The answer seems to lie in the achievement of embodiment.
Reality does not become aimlessly. Its histories of relation and becoming continually give rise to coherent patterns capable of acquiring presence, persistence, and identity. Becoming therefore should not be understood as endless motion alone. It is equally the continual realization of embodied realities whose histories remain open to further transformation.
This insight also begins to reconcile one of philosophy's oldest conversations. Western philosophy has often contrasted being with becoming, treating permanence and change as competing descriptions of reality. Yet a process-relational metaphysics suggests another possibility. Being and becoming need not be understood as opposites. Rather,
being may be understood as the achievement of becoming,
while
becoming continually renews the possibilities of being.
Therefore, embodiment occupies a pivotal place within an open relational metaphysics. It marks the point at which coherent histories become sufficiently integrated to acquire enduring presence within the world. Every embodied reality carries within itself the history of relations through which it emerged while simultaneously participating in the ongoing history through which reality continues to unfold.
This essay therefore explores embodiment not as a merely physical condition but as a metaphysical achievement. It asks how realities acquire presence without abandoning becoming, how identity emerges without requiring permanence, and why the enduring world around us should be understood not as the denial of process but as one of its most remarkable accomplishments.
Ultimately, embodiment reminds us that reality is neither static nor chaotic. It is a universe in which -
relation continually becomes,
becoming continually forms coherence,
and coherence continually achieves embodied existence.
In this way, being itself becomes one of the great achievements of reality's ongoing adventure.
Becoming seeks embodiment.Embodiment opens participation.- R. E. SlaterBeing is not the opposite of becoming.It is one of becoming's greatest achievements.- R. E. Slater
An open relational process metaphysics suggests another possibility.
Being need not be understood as the denial of becoming.
Nor should becoming be understood as the destruction of being.
Rather, becoming continually gives rise to being, while being continually provides the embodied stability through which becoming may proceed further.
The relationship is therefore reciprocal rather than oppositional!
Embodiment marks the meeting place of these two movements.
Every embodied reality represents a history of successful becoming that has achieved sufficient coherence to acquire presence within the world. Its stability is real. Its identity is genuine. Yet neither exists apart from the relational histories through which they continually arose and continue to develop.
The familiar world quietly demonstrates this truth everywhere we look. A mountain is not merely a static object but the embodiment of immense geological histories. A forest is not simply a collection of trees but the embodied achievement of countless generations of ecological becoming. A culture embodies histories of language, memory, imagination, and shared life. Even a human person is not a finished substance but the continually embodied history of biological, psychological, social, and relational becoming.
Embodiment therefore should never be mistaken for the end of becoming.
It is becoming made present.
Reality does not abandon becoming in order to achieve being.
Reality continually becomes by achieving new forms of embodied existence.
The proverbial mustard seed beautifully illustrates this movement. Its significance does not lie merely in becoming a tree. Rather, the tree itself becomes the embodied history of the seed's continuing life. Even then the story remains unfinished. The tree flowers, bears fruit, shelters life, returns nourishment to the earth, and gives rise to new generations of mustard trees that become an ecosystem, and becomes part of a climate zone. Becoming becomes again and again and again. Becoming is ceaseless. This means that every embodiment therefore becomes the beginning of further becoming cycles rather than its conclusion.
Perhaps this is why reality appears both remarkably stable and endlessly creative. Stability is not the absence of becoming.
It is becoming that has learned how to endure.
Every embodiment becomes
the beginning of another history.
- R. E. SlaterEmbodiment never ends becoming.It gives becoming somewhere new to begin.- R. E. Slater
Yet this is not the world we inhabit.Every embodiment simultaneously represents both an achievement and a beginning.
Embodiment therefore never concludes becoming.It continually redirects it.
Being is not the opposite of becoming.
Being is becoming that has learned how to endure.- R. E. Slater
Every embodied reality carries a history.Every history becomes the beginning of another.- R. E. Slater
History therefore becomes one of embodiment's greatest accomplishments.
Not history merely as chronology.
Nor history merely as memory.
But history as accumulated becoming.
A mountain embodies the history of geological forces extending across immense spans of time. A river embodies the continuing history of water, gravity, and landscape. Every living organism carries within itself billions of years of evolutionary achievement. Languages preserve centuries of human imagination. Cultures embody inherited wisdom while continually creating new possibilities for those who follow.
Nothing begins from nothing.
Everything begins within histories already unfolding.
This perspective also transforms our understanding of novelty. Novelty is rarely the appearance of something entirely disconnected from what preceded it. Rather, novelty represents the creative reorganization of accumulated histories into new forms of coherence and embodiment.
Reality therefore advances neither by abandoning its past nor by repeating it.
It advances by embodying it.
Every new embodiment preserves something. Every new embodiment transforms something. Every new embodiment contributes something. The history of reality thus becomes an endlessly formative history of relational becoming in which each achievement enlarges the possibilities available to future achievements.
