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

Showing posts with label EcoProcess Philosophy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label EcoProcess Philosophy. Show all posts

Sunday, December 29, 2024

Matthew Segall - Whitehead in 20 minutes:Why the World is Unfinished


Philosopher, Mathematician A.N. Whitehead


Matthew Segall is a proficient Whiteheadian whom I have followed for a number of years since discovering process philosophy or, as ANW had first described it as The Philosophy of Organism" which later generations renamed as the modern beginnings of process thought at once both ancient and new.

Having listened to the podcast twice I thought that writing it down would be the more helpful which transcript I found on Matthew's site saving a lot of work for myself. There is a lot that is said here bearing reflection and much more discourse hence this article today to help old and new process geeks and newbies find a new way forward in philosophical and theological reflection. Once understood the world both ancient and new will open up away from Plato and back into the ebb-and-flow of creation itself with fewer mental barriers and dead ends.

Happy New Year,

R.E. Slater
December 29, 2024




“The safest general characterization of the European philosophical tradition is that it consists of a series of footnotes to Plato.”
– Alfred North Whitehead

 

Bio & Philosophy: SEOP - Alfred North Whitehead

First published Tue May 21, 1996; substantive revision Thu Nov 10, 2022


Why the World is Unfinished: Whitehead in 20 Minutes
by Matthew Segall  |  Footnotes2Plato  |  19:01


Dec 16, 2024 Footnotes2Plato Podcast a whirling
romp through Whitehead's metaphysical scheme


Intro to Pando Populus by John Cobb

Why the World is Unfinished:
Whitehead in 20 Minutes

by Matthew Segall  |  Footnotes2Plato

The following reflections are based on transcribed excerpts from a recent podcast that should appear at the end of the year and that I will be sure to share.

Do I consider myself a Whiteheadian? On the one hand, obviously yes—he is certainly the most influential philosopher for me. But at the same time, I would not want to give the impression that I am a Whitehead partisan or that I don’t think he might be wrong or misguided about some things. I mean, he is hard to find bones to pick with, but I still would not want to give the impression that by adopting the label “Whiteheadian,” I am incapable of thinking outside of a Whiteheadian box. He created quite a roomy box, but at the same time, if anything, I would prefer to be thought of as a process philosopher, which is a broader tradition, a meta-philosophical approach that goes back to the origins of philosophy itself. There is a whole attitude that comes along with that, and one of those attitudes is: do not get boxed in and stuck thinking in terms of isms or schools guided by one particular great genius. But I will wear the label lightly, like a sticker that I can peel off as needed.

Whitehead presented us with a comprehensive cosmology. His intent was to provide a scheme of categories that could adequately describe every possible experience we might have, whether within science, religion and spirituality, art, or everyday life. That is a theory of everything, but I think it is obviously broader than what is usually called a theory of everything or a grand unifying theory in physics. It is meant to encompass the whole of human interest, including aesthetic concerns, and moral outlook, not just natural science. Physics is important but I would want to avoid simply saying “we must be naturalistic,” because then I would wonder where the place of spirit is in that? Now, I would not want to go in the opposite direction from naturalism and say, “Oh, I’m a spiritualist.” The fact is I think spirit is just as real as nature in some senses of these terms. What sense remains to be metaphysically worked out. 

And it will always remain to be worked out! We have to approach the incompleteness of our knowledge with a playful spirit. So in terms of a theory of everything, I am tempted to also say, “What about nothing?” We need to talk about nothing, even if we are going to performatively unsay whatever we say about nothing. Whitehead introduces a term, creativity, which is his ultimate category. I think one of the words used traditionally, going back in Western philosophy and theology, especially negative theology, for what Whitehead means by creativity would be nothing or nothingness, but a kind of fecund or fertile nothingness from out of which everything issues. We can call it a theory of everything, yes, but we should not forget that there is more—or less—than everything, depending on how you want to talk about it. Nothing has a role to play, too.

There is a sense in which there are no “things” anymore in Whitehead’s universe. There are events or processes, creative happenings, actual occasions. We can redefine what we mean by “thing” or really emphasize the gerund and throw things into process: thinging. I am just playing with words here, but I think it is important to get the full sense of what I mean. He is a systematic philosopher who wants to include everything, but it is also an open system—a scheme that has been sketched in pencil to be revised and not chiseled in stone tablets to be worshipped. The universe itself is unfinished, so of course our attempts to know the nature of that universe must also remain unfinished. “Theory of everything” can sound a little hubristic. That is what we are aiming for, but let us not become too full of ourselves. I doubt we will finally succeed in tying up all the loose ends to arrive at The Target. The target is an eternal sunrise on the horizon we can travel toward but that cannot be encompassed or outshined. 

Whitehead began as a mathematician. He worked with Bertrand Russell, who began as his student at Cambridge and quickly became his collaborator on the Principia Mathematica, to ground mathematics in the logic of set theory. They completed three volumes of that project. I like to say it was both a great success and a great failure. It was a success in that it really helped inaugurate this new analytic method of philosophy, bringing symbolic logic and new forms of predicate logic to bear on philosophical problems and the clarification of our propositions, helping us know what we are even talking about. Yet on the other hand, the project was a failure because they ran into a bunch of paradoxes. They tried to find patches for these paradoxes in order simply to prove that one plus one equals two, which an elementary school child knows is true, and yet to prove that with no presuppositions and no intuitive leaps turned out to be impossible. It was not until a few decades later, when Kurt Gödel came along and laid out his incompleteness theorems, that it was rigorously shown why it was impossible to ground mathematics purely in logic.

Russell went on from that project and got quite enamored with Wittgenstein and his Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus, which had a major influence on the Vienna Circle and logical positivism, even though Wittgenstein himself said, “You guys do not understand what I am actually talking about.” Russell developed what he called “logical atomism”—he wanted to pursue a scientistic form of philosophizing, even though he was a Platonic realist about ideas and took morality very seriously. Nonetheless, he was pursuing the analytic approach.

Whitehead, on the other hand, recognized what the failure of the Principia meant at a deeper level and started to ask deeper metaphysical questions in the 1910s, at the same time that physics was undergoing a second major revolution. It was really the second scientific revolution in many senses, both with Einstein and relativity theory and the beginnings of quantum theory. Whitehead recognized this, and he was always interested not just in pure mathematics but in applied mathematics. He learned mathematics at Cambridge from James Clerk Maxwell’s student. Maxwell invented electromagnetic theory, and one of Maxwell’s students was Edward John Routh, and that was Whitehead’s teacher. So he is one removed from Maxwell, a brilliant mathematician obviously applying mathematics to patterns that can be measured in the physical world. Whitehead always had that sense that math is applicable, and he was very interested in how it was relevant to physics. He was one of the few mathematicians alive in the 1910s who could even comprehend what Einstein was proposing, so much so that he even had some criticisms and voiced them to Einstein in the early 1920s. 

For all of these reasons—both the limits of logic and the shifts in physics—Whitehead found himself wandering into philosophy, and eventually, in 1924, he was invited to Harvard to teach philosophy, even though he had never taken a philosophy course himself. But very often major paradigm shifts in a discipline are catalyzed by someone coming from elsewhere, from a different discipline, shaking things up. I think Whitehead was very much doing that. He was a very close reader of the history of philosophy and had been studying it on his own, including reading Kant’s Critique of Pure Reason when he was a college student, as part of the Cambridge Apostles, a group that would meet to do extracurricular reading and study late into the night. He claimed that he was reading Kant so deeply he had memorized whole passages. He was always very conversant, to say the least, with the history of philosophy and a deep reader of Plato.

