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

Sunday, October 5, 2025

Epistemological Disruption and Its Costs - Part 3




Epistemological Disruption and Its Costs
PART 3

by R.E. Slater and ChatGPT-5


Disruption is not inherently destructive. In science, art, and politics, disruption can fuel renewal, spark creativity, and catalyze reform. But when it becomes untethered from truth and weaponized for ideological gain, disruption corrodes. It no longer breaks barriers—it breaks bonds. It no longer opens possibility—it undermines reality.

MAGAism (Make America Great Again) stands as a stark example of disruption turned toxic. Here, disruption is not a path to transformation but a strategy of control. It severs the connective tissue of society—truth, trust, and shared identity—replacing it with grievance, suspicion, and myth.

The costs are personal, communal, and civilizational:


✦ Harm to People

At the most intimate level, MAGA-fueled disinformation teaches people to distrust medicine, democracy, and even their own families.

  • During the COVID-19 pandemic, falsehoods about vaccines and masks cost tens of thousands of lives.

  • Conspiracy theories like QAnon isolated individuals, eroded relationships, and sowed fear.

The toll is not abstract. It is relational, emotional, and mortal. People lose not only truth, but connection, health, and life.


✦ Harm to Communities

Once-cohesive communities fracture along partisan lines.

  • Neighbors grow suspicious.

  • Churches divide over whether sermons should support political figures.

  • School boards become battlegrounds over banned books and censored curricula.

Civic disagreement—once a hallmark of democracy—becomes framed as betrayal. Social trust collapses, and with it, the possibility of common life.


✦ Harm to Nations

MAGA disruption weakens national identity by contesting shared symbols and rewriting history.

  • The flag and the Constitution become partisan icons.

  • Histories of slavery, Indigenous genocide, and systemic racism are minimized or dismissed.

  • Governance stalls as factions refuse compromise, leaving institutions brittle and ineffective in the face of real crises.

What emerges is a fragile nation, unable to adapt, reflect, or respond.


✦ Harm to Economies

When disruption targets science, education, and global cooperation, economic systems suffer.

  • Climate denial delays investment in renewable energy.

  • Nationalist trade wars destabilize global markets.

  • Distrust in experts weakens innovation in technology and medicine.

  • Public health becomes politicized, leading to lower productivity and rising costs.

In MAGA’s logic, ideology trumps expertise—and economies pay the price.


✦ Harm to Democracy

The most profound damage is to democracy itself.

  • When facts are no longer shared, democratic deliberation collapses.

  • If half the nation denies election results, governance becomes impossible.

  • In this vacuum, authoritarianism gains ground, replacing institutions with personality cults and populist theatrics.

Democracy depends on trust in process, respect for difference, and fidelity to truth. MAGA disruption unravels each of these threads.


✦ Conclusion: Disruption Without Truth

Disruption becomes dangerous when it is untethered from reality. What begins as a cry for change can devolve into a machine of division, denial, and destruction.

MAGAism reveals the dark side of disruption—when it is used not to reform systems, but to destabilize them; not to seek justice, but to secure power.

The challenge is not to reject disruption altogether—but to reclaim it. For disruption to be meaningful, it must be tied to truth, compassion, and co-creative transformation.

Communities and the Co-Creation of Ignorance, Part 2




Communities and the
Co-Creation of Ignorance
PART 2

by R.E. Slater & ChatGPT-5


I - Broadly

The greatest obstacle to discovery is not ignorance,
[but] the illusion of knowledge.
- Daniel Boorstin

Ignorance is not merely the absence of knowledge. It is something we make — co-created, sustained, and institutionalized by the very communities we inhabit. Through our shared customs, stories, silences, and systems, we collectively decide which truths to spotlight and which to suppress.

Cultures shape epistemology. They tell us what counts as worth knowing, who is allowed to speak, and whose voices can be ignored. From school curricula to media platforms, from religious teachings to political rhetoric, communal life functions as a layered filter — amplifying some truths while muffling others.

  • History textbooks in many nations celebrate military victories and national heroes, but erase legacies of slavery, colonization, or genocide.
  • News cycles sensationalize immediate drama while sidelining slow-moving catastrophes like ecological collapse or economic injustice.
  • Religious doctrines often teach selective moral clarity while silencing historic complicity in racism, misogyny, or empire.

These are not isolated blind spots; they are social strategies. In each case, ignorance is engineered — not to deceive maliciously, but to stabilize identity, justify the status quo, and preserve collective pride. The result is what process thought might call a structured negation of becoming: the deliberate closure of possibilities that threaten comfort or control.