Embodiment therefore does more than make being possible.
It makes inheritance possible.
It makes memory possible.
It makes identity possible.
It makes meaning possible.
It makes living systems and civilizations possible.
Ultimately, it makes participation possible.
For participation is never participation in an empty universe. It is participation in a universe that remembers.
Every embodiment becomes an invitation to participate.
- R. E. Slater
Participation therefore should not be understood as something added to embodiment.
It is the natural consequence of embodiment.
A star participates in the continuing evolution of galaxies through the elements it creates. Rivers participate in shaping landscapes. Forests participate in sustaining climates and ecosystems. Human persons participate in families, cultures, languages, communities, and civilizations. Every embodied reality both inherits relationships and contributes new possibilities to those relationships.
Reality therefore exhibits a remarkable generosity.
Every achievement becomes a gift to what follows.
Nothing embodies itself alone.
Nothing persists for itself alone.
Every embodiment enlarges the possibilities available to future embodiments.
Participation thus reveals the fundamentally relational character of being itself. To exist is already to participate. Every identity arises through relationships inherited from the past while continually contributing to relationships that have not yet fully emerged. Reality therefore becomes neither a collection of isolated entities nor an undifferentiated whole. It is a living community of embodied histories continually enriching one another through participation.
This insight also transforms how we understand meaning. Meaning is not something privately possessed by isolated beings. Meaning arises through participation in realities larger than ourselves. Knowledge grows through participation in communities of inquiry. Love grows through participation in relationships of mutual care. Cultures grow through participation across generations. Even nature itself continually participates in the larger unfolding creativity of the universe.
Embodiment therefore reaches its fulfillment not in isolation but in communion.
Every embodiment carries a history.
Every history invites participation.
Every participation contributes to further becoming.
In this way, reality continually deepens itself. What begins as relation becomes embodied life; embodied life becomes shared history; shared history becomes participation; and participation continually opens new possibilities for relation once again.
The movement is never complete.
It is an endlessly formative adventure of relational becoming in which every achievement becomes the beginning of another.
Reality does not merely exist.
It continually becomes a world within which life may dwell.- R. E. Slater
Reality, in this sense, becomes increasingly habitable.
Habitability should not be understood merely in biological terms. It extends far beyond the conditions necessary for organisms to survive. A habitable reality is one capable of sustaining memory, identity, relationship, meaning, creativity, culture, and hope. It is a world in which histories accumulate rather than disappear, where achievements are preserved rather than erased, and where every new embodiment enlarges the possibilities available to future generations of becoming.
This perspective also reshapes how we understand emergence. Emergence is not simply the appearance of greater complexity. It is the gradual formation of increasingly hospitable realities capable of supporting ever richer forms of participation. Stars make planets possible. Planets make life possible. Life makes consciousness possible. Consciousness makes culture possible. Culture makes ethical communities possible. Every achievement becomes the embodied foundation upon which new achievements may arise.
The universe therefore appears not merely creative but profoundly cumulative.
Its history is neither accidental repetition nor predetermined design.
It is an open history of relational achievements continually giving rise to new opportunities for embodiment and participation.
This does not imply inevitability. For reality also knows interruption. Failure. Extinction. Collapse. Where entire histories of living systems can disappear. Civilizations are forgotten. Species vanish. And stars exhaust themselves.
Yet even these interruptions become part of larger histories through which reality continually reorganizes itself from processual-relational event to processual-relational event. The openness of becoming includes both triumph and tragedy, both flourishing and failure. Precisely because the future remains genuinely open, every achievement remains precious.
Perhaps this is why embodiment occupies such an important place within an open relational metaphysics. Embodiment does not promise permanence. It makes possibility durable. It gives becoming somewhere to live. In doing so, reality continually creates a world capable of receiving its own future.
The achievement of being, therefore, is never the conclusion of becoming.
It is reality's continuing gift to itself.
Being is reality remembering itself
while remaining open to becoming.- R. E. SlaterThe achievement of being is never possession.It is participation within an unfinished reality.- R. E. Slater
Being therefore should never be understood as something standing outside process. It is one of process's greatest accomplishments. Every enduring reality represents relation that has become coherent, coherence that has become embodied, embodiment that has become historical, history that has become participatory, and participation that continually gives rise to further becoming.
Being is therefore never isolated.
It is relational.
Never finished.
It is generative.
Never merely present.
It carries its past while opening its future.
Reality thus appears neither as a universe of static substances nor as an endless stream of disconnected events. It is a living community of embodied histories whose achievements continually nourish one another across every scale of existence. Every mountain, every forest, every civilization, every person, and every act of compassion becomes part of the world's ongoing inheritance.
This, perhaps, is the deepest contribution of an open relational process metaphysics.
Reality is not simply becoming.
Reality continually achieves being.
And being continually enriches becoming.