Unlike Russell, who pursued logical atomism, Whitehead was far more of an organic and holistic thinker. He took the tools of propositional logic as far as they would go, but he was a constructive system-builder who was engaging in a form of speculative metaphysics and cosmology at a time in the 1920s when philosophy in the Anglo-American world was going in a very different direction. Continental philosophy was also going in a different direction with people like Heidegger. Being and Time was published in 1929, I believe, the same year as Process and Reality. But Heidegger’s project, I think, represents a different form of narrowing, in my opinion, in that it is focused more on human existence, whereas Whitehead was focused more on the cosmos at large, with the human as an expression of that. Whitehead took science very seriously, whereas Heidegger did not (at least not seriously enough to try to think with it). Whitehead was doing a very different thing that was very unpopular at the time, and for the better part of the last century, his work has been in cold storage. But it is really beginning to heat up now because the zeitgeist has changed.

Why is there renewed interest in Whitehead today? After century of making basically no progress on the foundations of physics after quantum theory blew up the old mechanistic, materialist picture, plus the ecological crisis forcing us to reimagine how human beings relate to the rest of the natural world—these factors have led people to realize that a reductionistic understanding of life and ecosystems, and a profound ignorance of the intrinsic value of the living world, contributed to us destroying that world. There is more recognition of the importance of aligning our deep values as human beings with what we think we know about the nonhuman world, which, in Whitehead’s view, would be the source of many of our values. We did not just make them up out of whole cloth as human beings because we are special. Actually, there were these deep cosmic values that we inherit. A hunger for more integrative ways of thinking, of bringing the human being back in touch with the natural world, are leading people to look again at Whitehead’s ideas.

Whitehead draws parallels between his actual occasions and Leibniz’s monads. Leibniz’s ontology is pluralistic, and Whitehead also calls his own ontology pluralistic, opposing it to a kind of Spinozistic monism. But Whitehead is different from both Spinoza and Leibniz in that they were thinking in terms of substance. Whether we are talking about Spinoza’s monism or Leibniz’s monadology, the logic is a substantialist logic, a non-relational logic. For Leibniz, his monads are windowless, walled off, with no openness to causal influence from the surrounding world. Each monad is self-enclosed, as if there is a preprogrammed virtual reality tunnel inside it that God set in place. Leibniz thinks in terms of a preestablished harmony of these monads, so the monads do not causally interact, but God arranged them in advance perfectly. Everything unfolds in an orchestrated way, and each monad experiences its world as if it were in relation to others. But in some sense, it is like a holographic illusion, each with its own little virtual reality running, never actually touching anybody else.

This conception of monads hermetically sealed off from each other is very different from Whitehead’s understanding of a nexus of actual occasions, which are almost all window, open and prehensively related to one another. Prehension is one of Whitehead’s neologisms, meaning a feeling—how that “over there” becomes “here,” how the past lives again in the present, how actual occasions appropriate and feed upon one another. Every actual occasion contains the entire past of the universe unified from its perspective. God is not prearranging everything in advance. Whitehead does have a God, but God is along for the ride, roiling amidst the creative advance with and within every other actual entity. There is a parallel to Leibniz, and it is helpful to know Leibniz before reading Whitehead, to have some sense of the pluralistic cosmology he is articulating. But there are important differences. Whitehead thinks in terms of process and relationship instead of substance, and that makes all the difference.

Interestingly, Whitehead does use Leibniz’s notion of a preestablished harmony in an effort to elucidate how the multiplicity of prehensions within a concrescing actual occasion bring themselves into compositional unity. These prehensions are said to be mutually sensitive to one another as they grow together to form a new actual occasion in the process of concrescence. It is as if there is a preestablished harmony from the perspective of the subject, which is finally achieved as a result of this process of concrescence. In Whitehead, there is still this holographic sense that each contains all, that every actual occasion is a unique recapitulation of the universe. But it is important to note the difference between his process approach and the substance approach to subjectivity. He describes the harmonization of what would otherwise be conflicting feelings into aesthetic contrasts in the process of concrescence so as to give rise to a novel subjective perspective. It might sound paradoxical at first, but for Whitehead, there are no subjects having experiences that preexist their prehensions of the rest of the universe. The subject is an outgrowth of its prehensions, emergent from its feelings. Whitehead also refers to a “superject.” He wants to hyphenate “subject-superject” to emphasize that the subject is the result of a process of experience rather than a substance that is already there in advance having experiences. The reason Whitehead refers to a preestablished harmony is because it is as if there is a subjective aim drawing these prehensions together into the formation of a subject or subject-superject, as if it were already there, but it is not achieved until the end of the concrescence. He is drawing on the Leibnizian allusion to express an important part of his own metaphysics, but it functions differently than it does for Leibniz.

Whitehead is no more or less accessible than Kant or Hegel or Heidegger. It is a real work of philosophy, and whenever a real work of philosophy appears, you are not going to understand it the first time you read it. Even an academic philosopher will need to reread and commit to learning a language. There is a reason academic philosophy becomes fragmented in a way—there are Heideggerians and Derrideans and Whiteheadians—because it takes a lifetime of study to really get inside and outside the inner workings of a philosopher’s mind of that caliber. Is he accessible? Yes, but you have to work for it. Whitehead presents a unique challenge because his insights come from a variety of disciplines—mathematics, propositional logic, physics, biology, history of religious experience. You have to be conversant in all these fields to see the synthetic argument he is making. It is not very common to have that breadth. For this reason I recommend studying Whitehead in groups. Do not do it by yourself.

I talked about creativity already, which is his ultimate category. Creativity is a category that is difficult to define because it is everything and nothing. He says it is both one and many. Elsewhere he talks about the principle of creative unrest, which constantly disturbs any sense of settled finality. Creativity is no more disjunctive than it is conjunctive. This leads us to the next important term, concrescence. Concrescence, as Whitehead defines it in a neat little formula, is the process whereby “the many become one and are increased by one.” It is iterative, cycling, cumulative, such that each subsequent concrescence includes the concrescences that came before it. There is a kind of nesting of perspective going on as the universe creatively advances.

The realization of a pulse of light, a photon, would be a prime example of concrescence. Psychologically, it is the most minute moment of experience we can imagine, involving some degree of, as Edmund Husserl would say, retention of the past and protention of the future—some degree of memory and anticipation. Whitehead is not suggesting our consciousness is like a cartoon flipbook with discrete frames that create the illusion of motion, which Bergson criticized as a cinematographic reduction. Whitehead is trying to point out that our experience as conscious psychological creatures is analogous to quantum phenomena, like a pulse or a “wavicle” of light, requiring a certain duration for a concrete occasion of any kind—whether photonic or psychological—to fully manifest as itself.

Reality, for Whitehead, is made of these concrescent drops of experience. They arise out of a past and integrate their feelings of that past with alternative possibilities that remain available. The process of concrescence is also a process of decision and winnowing down what can occur next, involving aesthetic and affective lures. When that decision is made, the many become one and are increased by one because after arising and integrating all these feelings, a concrescence perishes. It transitions from subjective immediacy to objective immortality and is then available for the next round of concrescence to prehend and make something new out of. This description Whitehead intended to apply across all scales, from the physical realm to the biological realm. You can even understand our own psychological experience in terms of these moments of concrescence. That is what Whitehead aims for with his categories—a scheme that applies across all levels.

Whitehead’s prehensions and acutal occasions of experience bear some resemblance to the notion of qualia, but his whole approach is quite different. Qualia come out of a substance ontology, where qualia are intrinsic properties. Whitehead’s ontology is process-relational. It is an alternative to the substance-quality ontology, where there are substances with essential or accidental qualities inhering in them. That is why we usually speak of a being “having” consciousness or conscious experiences, implying there is a substance with qualities attached. Most philosophers of mind who talk about qualia are trying to get at the intrinsic nature of consciousness. That is different from Whitehead, who thinks experience is relational, not an intrinsic property of an isolated substance.