Such ignorance is never neutral. It is entangled in power, memory, and myth. It defines who belongs, who suffers, and what truths can be told.

In this way, communities establish “zones of silence” — forbidden terrains of memory or knowledge where difficult truths are kept at bay. These zones protect the collective self-image. But they do so at immense cost: they obscure justice, distort history, and delay healing.

The task, then, is not simply to accumulate more knowledge. It is to unmask the mechanisms of collective forgetting — and to ask what it would mean to become communities that no longer need to silence the truth in order to survive.


II - Locally (MAGAism)

A lie can travel halfway around the world
while the truth is still putting on its shoes.
Often attributed to Mark Twain

I - MAGAism and the Weaponization of Ignorance

If ignorance is often co-created, it can also be weaponized. The MAGA (Make America Great Again) movement offers a clear and troubling case study of this phenomenon.

In the world of MAGAism, ignorance is not passive — it is strategically curated. Disinformation campaigns, rejection of electoral legitimacy, hostility toward science, and historical revisionism are deployed not as lapses in understanding, but as instruments of political power. Here, truth becomes negotiable, and loyalty to personality replaces loyalty to principle.

This weaponized ignorance operates on multiple levels:


✦ Individuals

Conspiracy theories like QAnon, COVID-19 vaccine microchip myths, or climate denial fracture families, isolate individuals from reality, and cultivate fear. These beliefs do not simply emerge — they are seeded, circulated, and reinforced through algorithmic echo chambers and partisan media ecosystems. In processual terms, they narrow the horizon of becoming, diminishing the relational openness that sustains truth and trust.

✦ Communities

Churches, schools, and neighborhoods become polarized and fragile. Once-plural spaces of shared identity are hollowed into zones of suspicion. School boards turn into ideological battlefields. Pulpits preach not grace, but grievance. Deliberation collapses under the weight of partisan absolutism. Communities become echo chambers of engineered antagonism.

✦ Nations

Shared democratic symbols - the flag, the Constitution, the idea of truth itself - fracture into competing fictions. Institutions once grounded in law and deliberation are eroded by performative rage and manufactured distrust. National coherence gives way to cultural fragmentation, threatening the very viability of governance.

✦ Economies

Anti-scientific rhetoric bleeds into national priorities. Pandemic denial costs lives and impairs healthcare systems. Resistance to renewable energy delays climate action. Attacks on education destabilize curricula and undermine future innovation. In the MAGA worldview, expertise becomes suspect — weakening the foundations of a thriving, adaptive economy.

✦ Democracy

Perhaps most fundamentally, democracy itself suffers. When truth becomes subordinated to tribal identity, facts can no longer hold a nation together. The social contract unravels, and authoritarianism rushes in to fill the void left by the collapse of shared reality. Elections become suspect, journalism becomes “fake news,” and law becomes selectively applied.

✦ Conclusion

MAGAism reveals that ignorance is not simply “not knowing” — it is a calculated refusal to know, shaped and sustained by power. It is a form of epistemological violence — a disruption of truth designed to consolidate control. This is not ignorance as accident; it is ignorance as strategy.

To respond, we must do more than correct falsehoods. We must understand the ecosystem that sustains them — and cultivate counter-processes that reweave relationship, restore trust, and nurture a shared reality in which all can participate.

III - Methodologies for Mapping Ignorance


We are not only stewards of what we know
but responsible for the ignorance we allow to persist.
Miranda Fricker

Ignorance is not simply what we fail to know. It is often what we are trained not to see - shaped, maintained, and enforced by cultural systems, institutional power, and social norms. To understand ignorance as a structured presence rather than a passive absence, several scholarly methodologies offer critical insight.

Each of the frameworks below equips us with tools to unmask how ignorance is producedprotected, and perpetuated:


 Agnotology: The Deliberate Production of Ignorance

Coined by historian Robert Proctor, agnotology is the study of how ignorance is intentionally manufactured. Industries such as tobacco and fossil fuels provide clear examples: for decades, they funded misleading research and PR campaigns to “cast doubt” on settled science — first about the dangers of smoking, then about climate change.

Result: Delayed public health interventions, environmental degradation, and millions of preventable deaths. Ignorance here is not innocent; it is a strategy.


✦ Standpoint Theory: The Positional Nature of Truth

Developed by feminist and critical race theorists, standpoint theory argues that marginalized groups often perceive truths hidden from dominant perspectives. Excluding these voices doesn't just silence people — it erases insight.

