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Alfred North Whitehead

Alfred North Whitehead OM FRS FBA (15 February 1861 – 30 December 1947) was an English mathematician and philosopher. He created the philosophical school known as process philosophy,[2] which has been applied in a wide variety of disciplines, including ecology, theology, education, physics, biology, economics, and psychology.

Alfred North Whitehead
Whitehead c. 1924
Born(1861-02-15)15 February 1861
Died30 December 1947(1947-12-30) (aged 86)
EducationTrinity College, Cambridge
(B.A., 1884)
Era20th-century philosophy
RegionWestern philosophy
School
Institutions
Academic advisorsEdward Routh[1]
Doctoral students
Main interests
Notable ideas
Process philosophy
Process theology
Signature

In his early career Whitehead wrote primarily on mathematics, logic, and physics. He wrote the three-volume Principia Mathematica (1910–1913), with his former student Bertrand Russell. Principia Mathematica is considered one of the twentieth century's most important works in mathematical logic, and placed 23rd in a list of the top 100 English-language nonfiction books of the twentieth century by Modern Library.[3]

Beginning in the late 1910s and early 1920s, Whitehead gradually turned his attention from mathematics to philosophy of science, and finally to metaphysics. He developed a comprehensive metaphysical system which radically departed from most of Western philosophy. Whitehead argued that reality consists of processes rather than material objects, and that processes are best defined by their relations with other processes, thus rejecting the theory that reality is fundamentally constructed by bits of matter that exist independently of one another.[4] Whitehead's philosophical works – particularly Process and Reality – are regarded as the foundational texts of process philosophy.

Whitehead's process philosophy argues that "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 consequences for the world around us."[4] For this reason, one of the most promising applications of Whitehead's thought in recent years has been in the area of ecological civilization and environmental ethics pioneered by John B. Cobb.[5][6]

Life edit

Childhood and education edit

 
Whewell's Court north range at Trinity College, Cambridge. Whitehead spent thirty years at Trinity, five as a student and twenty-five as a senior lecturer.

Alfred North Whitehead was born in Ramsgate, Kent, England, in 1861.[7] His father, Alfred Whitehead, became an Anglican minister after being headmaster of Chatham House Academy, a school for boys previously headed by Alfred's father, Thomas Whitehead.[8] Whitehead himself recalled both of them as being very successful school masters, with his grandfather being the more "remarkable" man.[8]

Whitehead's mother was Maria Sarah Buckmaster. Her maternal great-grandmother was Jane North (1776-1847), whose maiden surname was given to Whitehead, and several other members of his family over time. His mother, Maria Buckmaster had eleven siblings. The son of her brother Thomas, Walter Selby Buckmaster, was twice an Olympics silver medal winner for Polo (1900, 1908) for Britain, and is said to be "one of the finest polo players England has ever produced".[9] Whitehead does not appear to have been close to his mother, although he and Evelyn (full name: Evelyn Ada Maud Rice Willoughby Wade), whom he married in 1890, are recorded in the English Census of 1891 as living with Alfred's mother and father. Lowe notes that there appears to have been mutual dislike between Whitehead's wife, Evelyn, and his mother, Maria.

Griffin relates how Bertrand Russell, a colleague and collaborator of Whitehead, was a very close friend of Whitehead and of his wife, Evelyn. Griffin retells Russell's story of how, one evening in 1901, "they found Evelyn Whitehead in the middle of what appeared to be a dangerous and acutely painful angina attack. ... [but] It seems that she suffered from a psychosomatic disorder ... [and] the danger was illusory." Griffin posits that Russell exaggerated the drama of her illness, and that both Evelyn and Russell were habitually given to melodrama.[10] Intensity of emotion was encourgaged by their avant garde associates in the turbulent Bloomsbury Group which "discussed aesthetic and philosophical questions in a spirit of agnosticism and were strongly influenced by G.E. Moore's Principia Ethica (1903) and by A. N. Whitehead's and Bertrand Russell's Principia Mathematica (1910–13), in the light of which they searched for definitions of the good, the true, and the beautiful".[11]

Alfred's brother Henry became Bishop of Madras and wrote the closely observed ethnographic account Village Gods of South-India (Calcutta: Association Press, 1921).

Whitehead was educated at Sherborne,[12] a prominent English public school, where he excelled in sports and mathematics[13] and was head prefect of his class.[14]

In 1880, he began attending Trinity College, Cambridge, and studied mathematics.[15] His academic advisor was Edward Routh.[1] He earned his B.A. from Trinity in 1884, writing his dissertation on James Clerk Maxwell's A Treatise on Electricity and Magnetism, and graduated as fourth wrangler.[16]

Career edit

Elected a fellow of Trinity in 1884, Whitehead would teach and write on mathematics and physics at the college until 1910, spending the 1890s writing his Treatise on Universal Algebra (1898), and the 1900s collaborating with his former pupil, Bertrand Russell, on the first edition of Principia Mathematica.[17] He was a Cambridge Apostle.[18]

 
Bertrand Russell in 1907. Russell was a student of Whitehead's at Trinity College, and a longtime collaborator and friend.