The concept of prehension points precisely to the relational aspect of our experience. It occurs between beings rather than in separate beings. Philosophers of mind refer to qualia to point out the intrinsic nature of consciousness, insisting qualia have no function because once you admit they have a function, the functionalists explain it all in terms of what it does in the brain. The whole reason qualia defenders invoke qualia is to say something is left over—the “what it’s like” aspect—that functionalist accounts leave out, even if we had a complete neurophysiological understanding.

Prehension is different because prehensions do function. They are not ghostly apparitions hovering beyond physical processes but the very essence of causation itself. Prehensions convey feelings from here to there, from one occasion to the next, from many to one and from one back to many. There is an experiential quality, so it is like qualia in that sense, but prehensions are emotional, motivational, active in shaping what happens now and next. They imply a process-relational metaphysical background rather than the substance-property background of qualia.

In the first few pages of Process and Reality, Whitehead describes his categoreal scheme as a matrix, where there are categories meant to apply analogously across different domains of experience. You could say he is just using a mathematical metaphor and mutely appealing for an imaginative leap, but he is also trying to carefully describe a process of mapping many-to-one and one-to-many relationships. I am not an expert in advanced mathematics like category theory or graph theory, but I think methodologically Whitehead is applying a kind of mathematical method to metaphysics. He is a constructive mathematician, not pretending to provide a formula deducing everything or by which the universe could be calculated. He is using a mathematical analogy. For him, rationality is a method of analogy: knowledge is about making analogies between what we know and what we do not know, seeing if the analogy illuminates anything.

In part four of Process and Reality, which is notoriously difficult, Whitehead is founding a new discipline of “mereotopology,” the study of relationships among wholes and parts in terms of overlaps and adjacency. He tries to articulate a new description of extension that is more general than four-dimensional spacetime—what relativistic physics of his time was working on—and more general than any metrical geometry. He offers a projective form of geometry from which any metrical geometry could be derived. There is intensely mathematical thinking going on in Process and Reality. The spacetime we know from relativity physics could be emergent from this more primary type of extension that could also support different dimensional fields or morphologies. Whitehead argues that we should not assume any one geometry is the actual structure of the physical world. There might be multiple geometries revealing something interesting about its structure. He is a conventionalist in the sense that he did not collapse geometry with physics. Geometry is a way of measuring, and there could be multiple useful ways of doing so. Also, even if the physical world has some morphological structure today, it could be evolving into a new form of deeper dimensionality.

Whitehead provides a more adequate metaphysical context for the anomalies of quantum physics, which only seem anomalous to a materialistic, mechanistic understanding of the universe. He provides a way to understand nonlocality, entanglement, and the role potentiality plays in nature. He offers a more coherent account of how it fits together without needing to imagine magic, like conscious observers making the moon exist only when looked at. If you follow him deeply and come back up, quantum physics stops seeming paradoxical and starts just being how a minded universe works.

Whitehead sometimes describes his ontology as an event ontology, and “event” is slightly more general than “actual occasion.” An actual occasion is Whitehead’s attempt to provide an answer to the ontological question: what is a thing, what is it that exists? I implied earlier that “thing” typically implies a hunk of inert stuff, just hanging out until something happens to it, for our materialistic common sense. Actual occasions are not inert chunks of dead matter, but agential experients; they are alive. They have a certain temporal depth, but not measured by clock time; it is more like Bergsonian duration. You cannot measure the time it takes an actual occasion to become itself. Whitehead would say measurable clock time results from a series of actual occasions. He calls a series of actual occasions a society of actual occasions or a historical route of occasions.

It is important to note that most of what we experience—the enduring bodies, including our own bodies and other people’s bodies, all the animals and plants, the minerals, artifacts, coffee mugs—these are not actual occasions. These are societies of actual occasions, historical routes inheriting certain forms or patterns that repeat moment by moment, maintaining the form of the mug or our bodies. There are societies within societies going up and down the whole scale of the cosmos. With actual occasion, Whitehead is trying to give metaphysicians a referent for what exists, what is most concretely real. Among actual entities or actual occasions—he uses those terms synonymously—we include everything from God to a puff of smoke in far-off empty space to a moment of experience in a human life. These are all actual entities.

One implication is that Whitehead wants the same set of categories describing this process of becoming in terms of actual entities to apply to us as human beings, to our experience, to the rest of the natural world, to God, and so on. He says the world is composed of actual occasions. What is the world made of? That is the answer. It is not made of matter, not made of particles, not just ideas. It is made of these agents, these experiential, creative beings who realize a perspective on the world and then perish to give that perspective back to the world, becoming part of the next occasion that arises.

The most important idea you can take away from Whitehead is that the universe is alive, that life is a matter of degree, and there is no zero point. Everything has some degree of animacy, some degree of interiority and agency. As Thomas Berry, an American theologian and philosopher influenced by Whitehead, said, “The universe is not a collection of objects, it is a communion of subjects.” I think that basic intuition—that we live in a cosmic community of other beings, of innumerable kinds, and that we as human beings are participants in a very ancient process of evolution—is crucial. Everything we do, moment by moment in our individual lives and as a species, will ramify into the future to affect the community members that come after us. It is both a tremendous gift to realize we inherit all this brilliance, and a tremendous responsibility because what we do matters for the future. 

In each process of concrescence, there are physical prehensions of the past integrated with conceptual prehensions of alternative possibilities. The alternative possibilities are what Whitehead calls “eternal objects,” something like Platonic forms but different in an important way. What gets ingressed from this realm of possibilities must be compatible with what is already actualized. Whitehead would say it must be compatible with what is physically prehended by an actual occasion. Leibniz’s idea of compossibility is an inspiration here—compatibility of possibilities not only with each other but with what has already been actualized. You cannot have a square circle, and I cannot sprout wings and fly out the window even if I can imagine it.

We experience moment by moment the entire universe, and to actualize a coherent, harmonious, unique perspective, many of the feelings and prehensions streaming in from the past must have their volume turned down. They must be negatively prehended, so we can emphasize what matters and what we find valuable in our unified perspective. It is important to note, just because we negatively prehend a feeling does not mean it is eliminated. It still contributes to the emotional tone of our final experience. Whitehead even talks about negative prehensions leaving a scar. We might forget something, but that forgotten memory is still functioning in the unconscious. There is a whole theory of trauma and repression implied here.

William James was an important influence on Whitehead. In some sense, Whitehead is taking James’s psychology and drawing out its cosmological implications. James does that himself, especially in A Pluralistic Universe, but Whitehead systematizes James’s psychology and unpacks its metaphysical ingredients. With James, you get the baked cake, and it tastes great. Whitehead reverses the process and shows you the ingredients and order of operations needed to produce that cake, showing what the universe must be like for James’s psychology to make sense. Whitehead did not need to develop his own psychology because it is already there in James. Whitehead’s cosmology developed out of James’s psychology. William James was also an important influence on Carl Jung, so we can also easily apply Whitehead’s process philosophy to enrich our understanding of Jung’s depth psychology and the notions of the unconscious, collective unconscious, and archetypes. There is a way of understanding all that in Whiteheadian terms.

For example, what Jung calls the Self is analogous to God in Whitehead’s cosmology. Whitehead has a conception of God as having two poles. God is an actual entity. Every actual entity is dipolar. There is a mental pole and a physical pole. God’s mental pole is what Whitehead calls the primordial nature of God, and God’s physical pole is the consequent nature of God. We can think of Jung’s idea of the Self as a kind of lure guiding the psyche toward greater wholeness. In Whitehead’s view, the entire pluriverse is occurring inside God, but that does not mean God is outside of it. God is as much in the world as the world is in God. The role of God, with these two poles, is analogous to the Self as a lure toward deeper harmonization. For Whitehead, this is a cosmological process—the whole evolutionary arc of the universe is not determined by but lured by this divine impulse for harmony.

