeatedly throughout our discussions of cosmology and consciousness, identity and value, science and philosophy, emergence and teleology. Yet regardless of the subject, a similar pattern continually reappeared.

Reality seemed less like a collection of self-contained things and more like a network of relations.

Relations generated coherence ⟶
Coherence generated embodiment ⟶
Embodiment generated persistence ⟶
Persistence generated identity ⟶
Identity generated value and meaning ⟶
Meaning generated direction ⟶
Direction opened toward future possibilities not yet realized.

This recurring pattern eventually suggested a broader ontological framework. That framework came to be called Embodied Process Realism.

Embodied Process Realism is neither a completed ontological system nor a final philosophy of reality. It is better understood as an ongoing proposal - a way of interpreting reality that takes process, relation, coherence, embodiment, and participation as foundational features of existence itself.

Its central claim is deceptively simple:
  • Reality is fundamentally relational.
  • From relation emerges coherence.
  • From coherence emerges embodiment.
  • From embodiment emerges persistence.
  • From persistence emerge identity, value, meaning, and direction.
The universe is therefore not best understood as a collection of static objects. It is more accurately understood as an evolving field of relational becoming whose temporary stabilizations appear to us as things, selves, societies, ecosystems, and worlds.

This manifesto does not attempt to prove every aspect of that claim. The larger Reality & Cosmology Series undertakes that task.
Instead, the purpose of this document is more modest. It seeks to present the core vision that emerged from that exploration and to offer a concise statement of what Embodied Process Realism proposes about reality, existence, and humanity's place within an unfinished universe.
For if reality is fundamentally relational, then existence is not a possession.

It is participation.

And if the future remains genuinely open, then what we become together may matter more than we have yet imagined.



I. Why Another Ontology?

Every ontology emerges because an earlier picture of reality eventually reaches its limits.

Human beings have never ceased asking what reality fundamentally is. Across history, different answers have been proposed, each attempting to explain the world as it appears through experience, reflection, culture, and science. Some traditions emphasized permanence. Others emphasized change. Some sought reality in substances. Others located it in processes, events, energies, relations, or fields.

These approaches did not arise arbitrarily. Each emerged because it successfully illuminated some aspect of existence.

Classical substance ontologies emphasized stability and endurance. They helped explain why things appear to persist through time and why identity seems capable of surviving change. Yet such frameworks often struggled to account for novelty, emergence, development, and transformation.

Mechanistic and reductionist approaches later achieved extraordinary explanatory power. By analyzing systems into constituent parts, they contributed enormously to scientific progress and technological advancement. Yet when applied universally, they often encountered difficulties explaining wholes, meaning, consciousness, value, and the organizational patterns that arise from complex interactions.

More recent postmodern approaches exposed the limitations of many inherited certainties. They revealed the role of language, perspective, culture, and interpretation in shaping human understanding. Yet critique alone rarely provides a sufficient account of reality itself. The deconstruction of certainty does not automatically yield a constructive vision of what remains.

Process philosophy became one of the most important philosophical responses to these challenges. Rather than treating reality as fundamentally composed of static substances, it emphasizes becoming, relation, creativity, and change. Reality appeared less like a collection of finished things and more like an ongoing process of emergence and transformation.

This insight remains one of the most significant developments in modern philosophy.

Yet even here important questions remain open.

  • If reality is fundamentally relational, how do relations stabilize?
  • If everything is becoming, how does persistence arise?
  • If change is continuous, how does identity endure?
  • If novelty continually emerges, how do meaning and value become possible?

These questions increasingly surfaced throughout the Reality & Cosmology Series. They appeared in discussions of cosmology, consciousness, complexity, emergence, ethics, identity, and teleology. While the subjects differed, the underlying challenge remained remarkably similar.

  • How does reality achieve enough coherence to become something?
  • How does becoming become embodied?
  • How does embodiment become persistence?
  • And how does persistence become a meaningful participant within an open universe?

Embodied Process Realism emerged from these questions.

It does not reject the insights of earlier ontologies. On the contrary, it seeks to preserve what each contributed while addressing questions that remain unresolved:

  • Substance traditions recognized the importance of persistence.
  • Reductionist traditions clarified the role of structure and mechanism.
  • Postmodern critiques revealed the limitations of premature certainty.
  • Process philosophy restored becoming to the center of philosophical reflection.