In 1910, Whitehead resigned his senior lectureship in mathematics at Trinity and moved to London without first obtaining another job.[19] After being unemployed for a year, he accepted a position as lecturer in applied mathematics and mechanics at University College London, but was passed over a year later for the Goldsmid Chair of Applied Mathematics and Mechanics, a position for which he had hoped to be seriously considered.[20]

In 1914, Whitehead accepted a position as professor of applied mathematics at the newly chartered Imperial College London, where his old friend Andrew Forsyth had recently been appointed chief professor of mathematics.[21]

In 1918, Whitehead's academic responsibilities began to seriously expand as he accepted a number of high administrative positions within the University of London system, of which Imperial College London was a member at the time. He was elected dean of the Faculty of Science at the University of London in late 1918 (a post he held for four years), a member of the University of London's Senate in 1919, and chairman of the Senate's Academic (leadership) Council in 1920, a post which he held until he departed for America in 1924.[21] Whitehead was able to exert his newfound influence to successfully lobby for a new history of science department, help establish a Bachelor of Science degree (previously only Bachelor of Arts degrees had been offered), and make the school more accessible to less wealthy students.[22]

Toward the end of his time in England, Whitehead turned his attention to philosophy. Though he had no advanced training in philosophy, his philosophical work soon became highly regarded. After publishing The Concept of Nature in 1920, he served as president of the Aristotelian Society from 1922 to 1923.[23]

Move to the United States, 1924 edit

In 1924, Henry Osborn Taylor invited the 63-year-old Whitehead to join the faculty at Harvard University as a professor of philosophy.[24] The Whiteheads would spend the rest of their lives in the United States.

During his time at Harvard, Whitehead produced his most important philosophical contributions. In 1925, he wrote Science and the Modern World, which was immediately hailed as an alternative to the Cartesian dualism then prevalent in popular science.[25] He was elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences that same year.[26] He was elected to the American Philosophical Society in 1926.[27] Lectures from 1927 to 1928, were published in 1929 as a book named Process and Reality, which has been compared to Immanuel Kant's Critique of Pure Reason.[5]

Family and death edit

In 1890, Whitehead married Evelyn Wade, an Irishwoman raised in France; they had a daughter, Jessie, and two sons, Thomas and Eric.[14] Thomas followed his father to Harvard in 1931, to teach at the Business School. Eric died in action at the age of 19, while serving in the Royal Flying Corps during World War I.[28]

From 1910, the Whiteheads had a cottage in the village of Lockeridge, near Marlborough, Wiltshire; from there he completed Principia Mathematica.[29][30]

The Whiteheads remained in the United States after moving to Harvard in 1924. Alfred retired from Harvard in 1937 and remained in Cambridge, Massachusetts, until his death on 30 December 1947.[31]

Legacy edit

The two-volume biography of Whitehead by Victor Lowe[32] is the most definitive presentation of the life of Whitehead. However, many details of Whitehead's life remain obscure because he left no Nachlass (personal archive); his family carried out his instructions that all of his papers be destroyed after his death.[33] Additionally, Whitehead was known for his "almost fanatical belief in the right to privacy," and for writing very few personal letters of the kind that would help to gain insight on his life.[33] Wrote Lowe in his preface, "No professional biographer in his right mind would touch him."[7]

Led by Executive Editor Brian G. Henning and General Editor George R. Lucas Jr., the Whitehead Research Project of the Center for Process Studies is currently working on a critical edition of Whitehead's published and unpublished works.[34] The first volume of the Edinburgh Critical Edition of the Complete Works of Alfred North Whitehead was published in 2017 by Paul A. Bogaard and Jason Bell as The Harvard Lectures of Alfred North Whitehead, 1924–1925: The Philosophical Presuppositions of Science.[35]

Mathematics and logic edit

In addition to numerous articles on mathematics, Whitehead wrote three major books on the subject: A Treatise on Universal Algebra (1898), Principia Mathematica (co-written with Bertrand Russell and published in three volumes between 1910 and 1913), and An Introduction to Mathematics (1911). The former two books were aimed exclusively at professional mathematicians, while the latter book was intended for a larger audience, covering the history of mathematics and its philosophical foundations.[36] Principia Mathematica in particular is regarded as one of the most important works in mathematical logic of the 20th century.

In addition to his legacy as a co-writer of Principia Mathematica, Whitehead's theory of "extensive abstraction" is considered foundational for the branch of ontology and computer science known as "mereotopology," a theory describing spatial relations among wholes, parts, parts of parts, and the boundaries between parts.[37]

A Treatise on Universal Algebra edit

In A Treatise on Universal Algebra (1898), the term universal algebra had essentially the same meaning that it has today: the study of algebraic structures themselves, rather than examples ("models") of algebraic structures.[38] Whitehead credits William Rowan Hamilton and Augustus De Morgan as originators of the subject matter, and James Joseph Sylvester with coining the term itself.[38][39]

At the time, structures such as Lie algebras and hyperbolic quaternions drew attention to the need to expand algebraic structures beyond the associatively multiplicative class. In a review Alexander Macfarlane wrote: "The main idea of the work is not unification of the several methods, nor generalization of ordinary algebra so as to include them, but rather the comparative study of their several structures."[40] In a separate review, G. B. Mathews wrote, "It possesses a unity of design which is really remarkable, considering the variety of its themes."[41]

A Treatise on Universal Algebra sought to examine Hermann Grassmann's theory of extension ("Ausdehnungslehre"), Boole's algebra of logic, and Hamilton's quaternions (this last number system was to be taken up in Volume II, which was never finished due to Whitehead's work on Principia Mathematica).[42] Whitehead wrote in the preface:

Such algebras have an intrinsic value for separate detailed study; also they are worthy of comparative study, for the sake of the light thereby thrown on the general theory of symbolic reasoning, and on algebraic symbolism in particular... The idea of a generalized conception of space has been made prominent, in the belief that the properties and operations involved in it can be made to form a uniform method of interpretation of the various algebras.[43]

Whitehead, however, had no results of a general nature.[38] His hope of "form[ing] a uniform method of interpretation of the various algebras" presumably would have been developed in Volume II, had Whitehead completed it. Further work on the subject was minimal until the early 1930s, when Garrett Birkhoff and Øystein Ore began publishing on universal algebras.[44]

Principia Mathematica edit

 
The title page of the shortened version of the Principia Mathematica to *56

Principia Mathematica (1910–1913) is Whitehead's most famous mathematical work. Written with former student Bertrand Russell, Principia Mathematica is considered one of the twentieth century's most important works in mathematics, and placed 23rd in a list of the top 100 English-language nonfiction books of the twentieth century by Modern Library.[3]

Principia Mathematica's purpose was to describe a set of axioms and inference rules in symbolic logic from which all mathematical truths could in principle be proven. Whitehead and Russell were working on such a foundational level of mathematics and logic that it took them until page 86 of Volume II to prove that 1+1=2, a proof humorously accompanied by the comment, "The above proposition is occasionally useful."[45]

Whitehead and Russell had thought originally that Principia Mathematica would take a year to complete; it ended up taking them ten years.[46] When it came time for publication, the three-volume work was so long (more than 2,000 pages) and its audience so narrow (professional mathematicians) that it was initially published at a loss of 600 pounds, 300 of which was paid by Cambridge University Press, 200 by the Royal Society of London, and 50 apiece by Whitehead and Russell themselves.[46] Despite the initial loss, today there is likely no major academic library in the world which does not hold a copy of Principia Mathematica.[47]

The ultimate substantive legacy of Principia Mathematica is mixed. It is generally accepted that Kurt Gödel's incompleteness theorem of 1931 definitively demonstrated that for any set of axioms and inference rules proposed to encapsulate mathematics, there would in fact be some truths of mathematics which could not be deduced from them, and hence that Principia Mathematica could never achieve its aims.[48] However, Gödel could not have come to this conclusion without Whitehead and Russell's book. In this way, Principia Mathematica's legacy might be described as its key role in disproving the possibility of achieving its own stated goals.[49] But beyond this somewhat ironic legacy, the book popularized modern mathematical logic and drew important connections between logic, epistemology, and metaphysics.[50]

An Introduction to Mathematics edit

Unlike Whitehead's previous two books on mathematics, An Introduction to Mathematics (1911) was not aimed exclusively at professional mathematicians but was intended for a larger audience. The book covered the nature of mathematics, its unity and internal structure, and its applicability to nature.[36] Whitehead wrote in the opening chapter:

The object of the following Chapters is not to teach mathematics, but to enable students from the very beginning of their course to know what the science is about, and why it is necessarily the foundation of exact thought as applied to natural phenomena.[51]

The book can be seen as an attempt to understand the growth in unity and interconnection of mathematics as a whole, as well as an examination of the mutual influence of mathematics and philosophy, language, and physics.[52] Although the book is little-read, in some ways it prefigures certain points of Whitehead's later work in philosophy and metaphysics.[53]

Views on education edit

Whitehead showed a deep concern for educational reform at all levels. In addition to his numerous individually written works on the subject, Whitehead was appointed by Britain's Prime Minister David Lloyd George as part of a 20-person committee to investigate the educational systems and practices of the UK in 1921 and recommend reform.[54]

Whitehead's most complete work on education is the 1929 book The Aims of Education and Other Essays, which collected numerous essays and addresses by Whitehead on the subject published between 1912 and 1927. The essay from which Aims of Education derived its name was delivered as an address in 1916 when Whitehead was president of the London Branch of the Mathematical Association. In it, he cautioned against the teaching of what he called "inert ideas" – ideas that are disconnected scraps of information, with no application to real life or culture. He opined that "education with inert ideas is not only useless: it is, above all things, harmful."[55]

Rather than teach small parts of a large number of subjects, Whitehead advocated teaching a relatively few important concepts that the student could organically link to many different areas of knowledge, discovering their application in actual life.[56] For Whitehead, education should be the exact opposite of the multidisciplinary, value-free school model[55][57] – it should be transdisciplinary, and laden with values and general principles that provide students with a bedrock of wisdom and help them to make connections between areas of knowledge that are usually regarded as separate.

In order to make this sort of teaching a reality, however, Whitehead pointed to the need to minimize the importance of (or radically alter) standard examinations for school entrance. Whitehead writes:

Every school is bound on pain of extinction to train its boys for a small set of definite examinations. No headmaster has a free hand to develop his general education or his specialist studies in accordance with the opportunities of his school, which are created by its staff, its environment, its class of boys, and its endowments. I suggest that no system of external tests which aims primarily at examining individual scholars can result in anything but educational waste.[58]

Whitehead argued that curriculum should be developed specifically for its own students by its own staff, or else risk total stagnation, interrupted only by occasional movements from one group of inert ideas to another.