Jung was talking about the individuation process of the human psyche, but already in his own terms individuation allows the human being to become, if not one with the universe, then at least more intimately related to the whole. Process theology, which Whitehead’s idea of God inspired, is one of the best ways I have found to spell out the metaphysical and theological implications of Jung’s psychology. Jung does a good job himself, but he is limited by Kantian epistemological boundaries. He would say he is just a phenomenologist, describing archetypes based on observation of his patients and himself. But in more speculative moods, Jung has a lot to say beyond just phenomenology.

There is an ancient tradition of negative theology where paradox and the coincidence of opposites is the best way to describe the divine nature. Whitehead would say the primordial nature of God is eternal, and the consequent nature of God is temporal. Why is that? The primordial nature is the mental pole of God, providing some valence or aesthetic order to the realm of infinite possibilities. God’s original envisagement of possibility is felt by finite actual occasions as an initial aim at relevant novel possibilities in each unique situation. That is the role of the primordial nature.

The consequent nature, the temporal pole, is together with the world. The primordial nature is alone, one could say, while the consequent nature is together with the world, collecting the community of all actual occasions that have ever arisen, gathering everything that happens and harmonizing it. There is tension between these two poles. Whitehead does not want two gods, but we have a divine conception that is both eternal and historical, both alone and with the world. He also says the primordial nature of God is unconscious, and the consequent nature becomes conscious due to its relationship with the world. The primordial nature is like an unconscious yearning giving organized value to infinite possibility, informing and luring all finite actual occasions. They are not determined by God; they make their own decisions. Whatever they decide, the consequent nature harmonizes it, bringing it into ongoing unification.

..

In Plato, the eternal forms or ideas are the preeminent actualities. The physical world and everything we sense is a kind of imitation, a mimicry, a copy of the reality, the original, which resides in some Platonic heaven. To be fair to Plato, he wrote dialogues, not doctrines, and the best refutations of his own ideas (including the idea of ideas) are also in his dialogues. There is a very important and ongoing argument between Platonic realists and nominalists. Nominalists think universals are just names, while Platonic realists think universals preexist concrete things. The nominalist critique is important. We want to avoid essentialisms. At the same time, it is hard to make sense of mathematics without Platonic realism.

Whitehead also wanted to provide some justification for definite knowledge, which presupposes the ability to recognize and identify the same objects amidst the ever-changing flux. He thus introduced eternal objects as a category. Unlike Plato’s forms, eternal objects are deficient in actuality. They do not cause anything. Whitehead’s ontological principle says actual occasions are the only reasons, the only causes, and all agency lies with the actual occasions of experience, not with eternal objects. Actual occasions draw upon or ingress these eternal objects. This is almost an inversion of Plato. In inverting Plato, Whitehead maintains the importance of having a category of real ideas. He found it necessary to introduce eternal objects to justify our knowledge, so we can reference them and understand how we recognize things like Cleopatra’s Needle in London, which physically is never the same twice at the atomic level, always wasting away. Yet we recognize it as the same object each time we visit. Whitehead says what we recognize again and again is a complex eternal object participating in this society or nexus of flowing occasions. 

Process and Reality is a very difficult book to read. Whitehead warns us that his list of dozens of categories in Part 1 will only make sense when applied in subsequent parts of the book, where he he displays their relevance to the special sciences like physics, biology, physiology, psychology, religious experience, and so on. They are not supposed to make sense immediately. The order of presentation of Process and Realityis not the order of composition. To produce these categories, he first analyzed all these disciplines and found generic principles he could abstract. Categories are just general principles.

Sometimes category means a box to put things in, but I think Whitehead imagines categories more as ways things function. A category is an account of a function that, together with other functions, elucidates our concrete experience. It is not just a box; it is more like a hammer to hammer nails. 

In the case of the categories of explanation, these result from him carefully thinking through the process of concrescence to understand what makes logical sense. How to avoid contradictions? How to ensure coherence, that there are no arbitrary definitions, for example, that actual occasions and eternal objects are defined in terms of one another? He wants logical soundness and empirical adequacy. He is signaling an open-ended process of speculative inquiry, a speculative empiricism that we should continue to refine. Three-quarters through the book, he abolishes one of the categories (conceptual reversion), subsuming it into a more general category, exemplifying his creative method. Even he does not treat his system as finished, and nor should we.

Whitehead notes two different types of process: concrescence is one, and transition is the other. He says this is an intellectual analysis of an unbroken process of becoming, and we should not mistake the order of explanation for the order of actual becoming. He describes these two processes to do justice both to concrescent individuals (the microcosm), to the way the universe becomes unique in each particular, and also to the macrocosmic, the universal, not just each but All. Transition is where what was just unified becomes one of the many again. 

As I enter my late thirties and get older, turning toward the second half of life, I am feeling a transition in my own development and thinking. I have been mostly concerned with natural sciences and abstract metaphysical integrations of special sciences, and now I am increasingly interested in the human being and questions of meaning and life. I have been finding—if not answers—at least interesting questions in various esoteric traditions, like anthroposophy from Rudolf Steiner, inheriting German idealism and taking it further. Just one example: we are at an evolutionary bottleneck as a species, and the secular materialist story of technological progress and consumer capitalism as the end-all be-all, the end of history, seemed plausible in the ’90s, but in the last couple of decades that has collapsed and nothing new has emerged to replace it. We must rediscover a more viable deep motivational structure to guide our existence and understand the further reaches of human evolution. Where are we headed? Thinking we are the pinnacle of evolution is naïve. We have a unique potential as human beings. As the Buddhists say, it is an auspicious occasion to be incarnated as a human being. What are we capable of? These are my questions—what sorts of transpersonal development lie ahead, and how can we consciously decide to further the evolutionary process?

This has less to do with understanding all available knowledge and trying to integrate it—which still interests me, I admit—but as I face the fact that I will die one day, my mortality forces any answer to the meaning of life to reckon with that inevitability. Pure knowledge and intellectual understanding seems less valuable in light or in the shadow of death.

Whitehead claims that “The teleology of the universe is directed to the production of beauty.” His conception of the divine is as the ultimate aesthetic vision. The divine tries to realize beauty, and morality is a subset of aesthetics for Whitehead. God seeks intensity of experience. God does not seek to preserve established modes of experience but to lure us forward, beckoning us onward. Also, not only is morality a subset of aesthetics, but so is logic. This from one of the preeminent mathematicians in world history! Logic is a subset of aesthetics. There is an aesthetic order to the universe, and moral and mathematical forms of order are outgrowths of that. Mathematics is music, in a sense.

How does this affect me personally? I find it deeply inspiring. I have been on a journey in my life. I became a pretty obnoxious materialist atheist in my teens. Then I discovered the psychology of religion through Carl Jung, Alan Watts, Buddhism, Taoism, Zen. As I went through my twenties, I had some experiences and started thinking and feeling more deeply about the importance of a personal God. Studying esoteric and mystical forms of Christianity, the idea of incarnation resonated with me, as well. Whitehead’s idea of God as “the fellow sufferer who understands” touched me. Whitehead’s God is not omnipotent, not above the world ruling it with decrees like a dictator, but involved with the world, feeling every occasion’s pain and joy, trying to offer a sense of what is possible. This is not just a description of reality. It does seem adequate to my experience, sure; but it is also an invitation to give expression to experience in a certain way, so as to further this vision. There is a participatory element. God needs our help. I find that compelling.