EPR seeks to build upon these insights while taking a further step.

Its central intuition is that reality is neither best understood as isolated substances nor as unstructured flux.

Instead, reality appears as an open and relational process capable of generating coherence, embodiment, persistence, identity, meaning, and direction.

The remainder of this manifesto explores that proposal.




II. The Four Ontological Principles

Embodied Process Realism begins with a simple observation:

Reality appears neither as a collection of isolated things nor as an undifferentiated flow of change.

Instead, reality exhibits recurring patterns of organization through which relations become stable enough to generate enduring forms.

Across scales and contexts, a similar sequence repeatedly appears:

Relation ⟶ Coherence ⟶ Embodiment ⟶ Persistence

These four principles do not describe separate layers of reality. Rather, they identify recurring features of reality's ongoing becoming.

Together they form the ontological foundation of Embodied Process Realism.

Relation

Reality begins in relation. Nothing exists entirely alone. Every entity, event, organism, ecosystem, society, and galaxy exists within networks of interaction and influence. Existence itself appears fundamentally relational.

Relations are not merely connections between preexisting things. They participate in the formation of those things.

A living organism emerges through countless biological relations. A society emerges through human relations. An ecosystem emerges through ecological relations. Even the physical universe increasingly appears describable through interacting fields, forces, structures, and processes rather than isolated substances existing independently of one another.

To exist is to participate.

Reality is relational before it is individual.

Coherence

Relations alone do not explain the world we experience. Relations must also achieve sufficient organization to become stable. This achievement is called coherence.

Coherence occurs whenever relations become integrated enough to sustain a recognizable pattern across time.

  • A whirlpool exhibits coherence.
  • A cell exhibits coherence.
  • A forest exhibits coherence.
  • A human mind exhibits coherence.

Coherence does not eliminate change. Rather, it enables continuity through change.

Without coherence, reality would dissolve into fragmentation.
With coherence, relations become capable of generating structured forms of existence.

Coherence is therefore not the absence of becoming.

It is becoming organized.

Embodiment

When coherence stabilizes, embodiment emerges. Embodiment is the process through which organized patterns acquire structure, expression, and presence.

The term should not be restricted solely to biological organisms.

  • Stars embody gravitational organization.
  • Rivers embody hydrological organization.
  • Languages embody cultural organization.
  • Persons embody biological, psychological, and social organization.

Embodiment is coherence taking form.

It is the visible expression of organized relational activity.

Through embodiment, reality becomes tangible, identifiable, and capable of participating in further relations.

Embodiment transforms organization into presence.

Persistence

Embodiment alone is insufficient to explain the enduring character of reality. Patterns must also persist. Persistence refers to the capacity of embodied forms to maintain continuity through ongoing change.

Nothing remains absolutely identical from one moment to the next. Yet many things remain recognizably themselves.

  • A river continues despite changing waters.
  • An organism continues despite cellular replacement.
  • A culture continues despite generational transformation.

Persistence does not require permanence - it requires continuity.

Identity emerges because patterns endure long enough to maintain recognizable coherence across successive moments of becoming.

Persistence therefore represents neither stasis nor immobility.

It is the achievement of continuity within change.

The Ontological Sequence

These four principles form a developmental sequence rather than a hierarchy.

  • Relations generate coherence.
  • Coherence generates embodiment.
  • Embodiment generates persistence.
  • Persistence generates the conditions from which identity, value, meaning, consciousness, and directionality may emerge.

Relation ⟶ Coherence ⟶ Embodiment ⟶ Persistence

This sequence does not explain everything.

Yet throughout the Reality & Cosmology Series it repeatedly appeared as a remarkably productive way of understanding how reality moves from interaction toward increasingly organized forms of existence.

The remaining sections of this manifesto explore what emerges once persistence gives rise to identity, meaning, participation, and open futures.




III. The Emergence of Self

One of the oldest questions in philosophy concerns identity.

  • What makes something itself?
  • How does a person remain the same person across time?
  • What allows continuity amid constant change?