Above all else in his educational writings, Whitehead emphasized the importance of imagination and the free play of ideas. In his essay "Universities and Their Function", Whitehead writes provocatively on imagination:

Imagination is not to be divorced from the facts: it is a way of illuminating the facts. It works by eliciting the general principles which apply to the facts, as they exist, and then by an intellectual survey of alternative possibilities which are consistent with those principles. It enables men to construct an intellectual vision of a new world.[59]

Whitehead's philosophy of education might adequately be summarized in his statement that "knowledge does not keep any better than fish."[60] In other words, bits of disconnected knowledge are meaningless; all knowledge must find some imaginative application to the students' own lives, or else it becomes so much useless trivia, and the students themselves become good at parroting facts but not thinking for themselves.

Philosophy and metaphysics edit

 
Richard Rummell's 1906 watercolor landscape view of Harvard University, facing northeast.[61] Whitehead taught at Harvard from 1924 to 1937.

Whitehead did not begin his career as a philosopher.[7] In fact, he never had any formal training in philosophy beyond his undergraduate education. Early in his life, he showed great interest in and respect for philosophy and metaphysics, but it is evident that he considered himself a rank amateur. In one letter to his friend and former student Bertrand Russell, after discussing whether science aimed to be explanatory or merely descriptive, he wrote: "This further question lands us in the ocean of metaphysic, onto which my profound ignorance of that science forbids me to enter."[62] Ironically, in later life, Whitehead would become one of the 20th century's foremost metaphysicians.

However, interest in metaphysics – the philosophical investigation of the nature of the universe and existence – had become unfashionable by the time Whitehead began writing in earnest about it in the 1920s. The ever-more impressive accomplishments of empirical science had led to a general consensus in academia that the development of comprehensive metaphysical systems was a waste of time because they were not subject to empirical testing.[63]

Whitehead was unimpressed by this objection. In the notes of one of his students for a 1927 class, Whitehead was quoted as saying: "Every scientific man in order to preserve his reputation has to say he dislikes metaphysics. What he means is he dislikes having his metaphysics criticized."[64] In Whitehead's view, scientists and philosophers make metaphysical assumptions about how the universe works all the time, but such assumptions are not easily seen precisely because they remain unexamined and unquestioned. While Whitehead acknowledged that "philosophers can never hope finally to formulate these metaphysical first principles,"[65] he argued that people need to continually reimagine their basic assumptions about how the universe works if philosophy and science are to make any real progress, even if that progress remains permanently asymptotic. For this reason, Whitehead regarded metaphysical investigations as essential to both good science and good philosophy.[66]

Perhaps foremost among what Whitehead considered faulty metaphysical assumptions was the Cartesian idea that reality is fundamentally constructed of bits of matter that exist totally independently of one another, which he rejected in favour of an event-based or "process" ontology in which events are primary and are fundamentally interrelated and dependent on one another.[67] He also argued that the most basic elements of reality can all be regarded as experiential, indeed that everything is constituted by its experience. He used the term "experience" very broadly so that even inanimate processes such as electron collisions are said to manifest some degree of experience. In this, he went against Descartes' separation of two different kinds of real existence, either exclusively material or else exclusively mental.[68] Whitehead referred to his metaphysical system as "philosophy of organism," but it would become known more widely as "process philosophy."[68]

Whitehead's philosophy was highly original, and soon garnered interest in philosophical circles. After publishing The Concept of Nature in 1920, he served as president of the Aristotelian Society from 1922 to 1923, and Henri Bergson was quoted as saying that Whitehead was "the best philosopher writing in English."[69] So impressive and different was Whitehead's philosophy that in 1924 he was invited to join the faculty at Harvard University as a professor of philosophy at 63 years of age.[24]

 
Eckhart Hall at the University of Chicago. Beginning with the arrival of Henry Nelson Wieman in 1927, Chicago's Divinity School become closely associated with Whitehead's thought for about thirty years.[70]

This is not to say that Whitehead's thought was widely accepted or even well understood. His philosophical work is generally considered to be among the most difficult to understand in all of the Western canon.[5] Even professional philosophers struggled to follow Whitehead's writings. One famous story illustrating the level of difficulty of Whitehead's philosophy centres around the delivery of Whitehead's Gifford lectures in 1927–28 – following Arthur Eddington's lectures of the year previous – which Whitehead would later publish as Process and Reality:

Eddington was a marvellous popular lecturer who had enthralled an audience of 600 for his entire course. The same audience turned up to Whitehead's first lecture but it was completely unintelligible, not merely to the world at large but to the elect. My father remarked to me afterwards that if he had not known Whitehead well he would have suspected that it was an imposter making it up as he went along... The audience at subsequent lectures was only about half a dozen in all.[71]

It may not be inappropriate to speculate that some fair portion of the respect generally shown to Whitehead by his philosophical peers at the time arose from their sheer bafflement. The Chicago theologian Shailer Mathews once remarked of Whitehead's 1926 book Religion in the Making: "It is infuriating, and I must say embarrassing as well, to read page after page of relatively familiar words without understanding a single sentence."[72]

However, Mathews' frustration with Whitehead's books did not negatively affect his interest. In fact, there were numerous philosophers and theologians at Chicago's Divinity School that perceived the importance of what Whitehead was doing without fully grasping all of the details and implications. In 1927, they invited one of America's only Whitehead experts, Henry Nelson Wieman, to Chicago to give a lecture explaining Whitehead's thoughts.[72] Wieman's lecture was so brilliant that he was promptly hired to the faculty and taught there for twenty years, and for at least thirty years afterwards Chicago's Divinity School was closely associated with Whitehead's thought.[70]

Shortly after Whitehead's book Process and Reality appeared in 1929, Wieman famously wrote in his 1930 review:

Not many people will read Whitehead's recent book in this generation; not many will read it in any generation. But its influence will radiate through concentric circles of popularization until the common man will think and work in the light of it, not knowing whence the light came. After a few decades of discussion and analysis, one will be able to understand it more readily than can now be done.[73]

Wieman's words proved prophetic. Though Process and Reality has been called "arguably the most impressive single metaphysical text of the twentieth century,"[74] it has been little-read and little-understood, partly because it demands – as Isabelle Stengers puts it – "that its readers accept the adventure of the questions that will separate them from every consensus."[75] Whitehead questioned Western philosophy's most dearly held assumptions about how the universe works — but in doing so, he managed to anticipate a number of 21st century scientific and philosophical problems and provide novel solutions.[76]

Whitehead's conception of reality edit

Whitehead was convinced that the scientific notion of matter was misleading as a way of describing the ultimate nature of things. In his 1925 book Science and the Modern World, he wrote that:

There persists ... [a] fixed scientific cosmology which presupposes the ultimate fact of an irreducible brute matter, or material, spread through space in a flux of configurations. In itself, such a material is senseless, valueless, purposeless. It just does what it does do, following a fixed routine imposed by external relations which do not spring from the nature of its being. It is this assumption that I call "scientific materialism." Also, it is an assumption which I shall challenge as being entirely unsuited to the scientific situation at which we have now arrived.[67]

In Whitehead's view, there are a number of problems with this notion of "irreducible brute matter." First, it obscures and minimizes the importance of change. By thinking of any material thing (like a rock, or a person) as being fundamentally the same thing throughout time, with any changes to it being secondary to its "nature," scientific materialism hides the fact that nothing ever stays the same. For Whitehead, change is fundamental and inescapable; he emphasizes that "all things flow."[77]

In Whitehead's view, then, concepts such as "quality," "matter," and "form" are problematic. These "classical" concepts fail to adequately account for change, and overlook the active and experiential nature of the most basic elements of the world. They are useful abstractions but are not the world's basic building blocks.[78] What is ordinarily conceived of as a single person, for instance, is philosophically described as a continuum of overlapping events.[79] After all, people change all the time, if only because they have aged by another second and had some further experience. These occasions of experience are logically distinct but are progressively connected in what Whitehead calls a "society" of events.[80] By assuming that enduring objects are the most real and fundamental things in the universe, materialists have mistaken the abstract for the concrete (what Whitehead calls the "fallacy of misplaced concreteness").[68][81]

To put it another way, a thing or person is often seen as having a "defining essence" or a "core identity" that is unchanging, and describes what the thing or person really is. In this way of thinking, things and people are seen as fundamentally the same through time, with any changes being qualitative and secondary to their core identity (e.g., "Mark's hair has turned grey as he has gotten older, but he is still the same person"). But in Whitehead's cosmology, the only fundamentally existent things are discrete "occasions of experience" that overlap one another in time and space, and jointly make up the enduring person or thing. On the other hand, what ordinary thinking often regards as "the essence of a thing" or "the identity/core of a person" is an abstract generalization of what is regarded as that person or thing's most important or salient features across time. Identities do not define people; people define identities. Everything changes from moment to moment and to think of anything as having an "enduring essence" misses the fact that "all things flow," though it is often a useful way of speaking.

Whitehead pointed to the limitations of language as one of the main culprits in maintaining a materialistic way of thinking and acknowledged that it may be difficult to ever wholly move past such ideas in everyday speech.[82] After all, every moment of each person's life can hardly be given a different proper name, and it is easy and convenient to think of people and objects as remaining fundamentally the same things, rather than constantly keeping in mind that each thing is a different thing from what it was a moment ago. Yet the limitations of everyday living and everyday speech should not prevent people from realizing that "material substances" or "essences" are a convenient generalized description of a continuum of particular, concrete processes. No one questions that a ten-year-old person is quite different by the time he or she turns thirty years old, and in many ways is not the same person at all; Whitehead points out that it is not philosophically or ontologically sound to think that a person is the same from one second to the next.

 
John Locke was one of Whitehead's primary influences. In the preface to Process and Reality, Whitehead wrote: "The writer who most fully anticipated the main positions of the philosophy of organism is John Locke in his Essay."[83]

A second problem with materialism is that it obscures the importance of relations. It sees every object as distinct and discrete from all other objects. Each object is simply an inert clump of matter that is only externally related to other things. The idea of matter as primary makes people think of objects as being fundamentally separate in time and space, and not necessarily related to anything. But in Whitehead's view, relations take a primary role, perhaps even more important than the relata themselves.[84] A student taking notes in one of Whitehead's fall 1924 classes wrote that, "Reality applies to connections, and only relatively to the things connected. (A) is real for (B), and (B) is real for (A), but [they are] not absolutely real independent of each other."[85] In fact, Whitehead describes any entity as in some sense nothing more and nothing less than the sum of its relations to other entities – its synthesis of and reaction to the world around it.[86] A real thing is just that which forces the rest of the universe to in some way conform to it; that is to say, if theoretically, a thing made strictly no difference to any other entity (i.e., it was not related to any other entity), it could not be said to really exist.[87] Relations are not secondary to what a thing is; they are what the thing is.