Example: Women of color raised early alarms about environmental injustice—such as unsafe housing or toxic waste in low-income neighborhoods—long before mainstream acknowledgment. Their standpoint provided epistemic access others lacked.


 Epistemic Injustice: The Ethics of Knowing and Being Known

Philosopher Miranda Fricker introduced the concept of epistemic injustice — harm done to someone in their capacity as a knower. This takes two main forms:

Testimonial injustice: When a speaker’s word is discredited due to prejudice (e.g., a Black teenager’s eyewitness account is dismissed in court).

Hermeneutical injustice: When a person lacks the cultural tools to articulate experience (e.g., before the term sexual harassment existed, women’s workplace abuse was often unintelligible to legal systems).

Implication: Injustice doesn’t just operate through actions—it distorts what can be said, heard, or believed.


✦ Discourse and Power: Framing the Limits of Thought

Michel Foucault’s work on discourse and power reveals how institutions define what counts as knowledge. What we call “truth” is often shaped by “regimes of truth”—authorized by those in power, enforced through norms, and protected by language.

Example: During the Cold War, mainstream U.S. political discourse rendered any defense of socialism “un-American.” This narrowed the public’s conceptual horizon, making certain economic alternatives almost unthinkable—even when urgently needed.


✦ Synthesis: Ignorance as Structured Presence

Together, these methodologies expose ignorance not as a blank space, but as a constructed terrain - shaped by power, institutional design, cultural habits, and selective memory. To resist toxic unknowing, we must learn to interrogate how and why certain truths are obscured, discredited, or rendered invisible.

Understanding ignorance requires more than adding information. It demands we reconfigure the frameworks of attention, authority, and expression - the very structures by which knowledge becomes possible.



IV - Processual Epistemology: Ignorance as Frontier

The many become one, and are increased by one.
- Alfred North Whitehead

From a process perspective, ignorance is not simply a failure - it is a feature of an unfinished, unfolding reality. In a world that is open, relational, and in constant becoming, ignorance is inevitable. It arises not because we are flawed, but because we are not yet complete. The question is not whether ignorance exists, but how we respond to it.

Communities can either distort ignorance into rigidity and fear, or receive it as an invitation—a horizon from which creativity, transformation, and justice can emerge. A processual epistemology reframes ignorance through four overlapping lenses:


✦ Structural: Systems That Shape Knowing

All knowledge is shaped by structures—schools, media, religious institutions, governments. These systems decide not only what we know, but what remains hidden.

When schools ban books or censor curricula (e.g., on race or gender), they don't just omit facts—they build walls of ignorance.

But schools can also become sites of positive disruption: teaching students not only what is known, but how to ask: What don’t we know yet?

Ignorance becomes dangerous when structures are used to narrow inquiry. It becomes creative when structures cultivate curiosity, complexity, and courage.

✦ Relational: Who Is Allowed to Speak?

Ignorance grows where dialogue collapses. When marginalized voices—whether of migrants, women, Indigenous communities, or religious minorities—are excluded, ignorance calcifies.

Silence is not neutral. It is often a symptom of power suppressing difference.

But when communities open space for genuine listening across difference, ignorance becomes a bridge to deeper understanding. In process thought, relation is the ground of becoming—so ignorance dissolves as relationality deepens.

✦ Invitational: Not-Knowing as Fertile Ground

Ignorance need not be shameful. It can be a threshold—a sign that something new is possible. In science, ignorance drives inquiry. In art, it fuels imagination. In faith, it cultivates humility before mystery.

Ignorance framed as failure leads to defensiveness.

Ignorance framed as horizon opens space for growth.

Communities that embrace the invitation of not-knowing become more adaptive, creative, and just.

✦ Ethical: The Morality of Ignorance

Not all ignorance is innocent. Some forms—like climate denialhistorical revisionism, or racial erasure—are not passive but active refusals to engage with truth. These are not knowledge gaps; they are ethical failures.

By contrast, epistemic humility (“I may be wrong. I want to learn.”) transforms ignorance into moral growth.

From a processual lens, how we handle ignorance is a question of character, community, and care. Ignorance becomes a crucible in which ethical formation is tested and renewed.

V - Conclusion: Ignorance as Edge of Becoming

Thus, in a process worldview, ignorance is not just a void to be filled. It is a living frontier—the edge of becoming. The question is not how to eliminate ignorance entirely (an impossible task), but how to live with it responsively, relationally, and redemptively.

Communities that treat ignorance as invitation rather than threat can transform what seems like limitation into a resource for justice, creativity, and solidarity. In this way, not-knowing becomes not just a problem—but a path.