Traditional answers often sought identity in permanence. Beneath change, some enduring substance, essence, or fixed self was thought to provide stability and continuity.

Embodied Process Realism proposes a different approach.

If reality is fundamentally relational and processual,
then identity cannot depend upon absolute permanence.

The problem is simple... Nothing remains completely unchanged.

Organisms develop.
Cells are replaced.
Memories evolve.
Cultures transform.
Even stars and galaxies emerge, change, and eventually pass away.

Yet despite continual change, identity remains - the question is why?

EPR suggests that identity arises not from permanence but from patterned continuity.

  • A river remains a river despite changing waters.
  • A melody remains recognizable despite being played by different instruments.
  • A living organism remains itself despite continual biological renewal.

In each case, what persists is not an unchanging substance but an enduring pattern of organization.

Identity is therefore not what remains the same.
Identity is what remains coherent.

Persistence makes identity possible because coherent patterns endure across successive moments of becomingThe self is not a static object hidden somewhere beneath experience. It is an ongoing achievement arising from the continuity of embodied relations.

In this sense, identity is neither illusion nor permanence.

It is emergence.

The self becomes a dynamic center of continuity whose history, memory, embodiment, and relationships continually contribute to its ongoing formation.

Identity is therefore not merely personal. This principle appears throughout reality.

  • Ecosystems possess recognizable identities.
  • Cultures possess recognizable identities.
  • Institutions possess recognizable identities.
  • Even scientific theories and traditions exhibit forms of continuity
  • that allow them to persist through revision and development.

Across all these examples, identity emerges wherever coherence achieves sufficient persistence to maintain recognizable form through change.

This understanding transforms the way we think about selfhood.

Rather than viewing identity as a possession, EPR views identity as participation in an ongoing process of becoming.

We are not finished beings.
We are evolving patterns.

The self is not a completed object.
It is an unfinished achievement.

This perspective also helps explain why growth does not necessarily threaten identity. If identity depended upon absolute sameness, every change would diminish the self. Yet experience suggests otherwise.

  • Learning deepens identity.
  • Relationships reshape identity.
  • Creativity expands identity.
  • Even suffering may transform identity without destroying it.

The continuity of self therefore depends not upon resisting change but upon integrating change into an ongoing pattern of coherence.

Identity survives because coherence survives.

The self endures because becoming remains organized.

Within Embodied Process Realism, identity is therefore neither static nor accidental.

It is the persistence of coherent becoming.

And from that persistence emerge the deeper questions of value, meaning, and significance that shape human existence.




IV. The Emergence of Value

Meaning is not given. It is achieved.
Similarly, Value is not imposed upon reality. It emerges within reality.

I - Value

Once identity emerges, a further question naturally follows.

Why does anything matter?
Human beings do not merely exist.
They care.

They distinguish between what is important and unimportant, meaningful and meaningless, beneficial and harmful, beautiful and destructive. Across cultures and throughout history, questions of value have remained inseparable from questions of existence itself.

Yet the origin of value has often proven difficult to explain.

Some traditions locate value beyond reality in transcendent principles or divine commands.

Others reduce value to subjective preference, cultural convention, biological utility, or personal desire.

Embodied Process Realism proposes a different possibility.

Value emerges wherever relations deepen into coherent forms of participation.

At its most basic level, value reflects the significance of relations within ongoing processes of becoming.

  • A living organism values conditions that sustain its existence.
  • An ecosystem values forms of balance that support flourishing.
  • A community values trust because trust enables cooperation and continuity.
  • Human beings value friendship, knowledge, creativity, beauty, and love because such experiences deepen and enrich the relational patterns through which life is lived.

Value therefore appears neither arbitrary nor entirely external. It emerges from the ways coherent forms of existence participate in - and contribute to - larger patterns of becoming.

This does not mean that all values are equal. Nor does it imply that value can be reduced to simple utility. Some forms of relation deepen coherence. Others diminish it. Some forms of participation enlarge possibility. Others generate fragmentation and loss.

Value becomes visible wherever reality moves toward richer forms of integration, participation, creativity, and flourishing.