To Whitehead, an entity is not merely a sum of its relations, but also a valuation of them and reaction to them.[88] For Whitehead, creativity is the absolute principle of existence, and every entity (whether it is a human being, a tree, or an electron) has some degree of novelty in how it responds to other entities and is not fully determined by causal or mechanistic laws.[89] Most entities do not have consciousness.[90] As a human being's actions cannot always be predicted, the same can be said of where a tree's roots will grow, or how an electron will move, or whether it will rain tomorrow. Moreover, the inability to predict an electron's movement (for instance) is not due to faulty understanding or inadequate technology; rather, the fundamental creativity/freedom of all entities means that there will always remain phenomena that are unpredictable.[91]

The other side of creativity/freedom as the absolute principle is that every entity is constrained by the social structure of existence (i.e., its relations); each actual entity must conform to the settled conditions of the world around it.[87] Freedom always exists within limits. But an entity's uniqueness and individuality arise from its own self-determination as to just how it will take account of the world within the limits that have been set for it.[92]

In summary, Whitehead rejects the idea of separate and unchanging bits of matter as the most basic building blocks of reality, in favour of the idea of reality as interrelated events in the process. He conceives of reality as composed of processes of dynamic "becoming" rather than static "being," emphasizing that all physical things change and evolve and that changeless "essences" such as matter are mere abstractions from the interrelated events that are the final real things that make up the world.[68]

Theory of perception edit

Since Whitehead's metaphysics described a universe in which all entities experience, he needed a new way of describing perception that was not limited to living, self-conscious beings. The term he coined was "prehension," which comes from the Latin prehensio, meaning "to seize".[93] The term is meant to indicate a kind of perception that can be conscious or unconscious, applying to people as well as electrons. It is also intended to make clear Whitehead's rejection of the theory of representative perception, in which the mind only has private ideas about other entities.[93] For Whitehead, the term "prehension" indicates that the perceiver actually incorporates aspects of the perceived thing into itself.[93] In this way, entities are constituted by their perceptions and relations, rather than being independent of them. Further, Whitehead regards perception as occurring in two modes, causal efficacy (or "physical prehension") and presentational immediacy (or "conceptual prehension").[90]

Whitehead describes causal efficacy as "the experience dominating the primitive living organisms, which have a sense for the fate from which they have emerged, and the fate towards which they go."[94] It is, in other words, the sense of causal relations between entities, a feeling of being influenced and affected by the surrounding environment, unmediated by the senses. Presentational immediacy, on the other hand, is what is usually referred to as "pure sense perception," unmediated by any causal or symbolic interpretation, even unconscious interpretation. In other words, it is pure appearance, which may or may not be delusive (e.g., mistaking an image in a mirror for "the real thing").[95]

In higher organisms (like people), these two modes of perception combine into what Whitehead terms "symbolic reference," which links appearance with causation in a process that is so automatic that both people and animals have difficulty refraining from it. By way of illustration, Whitehead uses the example of a person's encounter with a chair. An ordinary person looks up, sees a coloured shape, and immediately infers that it is a chair. However, an artist, Whitehead supposes, "might not have jumped to the notion of a chair," but instead "might have stopped at the mere contemplation of a beautiful colour and a beautiful shape."[96] This is not the normal human reaction; most people place objects in categories by habit and instinct, without even thinking about it. Moreover, animals do the same thing. Using the same example, Whitehead points out that a dog "would have acted immediately on the hypothesis of a chair and would have jumped onto it by way of using it as such."[97] In this way, symbolic reference is a fusion of pure sense perceptions on the one hand and causal relations on the other, and that it is in fact the causal relationships that dominate the more basic mentality (as the dog illustrates), while it is the sense perceptions which indicate a higher grade mentality (as the artist illustrates).[98]

Evolution and value edit

Whitehead believed that when asking questions about the basic facts of existence, questions about value and purpose can never be fully escaped. This is borne out in his thoughts on abiogenesis, or the hypothetical natural process by which life arises from simple organic compounds.

Whitehead makes the startling observation that "life is comparatively deficient in survival value."[99] If humans can only exist for about a hundred years, and rocks for eight hundred million, then one is forced to ask why complex organisms ever evolved in the first place; as Whitehead humorously notes, "they certainly did not appear because they were better at that game than the rocks around them."[100] He then observes that the mark of higher forms of life is that they are actively engaged in modifying their environment, an activity which he theorizes is directed toward the three-fold goal of living, living well, and living better.[101] In other words, Whitehead sees life as directed toward the purpose of increasing its own satisfaction. Without such a goal, he sees the rise of life as totally unintelligible.

For Whitehead, there is no such thing as wholly inert matter. Instead, all things have some measure of freedom or creativity, however small, which allows them to be at least partly self-directed. The process philosopher David Ray Griffin coined the term "panexperientialism" (the idea that all entities experience) to describe Whitehead's view, and to distinguish it from panpsychism (the idea that all matter has consciousness).[102]

God edit

"I am also greatly indebted to Bergson, William James, and John Dewey. One of my preoccupations has been to rescue their type of thought from the charge of anti-intellectualism, which rightly or wrongly has been associated with it." – Alfred North Whitehead, Process and Reality, preface.[103]

Whitehead's idea of God differs from traditional monotheistic notions.[104] Perhaps his most famous and pointed criticism of the Christian conception of God is that "the Church gave unto God the attributes which belonged exclusively to Caesar."[105] Here, Whitehead is criticizing Christianity for defining God as primarily a divine king who imposes his will on the world, and whose most important attribute is power. As opposed to the most widely accepted forms of Christianity, Whitehead emphasized an idea of God that he called "the brief Galilean vision of humility":