Some people want God to be in charge and make it all okay. To me that is such a boring and inadequate understanding of human life. What is there for us to do if God is in charge? Why is there evil? If God is omnipotent, I am fucking pissed at that God. Instead, I feel inspired by a God who is not jealously guarding power, but crying out to us from even the smallest crevice, “Hey you, let’s do this together.”



John Cobb - The Philosophy of Alfred North Whitehead


Richard Rummell’s iconic landscape watercolor view
of Harvard University, 1906. Courtesy of Arader Galleries.


The Philosophy of Alfred North Whitehead

April 14, 2016


Many who are familiar with Pando Populus know of its intellectual roots in the process thought of Alfred North Whitehead. But fewer may be familiar with Whitehead’s place in the history of ideas and the community that has developed in response.

Alfred North Whitehead was a revered teacher at Harvard University from 1924-37. During that period and for some years thereafter he was regarded as one of the leading philosophers in the United States—a good many people would have listed him as the most important. His role in the United States extended beyond the university to a segment of the general public.

Today there is no interest in his thought at Harvard or, indeed, at the great majority of American universities. Those of us who appraise Whitehead as one of the great philosophers of all time constitute a tiny ghetto with few participants in major academic centers. Why has this change occurred?

The Roles and Fortunes of Whitehead’s Thought

I think I can say without fear of contradiction that the change did not result from the refutation of Whitehead or by improvement on his work. If that were the case, the small ghetto of which I wrote would not exist. The change has been in the nature of philosophy and of the university as a whole.

When Whitehead flourished, universities understood themselves to be places for intellectual reflection and conversation about the issues of concern in the wider culture. Among the most important such issues were those stimulated by developments in biology and physics. In different ways these developments raised questions about the relation of human beings to the rest of the world and the place of values and of religious ideas, including the reality of God. Cartesian dualism, which arose in the seventeenth century under the hallmark of separating mind from body—humans from the natural world—was disrupted by evolutionary theory of the nineteenth century, which emphasized the continuity of things. Immanuel Kant offered an epistemological dualism to replace Rene Descartes’, but many Americans were not satisfied. Other options were considered. Whitehead directly addressed all of these issues in original ways. This conversation seemed relevant to much of the university community, but it had its home in philosophy.

Already there were other philosophers who wanted to redefine their task. Some followed Kant in assuming that “knowledge” is limited to what is empirically known. This can give us only a phenomenal world of appearances, and it is purely deterministic. That is, it assumes that ultimately everything that happens can be explained by what has happened in the past. The entities of which the world is composed are not the sorts of things that could make choices.

These philosophers disagreed with Kant’s talk of another kind of reflection—one about practical affairs. They were not interested in the inevitably uncertain speculations that played a large role in the discussion in which Whitehead took part. For them, philosophy’s task is largely limited to showing why that kind of talk is useless and meaningless. The growing edge of philosophy limited itself to language analysis—deconstructing what we say, without a constructive attempt to put things back together again. The sort of synthesis that Whitehead sought was no longer considered a proper goal. In the 1940s and ‘50s many philosophy departments were still somewhat open to including those who sought synthesis in understanding the big picture, but by the ‘60s analytic philosophy was clearly dominant and often exclusive, and it remains so today.

In fact Whitehead made contributions to this kind of analysis as well as to the synthesis of a whole, and a few philosophers, such as his students—Bertrand Russell and Willard Quine—appreciated that. But in general the new school simply ignored or dismissed Whitehead. As philosophy had been newly defined, Whitehead was not even a philosopher.

The victory of this type of philosophy was supported by changes in the university as a whole. The university ceased to be a place for intellectual activity and focused instead on scholarly research. The distinction between the two is very broad. The one aims at a general understanding of life as it is lived, including its values; the other narrowly focuses on specialty concerns, and specifically excludes values from the mix. Most universities now define themselves as “research universities.” They judge that research is best done when one approaches the task within the confines of a narrowly defined academic discipline and without any judgments of better and worse. So they describe themselves as “value-free.” Since most of the questions raised by the culture cross all such disciplinary boundaries and concern the relation of facts and values, the research contributes only information to the discussion of action or policy or humanistic understanding. Clearly there is no place for traditional philosophy in a value-free research university. Philosophical analysis can have a small claim to a role in the research university by supposedly bringing greater clarity to the issues, but it must do so without the aim of addressing the larger whole. Whereas Whitehead’s type of synthetic philosophy was central to the intellectually-oriented university, it has no place in the research university, where even analytic philosophy is marginal.

That Whitehead survived at all in higher education is because the higher education industry includes professional schools. These have to pay some attention to real world issues. The professional schools did not immediately or wholeheartedly subscribe to value-free research in narrowly defined disciplines. Schools of education—that is, those that prepared teachers—took some interest in ideas excluded from the research university. After all, when one thinks of how to teach children, it is hard to exclude questions of better and worse altogether. Whitehead wrote a book about education that had some influence among educators even after philosophy departments excluded his work.

Theological schools are given the task of preparing people to serve the churches. Here too it was not possible to be completely free from questions of better or worse. Also the sorts of questions that Whitehead dealt with were asked by people in the pew. Whitehead continued to play a role in a few schools of theology, especially at the University of Chicago Divinity School through the 1960s.

Even in the professional schools, however, most courses came to be taught according to the model of the academic disciplines created for specialized valued free research. The Divinity School at Chicago now prides itself on the excellence of its work in these disciplines. Whether they serve the needs of pastors is not a major concern. Whitehead has disappeared from the curriculum.

This means that to maintain an interest in Whitehead is to be a critic of higher education, particularly of its abandonment of any effort to provide a comprehensive understanding of human life and its place in the natural world. Those of us influenced by Whitehead believe that the university has structured itself and understood its purpose based on bad philosophical assumptions that it is incapable of discussing. We believe that we must be witness to a different possibility. This requires us to build on a movement that flourished briefly in universities and then was excluded.

When I studied at Chicago, 1947-49, this movement was called neo-naturalism. My faculty in the Divinity School believed that it was clear that since we now knew that human beings are fully natural, as per evolutionary theory, we could not continue to think of nature in purely objective terms. Nature includes subjects (for example, us) as well as objects. In the previously dominant understanding of nature, building on Descartes, nature is exhaustively understood as a material mechanism. We human beings, on the other hand, know ourselves as something more than that. Re-thinking nature so that we could understand ourselves as part of it seemed to be the central intellectual task posed by the new evolutionary understanding.

The faculty was especially interested in scientists who shared this view and made helpful suggestions. They recognized Whitehead—the mathematician, logician, and physicist—as one who was doing this. They appreciated the work of Charles Hartshorne, who was teaching in the philosophy department at Chicago. Hartshorne had been an assistant of Whitehead and was inspired by him as well as by C.S. Peirce, whose collected writings he co-edited with Paul Weiss. A few of the neo-naturalists became serious Whiteheadians. Most of the followers of Whitehead in my generation were students of this faculty.

One reason that intellectual activity flourished in Chicago during those years was that it was strongly favored by the chancellor, Robert Maynard Hutchins. Hutchins left Chicago a few years later, however, surrendering to the rising tide of scholarly research through self-enclosed academic disciplines. Our professors at Chicago, of course, continued to teach neo-naturalism for some years under the leadership of Bernard Loomer. However, after Hutchins left, the neo-naturalist faculty dispersed and retired, and the University of Chicago ceased to be a center for this kind of thinking. Indeed, the issues with which this faculty had dealt ceased being discussed in North American universities. They did not fit into any of the academic disciplines developed for research purposes. The term “neo-naturalism” has also largely disappeared.

But before the dispersal, Loomer had introduced another label used especially for the neo-naturalist thinking influenced by Whitehead. He called it “process thought,” due to the central idea that to be is to be in process, rather than a static thing. Loomer’s leadership was such that this term was quickly picked up and adopted. The word “process” was already prominent in this community since the title of Whitehead’s magnum opus was “Process and Reality.”