II - Meaning

Meaning emerges in a similar way. Meaning is not a hidden object waiting to be discovered somewhere behind reality. Nor is it merely projected onto an otherwise indifferent universe. Meaning arises when patterns of existence become sufficiently coherent to sustain significance.

  • A meaningful friendship is more than an interaction.
  • A meaningful life is more than a sequence of events.
  • A meaningful community is more than a collection of individuals.

Meaning emerges whenever relations become organized in ways that generate enduring significance.

For this reason, meaning is not simply found.
It is achieved.

Human beings participate in the creation of meaning through relationships, commitments, creativity, memory, responsibility, and shared purpose. Meaning grows wherever participation deepens the coherence of lived experience.

The universe itself need not be viewed as either meaningless or predetermined.

Instead, reality may be understood as containing the conditions through which meaning becomes possible.

Value and meaning are therefore not additions to existence.
They are developments within existence.

They emerge from the same relational processes that give rise to identity, persistence, and embodiment.

Within EPR, value and meaning represent the deepening significance of coherent participation within an unfinished universe.

Reality becomes meaningful not because it reaches a final conclusion, but because it continually generates new opportunities for significance, relationship, creativity, and contribution.

Meaning is thus neither guaranteed nor absent.

It remains an ongoing achievement within the open horizons of becoming.

And wherever meaning emerges, direction soon follows.


Summary

 Section III - The Emergence of Self

Relation ⟶ Coherence ⟶ Embodiment ⟶ Persistence ⟶ Identity

Section IV - The Emergence of Value

Identity ⟶ Value ⟶ Meaning ⟶ Community ⟶ Responsibility




V. Directionality Without Determinism

Is reality going somewhere?
Or is everything merely happening?

If identity gives rise to value, and value gives rise to meaning, a further question naturally emerges.

Does reality possess direction?

For much of human history, this question has been answered in one of two ways.

Some traditions have viewed reality as moving toward predetermined ends. Whether expressed through fate, providence, destiny, historical inevitability, or metaphysical necessity, the future is often imagined as already contained within the present.

Other traditions reject direction altogether. Reality becomes a succession of accidents, contingencies, and random events without any larger trajectory or significance.

Embodied Process Realism proposes a different possibility.

Reality may exhibit direction without requiring determinism.

The distinction is crucial.

Direction does not imply a fixed destination.

  • A river possesses direction without knowing precisely where every current will flow.
  • A living organism develops without possessing a complete blueprint for every future moment.
  • A culture evolves without knowing the form it will eventually assume.

Similarly, reality may display tendencies, trajectories, and possibilities without requiring predetermined outcomes. This understanding emerges naturally from the ontological sequence already developed.

  • Relations generate coherence ⟶
  • Coherence generates embodiment
  • Embodiment generates persistence
  • Persistence generates identity
  • Identity generates value and meaning

As meaning deepens, certain possibilities become more significant than others. Future pathways remain open, yet they are not entirely unconstrained.

  • The past influences the future
  • Present conditions shape future possibilities
  • Patterns of coherence create trajectories that influence subsequent developments.

Reality therefore appears neither completely predetermined nor completely random. Instead, it unfolds through structured openness.

  • Novelty remains possible.
  • Creativity remains possible.
  • Unexpected emergence remains possible.

Yet these possibilities arise within ongoing histories, relationships, and conditions that influence what may realistically emerge.

Directionality thus reflects the tendency of reality to move through successive achievements of coherence, embodiment, participation, and significance.

Such movement does not guarantee progress. Not every development deepens value. Not every change increases flourishingFragmentation, loss, conflict, and failure remain genuine possibilities within an open universe. Nevertheless, reality repeatedly demonstrates a remarkable capacity for generating new forms of organization, integration, adaptation, and creativity.

Directionality therefore should not be confused with optimism.
Nor should it be confused with inevitability.

It simply acknowledges that reality exhibits patterns of development that influence future possibilities without fully determining them.

  • The future remains genuinely open.
  • Yet openness itself unfolds within inherited patterns of relation and coherence.

This understanding carries profound implications for human life.

  • Our choices matter because the future is not fixed.
  • Our choices matter because the future is not empty.
  • Every action participates in shaping possibilities that have not yet become actual.
  • Every decision contributes to the continuing formation of reality.