The two belong together.
Reality first invited us to observe.
Relation taught us that nothing exists entirely alone.
Becoming taught us that reality is generative.
Embodiment taught us that becoming achieves enduring presence.
History taught us that every achievement becomes an inheritance.
Participation taught us that no embodiment exists for itself alone.
Being taught us that reality continually remembers without ceasing to become.
The journey has therefore returned us to where it first began.
Reality.
Yet we no longer encounter it as we once did. We now recognize a universe that is relational before it is isolated, generative before it is static, embodied before it is abstract, historical before it is instantaneous, participatory before it is solitary, and forever open before it is complete.
Reality remains unfinished.
Not because it lacks coherence. But because its coherence continually gives rise to richer possibilities for becoming. Perhaps this is the deepest meaning of embodiment. Reality does not merely become. Reality continually becomes capable of becoming more. And perhaps that is the greatest achievement of being.
Aristotle. Metaphysics. Translated by Joe Sachs. Santa Fe, NM: Green Lion Press, 1999.
Heraclitus. Fragments. Translated by Brooks Haxton. New York: Viking, 2001.
Parmenides. The Fragments of Parmenides. Translated by A. H. Coxon. Las Vegas: Parmenides Publishing, 2009.
Plato. Timaeus. Translated by Donald J. Zeyl. Indianapolis, IN: Hackett Publishing, 2000.
Whitehead, Alfred North. Adventures of Ideas. New York: Free Press, 1967.
———. Modes of Thought. New York: Free Press, 1968.
———. Process and Reality: An Essay in Cosmology. Corrected ed. Edited by David Ray Griffin and Donald W. Sherburne. New York: Free Press, 1978.
Process Philosophy and Metaphysics
Cobb, John B., Jr. A Christian Natural Theology. 2nd ed. Louisville, KY: Westminster John Knox Press, 2007.
Griffin, David Ray. Reenchantment without Supernaturalism. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2001.
Hartshorne, Charles. Reality as Social Process. New York: Hafner Publishing, 1953.
Mesle, C. Robert. Process-Relational Philosophy: An Introduction to Alfred North Whitehead. West Conshohocken, PA: Templeton Foundation Press, 2008.
Oord, Thomas Jay. The Death of Omnipotence and Birth of Amipotence. Grasmere, ID: SacraSage Press, 2023.
Rescher, Nicholas. Process Metaphysics: An Introduction to Process Philosophy. Albany: State University of New York Press, 1996.
Segall, Matthew David. Physics of the World-Soul. Albany: State University of New York Press, 2021.
Emergence, Complexity, and Living Systems
Capra, Fritjof, and Pier Luigi Luisi. The Systems View of Life. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2014.
Holland, John H. Emergence: From Chaos to Order. Reading, MA: Perseus Books, 1998.
Kauffman, Stuart A. At Home in the Universe. New York: Oxford University Press, 1995.
Laland, Kevin N. Darwin's Unfinished Symphony. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2017.
Laland, Kevin N., Tobias Uller, Marcus W. Feldman, Kim Sterelny, Gerd B. Müller, Armin Moczek, Eva Jablonka, et al. "The Extended Evolutionary Synthesis: Its Structure, Assumptions and Predictions." Proceedings of the Royal Society B 282, no. 1813 (2015).
Mitchell, Melanie. Complexity: A Guided Tour. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2009.
Morin, Edgar. On Complexity. Cresskill, NJ: Hampton Press, 2008.
Noble, Denis. Dance to the Tune of Life: Biological Relativity. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2016.
Prigogine, Ilya, and Isabelle Stengers. Order Out of Chaos. New York: Bantam Books, 1984.
Ontology, Meaning, and Human Becoming
Cassirer, Ernst. An Essay on Man. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1944.
Frankl, Viktor E. Man's Search for Meaning. Boston: Beacon Press, 2006.
Heschel, Abraham Joshua. God in Search of Man. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1955.
Maritain, Jacques. The Degrees of Knowledge. Notre Dame, IN: University of Notre Dame Press, 1995.
Nurse, Paul. What Is Life? Five Great Ideas in Biology. New York: W. W. Norton, 2020.
Polanyi, Michael. Personal Knowledge. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1958.
Taylor, Charles. Sources of the Self. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1989.
Hermeneutics and Interpretation
Gadamer, Hans-Georg. Truth and Method. 2nd rev. ed. New York: Continuum, 1989.
Ricœur, Paul. Interpretation Theory. Fort Worth, TX: Texas Christian University Press, 1976.
Reference Works
Craig, Edward, ed. Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy. London: Routledge, 1998.
Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Edited by Edward N. Zalta and Uri Nodelman.
Companion Essays
Slater, R. E.
———. Reality and Cosmology Series (Embodied Process Realism).
———. Reality and Metaphysics Series (Open Relational Process Metaphysics of Becoming).
Overview of Essays 13-16
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