It does not emphasize the ruling Caesar, or the ruthless moralist, or the unmoved mover. It dwells upon the tender elements in the world, which slowly and in quietness operates by love; and it finds purpose in the present immediacy of a kingdom not of this world. Love neither rules, nor is it unmoved; also it is a little oblivious as to morals. It does not look to the future; for it finds its own reward in the immediate present.[106]

For Whitehead, God is not necessarily tied to religion.[107] Rather than springing primarily from religious faith, Whitehead saw God as necessary for his metaphysical system.[107] His system required that an order exist among possibilities, an order that allowed for novelty in the world and provided an aim to all entities. Whitehead posited that these ordered potentials exist in what he called the primordial nature of God. However, Whitehead was also interested in religious experience. This led him to reflect more intensively on what he saw as the second nature of God, the consequent nature. Whitehead's conception of God as a "dipolar"[108] entity has called for fresh theological thinking.

The primordial nature he described as "the unlimited conceptual realization of the absolute wealth of potentiality"[106] — i.e., the unlimited possibility of the universe. This primordial nature is eternal and unchanging, providing entities in the universe with possibilities for realization. Whitehead also calls this primordial aspect "the lure for feeling, the eternal urge of desire,"[109] pulling the entities in the universe toward as-yet unrealized possibilities.

God's consequent nature, on the other hand, is anything but unchanging; it is God's reception of the world's activity. As Whitehead puts it, "[God] saves the world as it passes into the immediacy of his own life. It is the judgment of a tenderness which loses nothing that can be saved."[110] In other words, God saves and cherishes all experiences forever, and those experiences go on to change the way God interacts with the world. In this way, God is really changed by what happens in the world and the wider universe, lending the actions of finite creatures an eternal significance.

Whitehead thus sees God and the world as fulfilling one another. He sees entities in the world as fluent and changing things that yearn for a permanence which only God can provide by taking them into God's self, thereafter changing God and affecting the rest of the universe throughout time. On the other hand, he sees God as permanent but as deficient in actuality and change: alone, God is merely eternally unrealized possibilities and requires the world to actualize them. God gives creatures permanence, while the creatures give God actuality and change. Here it is worthwhile to quote Whitehead at length:

"In this way God is completed by the individual, fluent satisfactions of finite fact, and the temporal occasions are completed by their everlasting union with their transformed selves, purged into conformation with the eternal order which is the final absolute 'wisdom.' The final summary can only be expressed in terms of a group of antitheses, whose apparent self-contradictions depend on neglect of the diverse categories of existence. In each antithesis there is a shift of meaning which converts the opposition into a contrast.

"It is as true to say that God is permanent and the World fluent, as that the World is permanent and God is fluent.

"It is as true to say that God is one and the World many, as that the World is one and God many.

"It is as true to say that, in comparison with the World, God is actual eminently, as that, in comparison with God, the World is actual eminently.

"It is as true to say that the World is immanent in God, as that God is immanent in the World.

"It is as true to say that God transcends the World, as that the World transcends God.

"It is as true to say that God creates the World, as that the World creates God...

"What is done in the world is transformed into a reality in heaven, and the reality in heaven passes back into the world... In this sense, God is the great companion – the fellow-sufferer who understands."[111]

The above is some of Whitehead's most evocative writing about God, and was powerful enough to inspire the movement known as process theology, a vibrant theological school of thought that continues to thrive today.[112][113]

Religion edit

For Whitehead, the core of religion was individual. While he acknowledged that individuals cannot ever be fully separated from their society, he argued that life is an internal fact for its own sake before it is an external fact relating to others.[114] His most famous remark on religion is that "religion is what the individual does with his own solitariness ... and if you are never solitary, you are never religious."[115] Whitehead saw religion as a system of general truths that transformed a person's character.[116] He took special care to note that while religion is often a good influence, it is not necessarily good – an idea which he called a "dangerous delusion" (e.g., a religion might encourage the violent extermination of a rival religion's adherents).[117]

However, while Whitehead saw religion as beginning in solitariness, he also saw religion as necessarily expanding beyond the individual. In keeping with his process metaphysics in which relations are primary, he wrote that religion necessitates the realization of "the value of the objective world which is a community derivative from the interrelations of its component individuals."[118] In other words, the universe is a community which makes itself whole through the relatedness of each individual entity to all the others; meaning and value do not exist for the individual alone, but only in the context of the universal community. Whitehead writes further that each entity "can find no such value till it has merged its individual claim with that of the objective universe. Religion is world loyalty. The spirit at once surrenders itself to this universal claim and appropriates it for itself."[119] In this way, the individual and universal/social aspects of religion are mutually dependent. A connection between the works of William DeWitt Hyde and Whitehead further elucidates this necessary duality of social and individual roles in religious experience.[120] Whitehead also described religion more technically as "an ultimate craving to infuse into the insistent particularity of emotion that non-temporal generality which primarily belongs to conceptual thought alone."[121] In other words, religion takes deeply felt emotions and contextualizes them within a system of general truths about the world, helping people to identify their wider meaning and significance. For Whitehead, religion served as a kind of bridge between philosophy and the emotions and purposes of a particular society.[122] It is the task of religion to make philosophy applicable to the everyday lives of ordinary people.