Within EPR, directionality is therefore neither destiny nor accident
It is the open movement of reality toward possibilities not yet realized.

The future remains unfinished.

And it is precisely this unfinished character that makes participation meaningful.




VI. Consciousness and Participation

Among the many phenomena that reality has produced, consciousness remains one of the most remarkable.

Human beings do not merely exist within the universe. They experience it. They reflect upon it. They interpret it. They imagine possibilities beyond what presently exists. They participate in shaping futures that have not yet arrived.

For this reason, consciousness occupies a unique place within human inquiry. It is through consciousness that reality becomes aware of itself, questions itself, and seeks to understand itself. Yet consciousness remains one of the most difficult realities to explain.

Some approaches reduce consciousness to purely physical processes. Others separate mind from nature altogether. Still others propose that consciousness exists as a fundamental feature of reality itself.

Embodied Process Realism approaches the question differently. Rather than beginning with consciousness, EPR begins with relation, coherence, embodiment, and persistence. From this perspective, consciousness appears as one expression of increasingly complex forms of organized participation.

As relations deepen and coherence becomes more highly integrated, new forms of interiority become possible. Experience becomes richer. Awareness becomes more expansive. Reflection becomes increasingly sophisticated.

Consciousness therefore appears neither as an illusion nor as a mysterious exception to reality. Rather, it emerges within reality as one of reality's most remarkable achievements.

This does not resolve every philosophical debate concerning mind, experience, or subjectivity. Nor does EPR claim to possess a final theory of consciousness. Instead, it proposes that consciousness becomes understandable when viewed within the larger context of relational becoming.

  • Mind does not stand outside reality - Mind participates within reality.
  • Human beings are not detached observers viewing the universe from some external vantage point - we are embodied participants within the very processes we seek to understand.
  • Our thoughts emerge within relationships.
  • Our identities emerge within communities.
  • Our knowledge emerges through participation in the world.
  • Even our most abstract ideas remain connected to histories, cultures, bodies, environments, and experiences that continually shape them.

Participation therefore becomes one of the defining features of existence.

To exist is not merely to occupy space.

It is to contribute to reality's ongoing becoming.

  • Every organism participates within ecological systems.
  • Every culture participates within historical development.
  • Every person participates within networks of relationship, responsibility, creativity, and meaning.

Participation does not guarantee significance. Yet significance rarely emerges without participation.

  • Meaning deepens through engagement.
  • Identity develops through relationship.
  • Value grows through contribution.
  • The future changes because participants help shape it.

Within EPR, human beings therefore occupy neither the center of reality nor a position outside it. We are participants within a larger process of becoming. Our importance derives not from domination but from contribution.

We matter, have value, have purpose because our actions influence the continuing formation of the worlds we inhabit.

This understanding transforms responsibility.

Responsibility is no longer merely a moral obligation imposed from outside.
It becomes a natural consequence of participation itself.

To participate is to affect.
To affect is to bear responsibility.

And to bear responsibility is to recognize that the future remains open partly because our lives contribute to its unfolding.

Consciousness therefore represents more than awareness. It represents the capacity to participate knowingly within reality's continuing becoming.

And through that participation, reality discovers possibilities that otherwise might never emerge.




VII. An Open Universe

Openness is not merely something we do not know.
Openness is something reality itself appears to be.

Throughout the Reality & Cosmology Series, one conclusion repeatedly emerged -

Reality appears unfinished.

This observation extends beyond human experience. It appears within biology, culture, history, consciousness, and cosmology itself. Across scales, reality exhibits a remarkable capacity for generating new forms, new relationships, and new possibilities.

The universe does not appear as a completed structure whose future has already been fully determined.

Nor does it appear as a realm of pure randomness lacking continuity or order.

Instead, reality presents itself as an ongoing process of becoming.

The significance of this observation should not be underestimated. If reality is unfinished, then openness becomes a fundamental feature of existence itself.

The future is not simply waiting to be revealed.

The future is continually being formed.

New conditions emerge. New relationships develop. New patterns of coherence arise. Possibilities that did not previously exist become available through the continuing interactions of reality's participants.