Those of us who, while studying at Chicago, learned the importance of intellectual life were distressed that Chicago Divinity School faculty was no longer providing the leadership we had appreciated. Whitehead’s own students kept some interest alive quite independently of Chicago, and in their diaspora some of the Chicago neo-naturalists continued to influence students. But these rather isolated influences were barely keeping the memory of Whitehead alive.

To resist the continuing decline of what some of us considered a crucial dimension of thought, we created a journal, Process Studies, and (in 1973) a Center for Process Studies in Claremont, California. The Whiteheadian process movement has not recovered the status in the United States that it had during Whitehead’s life or for a decade after his death, but it has survived, developed, and achieved some international visibility.

In Europe, interest in Whitehead developed largely independently of what we had done in the United States. Isabelle Stengers, in her work with the Nobel Prize-winning chemist Ilya Prigogine, became interested in Whitehead’s contribution to science, and she was joined in this regard by Bruno Latour. Stengers’ Thinking with Whitehead is one of the most important studies of his philosophy. The opening of European universities to Whitehead, however, resulted chiefly from his importance being recognized by Gilles Deleuze.

What is appreciated in European universities is primarily the early, less speculative, and less radical Whitehead. For secular European intellectuals to take Whitehead seriously requires the denial of his theism, whereas Process and Reality gives a major role to what Whitehead calls “God.” The fact that the Center for Process Studies is located at a school of theology makes Whitehead suspect on both sides of the Atlantic. That it does not prevent the Chinese from being uniquely receptive is an ironic twist.

There has been a third strand of interest among Catholic philosophers, however, who have a center in Leuven. This has been connected closely with the Claremont center. Leuven has attracted students from around the world and its graduates have taken process theology to Congo, India, and the Philippines.The Catholic strand has been influential in creating some interest in Poland and perhaps also in Romania and Bulgaria. The International Whitehead Network, which grew out of a Center for Process Studies conference, keeps this global reality alive and visible through international conferences every other year.

Some Major Ideas of Whitehead

To deal with questions raised by scientific and intellectual developments of the nineteenth century, Whitehead broke with the dominant Western tradition. He developed a metaphysics and cosmology more similar to classical Buddhism than to any preceding Western thinker. But he developed this vision in dialogue with Western science, philosophy, and religion far beyond what any Buddhist has done.

The great majority of Western thinkers from the Greeks to the present time have thought that our basic relation to the world was mediated through the sense organs, and most have focused on vision. The 18th century philosopher, David Hume, made clear for all time that if we begin with this assumption we are limited to a phenomenal world—the world of immediate appearances, stripped of any history or future, as well as values and purposes. The phenomena we perceive are all given to us as objects. That is, we have no direct relation to the subjects that may underlie these objects, and their existence cannot be “known” in the Kantian sense. All that can be known is a universe of objects.

Whitehead rejected this starting point. Obviously the senses are very important in giving us clear conscious knowledge, but this is not primitive or the most fundamental kind of knowledge. For instance, the experience of sight begins with the world impinging on our eyes and brain. This is prior to our “seeing” patterns of color. It is true that we are far more clearly conscious of the colors we project than of the primitive experience of being impacted by the world. But that we experience this relationship also, even if only at the largely non-conscious level, is evidenced throughout. We do not really doubt the existence of a world: we “feel” the world’s presence in a more fundamental way than our sense organs can ever tell us. Babies are convinced very early that the world they are impacted by is very real. Indeed, we do not doubt the existence of other subjects. It is foolish to suppose that we arrive at these conclusions by reasoning from sense experience; there is no sense experience we can have that would yield this conclusion. The knowledge that there is a real world is a more fundamental knowledge than how that world looks and sounds and feels.

The philosopher William James taught us the idea of radical empiricism—that we should examine experience radically to bring out elements other than the ones sense data provides. For example, we all know that our experience in the present moment is affected by past experience, most of all by immediately preceding experiences. We do not infer that this is the case, however, from sense data. Yet, in each moment we experience the causal efficacy of the past experience—no present experience is somehow “purely” what it is apart from the past leading up to it. Similarly, while we all take for granted that we are “embodied” in some sense, we do not arrive at the idea through examining sense experience. Rather, we experience our bodies as “us” as a kind of deep perception, apart from any sense experience that would necessitate it.

Whitehead thus analyzes two dimensions of human experience and, in this, makes a unique and highly important (if now overlooked) contribution to the history of thought. There are perceptions in the mode of “causal efficacy”—that is, the “perception” that one moment has of previous moments. There are also perceptions in the mode of “presentational immediacy”—that is, the perceptions we have of the appearance of the world, the data of the senses. These include touch and vision. Most philosophers have begun with the latter—what we feel and what we see. The conclusion, if they are fully consistent, leads in the direction of the idea that nothing exists other than my singular experience at any given time (solipsism of the present moment). However, if we actually analyze our experience, we will find that perceptions in the mode of causal efficacy ground the perceptions in the mode of presentational immediacy. Whitehead’s contribution goes against much of modern thought and lays a foundation for a deeply ecological view of relations. We begin in a social world, not an individual one.

Whitehead then goes to some trouble to explain how presentational immediacy arises out of causal efficacy. To deal with these in detail he invents a new word, “prehension.” A prehension makes something that’s given a participant in a new instance of becoming. Perception in the mode of causal efficacy makes an aspect of some preceding event a participant in the new becoming. So there are prehensions in the mode of causal efficacy. These are called physical, because their data are already actual and are felt as such.

But clearly the patches of color presented to us immediately are not objectively there before we see them. Their reality is bestowed on them in the seeing by the new occasion. Therefore, the prehension of these shapes and colors are not physical in this sense. They are felt as potentials for actualization. These potentials are not limited to visual data or even to sensory data as a whole. They may be emotional tones and urges and anticipations. Whereas the potentials actualized in vision are largely determined by what happens physically in the sense organs and the brain, some of the potentials are what we call ideas and ideals that shape our action. Whitehead calls all of these prehensions of potentials “conceptual.” They constitute the mental aspect of each moment of becoming. Every instance of becoming has both a “physical pole” and a “mental pole.” This polarity replaces a dualism of physical and mental substances without minimizing the importance of either physicality or mentality.

Using the term “causal” in naming the most primal perceptions is an indication that Whitehead rejects both the Humean and the Kantian view of causality. We know what a cause is because we experience ourselves as deriving what we become from others. In a causal feeling the present reenacts what is given in the past or incorporates that past within itself. The simplest feelings are deterministic. The present necessarily prehends and in some part reenacts what it prehends. This is why the world holds together and so much can be predicted with confidence. It is why so much has been accomplished by Cartesian science employing a mechanistic model.

Then, in order to understand causality, Whitehead distinguished subjects from objects in a very different way than modern thought has done. For Whitehead, everything we experience as an object was once a subject or composed of subjects. Every event in the process of its own becoming is in fact subjective. Every experience subjectively takes in (“prehends” was Whitehead’s word) past events. These events were at one time subjects, too, but they have now become data or objects for the new event—as the new subjective event will become an object for future events. Here, too, the dualism of modernity is rejected. There is not one kind of thing that is inherently subjective and another that is inherently objective. In its moment of becoming everything is subjective. As soon as it has become that moment, it is an object for its successors. Whitehead’s point was that we cannot have any understanding of causality if we abstract the world from its moment of subjectivity as science insists that we do. This emphasis on subjectivity allows us to see that the world is “fully alive” rather than composed of lumps of “dead matter”—another key reason why Whitehead is an apt philosopher for a more ecological way of thinking.