This openness does not imply the absence of structureThe universe exhibits remarkable regularity.

  • Patterns endure.
  • Histories matter.
  • Constraints remain real.
  • The past influences the present, and the present influences the future.

Yet influence is not determinationConditions shape possibilities without exhausting them.

Reality appears neither closed nor chaotic.
It appears open within limits.

This distinction is essential.

  • A completely closed universe leaves little room for novelty.
  • A completely chaotic universe leaves little room for continuity.

The world disclosed through experience appears to occupy neither extreme. Instead, it exhibits a dynamic balance between persistence and emergence, continuity and novelty, inheritance and possibility. This openness can be observed throughout reality:

  • Life evolves because new adaptations remain possible.
  • Knowledge grows because understanding remains incomplete.
  • Cultures develop because new forms of organization and meaning continue to emerge.
  • Even the cosmos itself possesses a history, suggesting that becoming belongs not merely to local systems but to reality's larger unfolding as well.

For Embodied Process Realism, openness is therefore not merely an epistemological limitation arising from human ignorance. It is an ontological feature of reality itself.

Reality remains capable of becoming otherwise.
The future remains genuinely unfinished.

And because the future remains unfinished, participation remains consequential.

  • Every act contributes.
  • Every relationship matters.
  • Every achievement of coherence influences possibilities yet to come.

Reality is not moving toward a predetermined conclusion. It is continually generating new horizons of becoming. An open universe is therefore not a universe lacking direction. It is a universe whose direction remains responsive to the ongoing participation of its inhabitants.

Reality remains unfinished.

And it is within that unfinishedness that possibility lives.




VIII. What EPR Is Not

As with any emerging philosophical framework, it is important to clarify not only what Embodied Process Realism proposes, but also what it does not propose.

EPR does not begin by claiming to possess a final explanation of reality.

It remains an ontological proposal rather than a completed system.

Its purpose is to describe recurring features of existence as they appear across experience, science, philosophy, and cosmology. It seeks to identify patterns of relation, coherence, embodiment, persistence, identity, meaning, and participation that seem fundamental to reality's unfolding character.

For this reason, EPR should not be confused with several other philosophical positions.

It is not a classical substance ontology.

Reality is not understood primarily through static entities whose essential nature remains unchanged beneath all becoming. Persistence remains important, but persistence itself emerges through ongoing processes rather than existing independently of them.

Nor is EPR a reductionist materialism.

While fully affirming the importance of science, embodiment, and physical processes, EPR does not assume that reality can be exhaustively explained through the analysis of constituent parts alone. Relations, organization, emergence, and coherence possess explanatory significance in their own right.

Neither is EPR a form of idealism.

Reality is not treated as merely a construction of thought, consciousness, language, or interpretation. On the contrary, EPR begins from the conviction that reality exists prior to our descriptions of it and continually exceeds them. Before interpretation comes reality.

EPR is likewise not a dualism.

Mind and matter are not treated as separate substances inhabiting distinct ontological realms. Instead, both emerge within a larger relational framework whose complexities continue to unfold across multiple scales of existence.

Nor should EPR be equated with panpsychism, although it shares certain concerns with panpsychist discussions. EPR does not begin by asserting that consciousness exists everywhere. Rather, it begins with relation, coherence, embodiment, and persistence. Questions concerning consciousness arise later as part of a broader inquiry into interiority, participation, and experience.

Finally, EPR is not itself a theology.

The framework may prove compatible with various metaphysical and theological interpretations, including process-relational approaches to God, reality, and meaning. Yet such developments belong to later stages of inquiry. Let us explain:

The methodological sequence remains essential -

Ontology precedes metaphysics.
Metaphysics precedes theology.

That is,

Before meaning comes being.
And before interpretation comes reality.

Therefore, EPR therefore should be understood neither as a final worldview nor as a completed doctrine. It is better understood as an invitation. An invitation to examine reality through the lenses of relation, coherence, embodiment, persistence, and participation.

Whether this proposal ultimately succeeds remains an open question.

What matters is that reality itself remains open to continued exploration.

And it is that openness which makes philosophical inquiry possible.




IX. The Future of EPR

Embodied Process Realism is not presented as a finished philosophy.

It is a beginning of an ontological exploration.

It's framework emerged through an extended exploration of ontology - an inquiry into what reality must be like for persistence, identity, value, meaning, consciousness, and directionality to arise.

Yet ontology alone cannot answer every question.

Once reality has been described, deeper questions inevitably follow:

  • Why does reality exhibit these characteristics?
  • Why do relation, coherence, embodiment, and persistence repeatedly emerge across such diverse scales of existence?
  • What conditions make openness possible?
  • What deeper structures sustain becoming itself?
  • And how should human beings live within a reality understood in these terms?

Such questions point beyond ontology while remaining grounded within it.

They lead naturally toward metaphysics, cosmology, consciousness studies, ethics, and theology.

The purpose of EPR is not to prematurely answer these questions.

Its purpose is to provide a foundation upon which such questions may be explored responsibly.

The methodological sequence remains important.

Ontology asks:

What is reality?

Metaphysics asks:

Why is reality this way?

Theology asks:

What ultimate significance, if any, does reality disclose?

Each inquiry depends upon those that precede it.

For this reason, EPR remains committed to philosophical openness.

Its conclusions remain provisional.

Its concepts remain revisable.

Its future development remains unfinished.

Like the reality it seeks to understand, EPR remains a participant within an ongoing process of discovery.

Future work may deepen its engagement with science, cosmology, emergence, consciousness, ethics, and metaphysics.

  • It may require revision.
  • It may require expansion.
  • Some of its proposals may prove mistaken.
  • Others may reveal possibilities not yet fully recognized.

Such outcomes are not weaknesses.

They are consequences of taking seriously the openness of reality itself.

Importantly, openness should not be mistaken for directionlessness

Throughout the Reality & Cosmology Series, reality repeatedly disclosed recurring tendencies toward relation, coherence, embodiment, persistence, identity, meaning, and participation. These patterns do not function as predetermined destinations. Rather, they appear as generative directions through which reality continually organizes, stabilizes, and renews itself.

The future therefore remains genuinely open, but not arbitrary.

EPR proposes a universe characterized by open directionality - a reality in which multiple futures remain possible while certain forms of becoming repeatedly demonstrate greater coherence, persistence, creativity, and flourishing than others.

As such, if reality remains unfinished, then every philosophy of reality must remain unfinished as well.

If reality remains unfinished, then every philosophy of reality must remain unfinished as well.

The task is not to construct a final system.

The task is to continue the inquiry.

Embodied Process Realism therefore looks forward rather than backward.

Not toward certainty, but toward understanding.
Not toward closure, but toward deeper participation.

Not toward final answers, but toward better questions.
For reality continues to disclose itself.

And philosophy remains one way of listening.


A Credo of Reality

Relation ⟶ Coherence ⟶ Embodiment ⟶ Persistence ⟶
Identity ⟶ Meaning ⟶ Direction ⟶ Possibility

We do not inhabit a finished universe.
We inhabit a reality still becoming.

Reality is not composed of isolated things.
Reality is composed of relations that become things.

From relation emerges coherence.
From coherence emerges embodiment.
From embodiment emerges persistence.
From persistence emerges identity.
From identity emerge value and meaning.
From meaning emerges direction.
And from direction emerge possibilities not yet realized.

Nothing exists alone.
Everything participates.

Every life, every culture, every ecosystem, every world
arises within networks of relations
that continually shape what becomes possible.

Identity is not what remains the same.
Identity is what remains coherent.

Meaning is not given.
Meaning is achieved.

The future is neither fixed nor empty.
It remains open.

Novelty remains possible.
Creativity remains possible.
Participation remains consequential.
Reality continues to disclose itself.

And we remain participants within that disclosure.
For we do not stand outside reality observing it from afar.

We belong to it.
We contribute to it.
We become through it.

The universe remains unfinished.
So do we.
And it is within that unfinishedness
that possibility lives.




Epilogue: Why "Embodied"?

One question repeatedly surfaced throughout the Reality & Cosmology Series.

Where is the coherence?