If the physical feelings that I have described were all there is, then the scientistic model would work for everything. But Whitehead is analyzing subjects rather than objects as primary. The subjects do reenact what they receive. But they also integrate the many things they receive into a new unity. This integration is quite simple for simple occasions but very complex for complex ones such as human experiences. It always involves potentials as well as what is actual. It actualizes some potentials but not others. Whitehead calls this a “decision,” which means a cutting off. Not all potentials can be actualized. This role of potentials constitutes the germ, in even the simplest occasion, of what becomes mentality in complex occasions.

I will take this discussion one step further. Causal feelings are feelings of the physical feelings of antecedent occasions. The causality of the past is mediated through contiguous experience. But there are other influences on the coming to be of an experience that are not as scientists anticipate. The mental aspect of earlier experiences can also be prehended. Whitehead calls this the physical feeling of a feeling of what is potential. The feeling of these past “conceptual feelings” is not limited to contiguous events. There is, therefore, action at a distance at both the quantum level and in animal experience. At the quantum level physicists call it “entanglement”. At the human level we are talking about our sense of the feeling tone of a whole group of people or memory of past experiences or telepathic communications.

The issue of God arises in this context. One reason that Whiteheadians have been able to work fairly effectively in inter-religious contexts is that, against the tenor of modernity, Whitehead took the notion of God quite seriously. Rather than eliminating purpose from nature, Whitehead affirms that every event arises out of the aim to become, and to become whatever value is possible in the given situation. This aim is derived from the ordering of potentials relevant to the situation. This is the way God enters the picture. In every moment of our experience, we are called to actualize those potentials that provide the greatest value in the momentary event and in its relevant future. Today, this surely means that God calls us to actualize those potentials that will help to save the Earth. In fact we often fall short, and this leaves us humans with the sense that we often “miss the mark.”

My formulations have assumed some things that need to be made explicit. For Whitehead, the actual world we experience moment by moment consists of a sequence of events rather than of substances or things. This notion is common in Eastern thought, whereas it is rare in Western ways of thinking. In the West, we think of things happening to us or being done by us, with the idea the the “us” in question remains the same. So we think of ourselves as substances underlying the changing experiences. For Whitehead, the experiences are the really real things. At any moment that there is no “me” separate from the experience. There’s no underlying substance; the event is all that is. What we think of as substances are actually snapshots of events.

This idea is based on careful reflection of a moment of experience, similar to the sort of analysis Gotama Buddha engaged in millennia ago. Whitehead was a mathematical physicist, and his philosophy was also heavily influenced by new developments in physics. The quanta, after all, of which the world is made up are not substances. They happen. Whitehead applies the same notion to human experience. There is no underlying experiencer who remains the same while experience all around her changes. Nor can experiences be viewed as substances. They are events.

Further, like William James, Whitehead thinks that the flow of our experience is not continuous. Instead it consists in successive experiences, one after another. The descriptions above presuppose this. They talk about the becoming of a single moment of experience. The most important contributor to this event is almost always the previous moment of experience, the one that we identify as “belonging to” the same person. But in each moment we take account of data that were not available in the preceding moment (the visual and auditory data are always changing and the past events felt in causal feelings always include new elements. A person is not absolutely self-identical through time. A person is a process. Whitehead calls this kind of process a macro-process.

This macro-process can be analyzed into the micro-processes that make it up. It is these micro-processes that are the “atomic” units that ultimately make up the world. These units are atomic because they cannot be broken up into smaller events. Their analysis is the account of the process through which they came into being as an indivisible whole. For Whitehead, each of these indivisible actualities is an “actual entity” or an “occasion of experience.”

Whitehead’s thought is remarkably similar to Buddhism. The Buddhist analysis of what we are likely to consider enduring substances is similar. Also, in Nagarjuna we have a clear account of what he calls pratityasamutpada. Every entity is an instance of this, and this is the way all things come together to constitute us in each moment. Whitehead’s formulation is that each actual entity is an instance of creativity, and each moment of creativity is, in that instance, a matter of many data points being factored together to become one event, and then that one event becoming a datum for the next event. “The many become one and are increased by one” is the way that Whitehead put it. Most of what takes part in constituting me now also takes part in constituting other people as well. Again, it’s a profoundly ecological way of thinking—not just about the world, but reality itself.

Of course, we cannot live without discriminating, and we need to identify, with regard to every decision, what is most important. But Whitehead reminds us that discriminating is always also abstracting. In fact, everything is relevant to everything.

In practice, while this relates to the fact that we cannot avoid ignoring a great deal,it also means that decisions to ignore need to be open to constant revision. This points in exactly the opposite direction from the organization of the university in more or less airtight academic disciplines. Whitehead thus shares this critique of concepts with Buddhists, although he emphasizes the positive role of concepts, with all their limitations, more than most Buddhists.

Whitehead emphasizes, much more than Buddhists, two things. First, every actual entity “decides” just how it will synthesize all the elements that the world contributes to it. While most of what it will be is decided for it, it still participates in its own creation. Second, every entity aims to actualize value. It organizes around that aim. The aim is to achieve the most value possible in itself and in its effect on the future. It may decide accordingly, but it may refuse to fully accord with that aim. It derives that aim from the divine ordering of potentialities.

In other words, Whitehead’s metaphysics is Buddhist, but his theology is Christian. In Japan, process thought plays its most important role in the Buddhist/Christian dialog—a conversation in which Japanese intellectuals are often interested. This discussion is also increasingly important in the United States.

In the Abrahamic scriptures, clearly, God is an actual entity. However, most philosophers assume that God must be“ultimate.” Thomism has tried to identify God both as Supreme Being and as Being Itself. Whitehead regards creativity as the “ultimate,” that is, what plays the role of Being Itself in the West. But he agrees with the scriptures that God is an actual entity, not creativity as such. Thus whereas Buddhists aim to realize their true nature, called Buddha nature, Christians want to respond fully to the call of God. For a Whiteheadian these goals, oriented respectively to creativity and to God, can be viewed as complementary.

Relevance to Saving the World

For me and my fellow Whiteheadians, the need to keep this kind of thinking alive was intensified by the global environmental crisis. The victory of value-free research disciplines has rendered universities more part of the problem than part of the solution. With few exceptions, they have not addressed the issues facing humanity or even recognized that they should try to contribute to saving the world. An influential book directed to faculties, is entitled Save the World on Your Own Time. It makes clear that professors are hired to teach and do research on whatever they can get the money to investigate. They are not hired to work for bettering the human condition.

We in the Whiteheadian community feel the need to muster thinkers to the task of considering how the biosphere can be preserved and how Earth can be kept habitable for humans. These questions are, of course, shaped by our valuing of life. The refusal to acknowledge such values seems to us to be absurd and even demonic. We believe that most people in universities agree, but that their graduate studies have socialized them to prioritize research and through their teaching to socialize the next generation of teachers to avoid allowing their values to influence their academic work. Few can even imagine another way to teach and learn. To some of us it seems quite clear that the dominant Western philosophy has contributed extensively to bad actions and bad policy. It is difficult to have much hope for the needed changes being made while these ideas remain unchallenged.

The most obvious example is economic theory. Economists are extensively consulted by governments and corporations, and over recent decades their advice has generally supported moves in the wrong direction. There is now much more self-criticism among economists than there has been in the past. Many realize that the extreme gap between the very rich and the poor, to which the policies they have encouraged contributed, is not desirable. But the even more serious problems resulting from their encouragement of increasing market activity have barely been acknowledged. Almost all economists continue to encourage governments to work for economic growth. At best they seek to balance economic considerations, assuming that these focus on growth, with questions of sustainability.