The question appeared under many names. In last summer's 2025 exploration we found the following:

For Frege, it appeared as the problem of how meaning, reference, and the relationship between concepts and reality becomes instantiated.

For Lacan, it appeared as the problem of how symbolic structures, the imaginary, and the real become lived realities.

For Badiou, it appeared as the problem of how an Event persists after its eruption. Without embodiment, events evaporate.

For Whitehead, it appeared as the problem of how becoming achieves continuity through successive acts of concrescence. In EPR terms, How does coherence become present? The answer again pointed toward embodiment.

Each philosopher approached the question differently. Yet a common theme gradually emerged.

  • Meaning must become embodied.
  • Events must become embodied.
  • Identity must become embodied.
  • Cultures must become embodied.
  • Even becoming itself must become embodied.

Without embodiment, coherence remains abstract.

Without embodiment, persistence lacks a vehicle through which to endure.

Without embodiment, meaning evaporates.

This realization gradually suggested a further emphasis beyond process alone.

  • Classical ontology emphasized substance.
  • Process philosophy emphasized becoming.
  • Embodied Process Realism emphasizes embodied becoming.

Or stated differently:

  • Classical ontology asked how things endure.
  • Process philosophy asked how things become.
  • Embodied Process Realism asks how becoming becomes embodied and thereby endures.

The answer repeatedly pointed toward the same conclusion: Reality is never encountered as pure abstraction. Reality is encountered as embodied reality.

Not merely being.
But being-in-form.

Not merely coherence.
But coherent embodiment.

Not merely persistence.
But embodied persistence.

Every time the question was asked:

Where is the coherence?

The answer increasingly became:

It is found in its embodiment.

Hence, when reviewing through alternative terms like

  • Process Realism
  • Relational Realism
  • Open Relational Realism

all describe important dimensions. Yet they did not quite capture the crucial insight that repeatedly emerged across the essays:

Reality's patterns become real through embodiment.

Thus the formation of the phrase, Embodied Process Realism. It seemed to cut across the major philosophies Frege, Lacan, and Badiou, and be summarily conjoined to what Whitehead himself was pronouncing in his day.

Accordingly, the "Embodied Process Realism" title -

was not so much imposed upon the subject of ontology

as it was that the subject of ontology itself seemed to demand it.

Across all 56 essays "embodiment" became the affectuating bridge between "becoming and persistence, possibility and actuality, meaning and participation."

And perhaps, in its own way, it also names what Frege, Lacan, Badiou, and Whitehead were each approaching from different directions:

the place where coherence becomes present in the world. 

Thus we conclude with the story of reality. It's composition, generation, and directional movement towards relational becoming in all that that might mean.

In our next series, we will explore the metaphysics of reality based upon its ontology of embodied process realism.

That series will likewise utilize Whitehead's processual philosophy as its framework. Perhaps we'll describe it as an "Open and Relational Processual Metaphysic of Becoming" (ORPMB). We'll see....


BIBLIOGRAPHY

I

Intellectual Influences and Further Reading

Process Philosophy

Alfred North Whitehead. Process and Reality. Corrected Edition. New York: Free Press, 1978.

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

John B. Cobb Jr.. Process Theology: An Introductory Exposition. Philadelphia: Westminster Press, 1976.


Philosophy and Ontology

Aristotle. Metaphysics.

Martin Heidegger. Being and Time. Albany: SUNY Press, 1996.

Henri Bergson. Creative Evolution. Mineola, NY: Dover Publications, 1998.


Science, Complexity, and Emergence

Stuart Kauffman. At Home in the Universe. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1995.

Ilya Prigogine and Isabelle Stengers. Order Out of Chaos. New York: Bantam Books, 1984.

Sean Carroll. The Big Picture. New York: Dutton, 2016.


Cosmology

Stephen Hawking and James Hartle. Selected writings on the No-Boundary Proposal.

Roger Penrose. The Road to Reality. New York: Vintage Books, 2007.

Max Tegmark. Our Mathematical Universe. New York: Knopf, 2014.


Consciousness and Mind

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

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


The Reality & Cosmology Series

Slater, R.E., and ChatGPT. What Is Reality? Reality & Cosmology Series. Essays 1–56. 2026.