Around the edges, people who are not part of the guild have proposed that we should seek to develop economies that aim at meeting human needs without increasing the pressure we place on the natural environment. To Whiteheadians this seems to be a question economists should be asking but refuse to ask. If we reflect as to why economists cannot consider changing their discipline to fit the needs of the time, we quickly run into deeply entrenched commitments of a sort historically discussed by philosophers. The economists’ description of the nature of the human being, qua economic actor, fits the individualism and indifference to values that the university as a whole encourages.

Before 1970, a Whiteheadian economist, Herman Daly, proposed that, given the location of human activity in the context of a larger natural system, growth economics should be replaced by steady-state economics. He is now recognized as the father of ecological economics. He was, of course, excommunicated by the economics guild, and he has not been allowed to teach. But among environmentalists and church people he is widely appreciated and admired. There is, I think, only one university in which ecological economics is taught, but the topic is widely discussed outside the university.

Let me make it clear that ecological economics could have been developed by someone who knew nothing of Whitehead’s thought. If so, we Whiteheadians would still support it wholeheartedly. We are not sectarian in the sense of only wanting to promote our own work. But I think it is not an accident that Daly was influenced by Whitehead and is part of our circle. This is also true of Mark Anielski, who has published a book on “The Economics of Happiness.” The only country that aims at human happiness rather than enlargement of the market is Bhutan, a Buddhist kingdom.

Our habit of critiquing the dominant economic and political practices has led Whiteheadians to be more critical of the increasing takeover of American democracy by corporations, and especially Wall Street, than many. Similarly, we tend to be strongly opposed to American imperialism. On the whole, I believe, we are less taken in by American propaganda than most academics, religious leaders, and political pundits. Our willingness as a school of thought to question fundamental assumptions of thought has created more of an environment for questioning assumptions that the dominant culture ignores. Not a few Whiteheadians have waded into territory others assume to be too hot to handle. Whiteheadians tend to be enormously diverse in their ideas, but unified in their belief that sacred cows tend to be dangerous animals.

I hardly need to say at this point that a Whiteheadian view of education calls for drastic changes. There are a few liberal arts colleges that have developed the sort of curricula for which a Whiteheadian hopes. There has been some influence of Whitehead’s thought, but our support for such experiments does not depend on that. In Beijing there is a Whitehead kindergarten—indeed, a group of them that goes by that name. In Korea there is a grade school being developed on Whiteheadian lines. Whiteheadians have developed a few programs in American universities. But we support also many other experiments that are taking place. I keep hoping that the absurdity of value-free education and research in a desperately needy world will soon be widely recognized, by whatever name it goes under. The value of Whitehead’s work is that he laid a systematic, philosophical foundation for doing so and going against the tide.

Agriculture is another area in which many people recognize that we have gone in the wrong direction. There has been very little truly sustainable agriculture in human history, and many regions that once were fertile are no longer productive. Now we are dealing with the whole planet, and the need for sustainability is global and urgent. But our actual practice is becoming worse as we continue to shift from small farms to industrial agriculture.

This shift is the result of the influence of economics on agricultural policy and practice. Increasing “productivity” is now the key goal, and this is measured in terms of output divided by labor. Slow loss of soil is not considered a problem because of the habit of economists to discount the future. Social costs are not factored in, nor are the consequences of increasing the dependence on oil products. Since the calculations of economists are favorable to the interests of agricultural corporations, they support one another. The schools of agriculture in the United States teach nothing else. Governmental departments of agriculture at state and national levels join the schools in serving the corporations.

Outside of these schools, however, there is interesting work being done. Wes Jackson, founder of The Land Institute, has devoted his career to creating perennial grains that are as productive as annuals. He has had significant success, now recognized even by schools of agriculture. If a polyculture of perennials can succeed the monoculture of annuals, the production of food can be accompanied by the maintenance and even improvement of the soil. We would, of course support such moves regardless of the philosophy of the leaders, but I do not think it an accident that Jackson is a Whiteheadian.

China has been particularly receptive to Whitehead-inspired initiatives. In the area of agriculture, most of China’s professors were educated in the United States, and China was on its way to replacing thousands of villages with industrial agriculture. A few Chinese, mainly those affirming traditional Chinese values, were opposing this and seeking village development instead. We threw ourselves in with these, especially with the Chinese environmentalist Sheri Liao, begging the government not to make the mistakes that have done so much harm in the United States. We have been surprisingly successful. President Xi now supports the development of eco-villages rather than replacing villages with industrial plantations. Of course, the project may yet fail, but it stands a much better chance than once seemed possible. In China this change is associated with the goal of “ecological civilization” that has been written into the Chinese Communist Party constitution. In China, both the goal of eco-villages and that of the broader “ecological civilization” are associated with Whitehead, partly because many Chinese have come to Claremont to the conferences we have held on these topics.

For our contribution to healthy change in American society, the most important development has been eco-feminism. A good many eco-feminists are consciously Whiteheadian. The teaching of the others is so congenial to Whitehead that it matters little to us whether those who teach these ideas are interested in Whitehead’s thought per se. Because of the pressure on universities to include more women, eco-feminists have penetrated universities more successfully than any other representatives of Whitehead-type thinking. They are under enormous pressure to conform to the disciplinary norms, and to a large extent departments of “women’s studies” have done so. One leading feminist, Mary Daly, complained of “methodicide.” But many of the women who do the teaching still constitute a potentially subversive group inside the university walls. In business, government, and churches, the effects of feminism have been enormous, and much of this has included rethinking the relation of human beings to nature.

A relatively bright spot is the status we now have in the old-line Protestant churches. Of course, they are aging and dying, so that success within them does not mean a great deal. In the first decades of my career, these churches considered continental neo-Reformation theology, especially that of Karl Barth and Emil Brunner, to be the norm. Obviously process theology was not then taken seriously. Those theologians who wanted to do philosophical theology, despite the opposition of the dominant school, turned to Paul Tillich, who was also regarded as part of the serious theological dialogue. He was much less uncongenial to Whitehead, but he dealt very little with the issues of neo-naturalism. Those theologians who looked for philosophies as partners in their work usually wanted to relate to philosophies that had prestige in universities. Whitehead was, of course, excluded.

The situation began to change, however, when Black theology and Latin American liberation theology captured North American theological attention. The Whitehead community joined in supporting these movements, but we were treated with suspicion because of our commitment to a philosophy that was seen, with some justification, as responding to the intellectual problems of the North American white bourgeoisie, rather than to the suffering of the oppressed. We gradually overcame the suspicion and now work closely with the heirs of liberation theology in Latin America. We have been helped by the fact that one of the major biblical scholars of the liberation movement, George Pixley, identified with process theology.

Gradually, issues of science and religion and the relation of Christianity to other wisdom traditions reasserted themselves. Feminist critique of patriarchal institutions and culture were typically quite similar to ours. And in ecological theology, we were recognized as leaders. A little book I wrote in 1970, entitled Is It Too Late? is identified as the first book on ecological philosophy and theology. The theologies that once marginalized process theology have faded, and in a sense we are the “last man left standing” in the rather small and largely ignored field of progressive theology. This is not a great achievement, but it puts some responsibility on our shoulders.

I fear that celebrating what success we have had may give the impression that I think we are significantly affecting the fate of the planet. I know all too clearly that we are not. Except in China, I realize that the decision-makers do not know or care about our existence. In the university and in the media the issues central to us are not even posed in a way that makes our contribution relevant.

If there is a real cultural awakening to the need for drastic change, we stand ready to make proposals and enter into the very different discussions that would then take place. I look with hope to the remarkable leadership of Pope Francis. But thus far our efforts, and the more important efforts of many others, have not prepared people even to consider the changes that are needed. American political life is irrelevant or worse—much, much worse. When I get up in the morning, it often seems foolish to continue the effort. But not trying seems worse.

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John B. Cobb, Jr. is founding chairperson of Pando Populus and a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.