Influence edit

Isabelle Stengers wrote that "Whiteheadians are recruited among both philosophers and theologians, and the palette has been enriched by practitioners from the most diverse horizons, from ecology to feminism, practices that unite political struggle and spirituality with the sciences of education."[75] In recent decades, attention to Whitehead's work has become more widespread, with interest extending to intellectuals in Europe and China, and coming from such diverse fields as ecology, physics, biology, education, economics, and psychology. One of the first theologians to attempt to interact with Whitehead's thought was the future Archbishop of Canterbury, William Temple. In Temple's Gifford Lectures of 1932-1934 (subsequently published as "Nature, Man and God"), Whitehead is one of a number of philosophers of the emergent evolution approach with which Temple interacts.[123] However, it was not until the 1970s and 1980s that Whitehead's thought drew much attention outside of a small group of philosophers and theologians, primarily Americans, and even today he is not considered especially influential outside of relatively specialized circles.

Early followers of Whitehead were found primarily at the University of Chicago Divinity School, where Henry Nelson Wieman initiated an interest in Whitehead's work that would last for about thirty years.[70] Professors such as Wieman, Charles Hartshorne, Bernard Loomer, Bernard Meland, and Daniel Day Williams made Whitehead's philosophy arguably the most important intellectual thread running through the divinity school.[124] They taught generations of Whitehead scholars, the most notable of whom is John B. Cobb.

Although interest in Whitehead has since faded at Chicago's divinity school, Cobb effectively grabbed the torch and planted it firmly in Claremont, California, where he began teaching at Claremont School of Theology in 1958 and founded the Center for Process Studies with David Ray Griffin in 1973.[125] Largely due to Cobb's influence, today Claremont remains strongly identified with Whitehead's process thought.[126][127]

But while Claremont remains the most concentrated hub of Whiteheadian activity, the place where Whitehead's thought currently seems to be growing the most quickly is in China. In order to address the challenges of modernization and industrialization, China has begun to blend traditions of Taoism, Buddhism, and Confucianism with Whitehead's "constructive post-modern" philosophy in order to create an "ecological civilization".[57] To date, the Chinese government has encouraged the building of twenty-three university-based centres for the study of Whitehead's philosophy,[57][128] and books by process philosophers John Cobb and David Ray Griffin are becoming required reading for Chinese graduate students.[57] Cobb has attributed China's interest in process philosophy partly to Whitehead's stress on the mutual interdependence of humanity and nature, as well as his emphasis on an educational system that includes the teaching of values rather than simply bare facts.[57]

Overall, however, Whitehead's influence is very difficult to characterize. In English-speaking countries, his primary works are little-studied outside of Claremont and a select number of liberal graduate-level theology and philosophy programs. Outside of these circles, his influence is relatively small and diffuse and has tended to come chiefly through the work of his students and admirers rather than Whitehead himself.[129] For instance, Whitehead was a teacher and long-time friend and collaborator of Bertrand Russell, and he also taught and supervised the dissertation of Willard Van Orman Quine,[130] both of whom are important figures in analytic philosophy – the dominant strain of philosophy in English-speaking countries in the 20th century.[131] Whitehead has also had high-profile admirers in the continental tradition, such as French post-structuralist philosopher Gilles Deleuze, who once dryly remarked of Whitehead that "he stands provisionally as the last great Anglo-American philosopher before Wittgenstein's disciples spread their misty confusion, sufficiency, and terror."[132] French sociologist and anthropologist Bruno Latour even went so far as to call Whitehead "the greatest philosopher of the 20th century."[133]

Deleuze's and Latour's opinions, however, are minority ones, as Whitehead has not been recognized as particularly influential within the most dominant philosophical schools.[134] It is impossible to say exactly why Whitehead's influence has not been more widespread, but it may be partly due to his metaphysical ideas seeming somewhat counterintuitive (such as his assertion that matter is an abstraction), or his inclusion of theistic elements in his philosophy,[135] or the perception of metaphysics itself as passé, or simply the sheer difficulty and density of his prose.[5]

Process philosophy and theology edit

 
Philosopher Nicholas Rescher. Rescher is a proponent of both Whiteheadian process philosophy and American pragmatism.

Historically, Whitehead's work has been most influential in the field of American progressive theology.[112][127] The most important early proponent of Whitehead's thought in a theological context was Charles Hartshorne, who spent a semester at Harvard as Whitehead's teaching assistant in 1925, and is widely credited with developing Whitehead's process philosophy into a full-blown process theology.[136] Other notable process theologians include John B. Cobb, David Ray Griffin, Marjorie Hewitt Suchocki, C. Robert Mesle, Roland Faber, and Catherine Keller.

Process theology typically stresses God's relational nature. Rather than seeing God as impassive or emotionless, process theologians view God as "the fellow sufferer who understands," and as the being who is supremely affected by temporal events.[137] Hartshorne points out that people would not praise a human ruler who was unaffected by either the joys or sorrows of his followers – so why would this be a praiseworthy quality in God?[138] Instead, as the being who is most affected by the world, God is the being who can most appropriately respond to the world. However, process theology has been formulated in a wide variety of ways. C. Robert Mesle, for instance, advocates a "process naturalism" — i.e., a process theology without God.[139]

In fact, process theology is difficult to define because process theologians are so diverse and transdisciplinary in their views and interests. John B. Cobb is a process theologian who has also written books on biology and economics. Roland Faber and Catherine Keller integrate Whitehead with poststructuralist, postcolonialist, and feminist theory. Charles Birch was both a theologian and a geneticist. Franklin I. Gamwell writes on theology and political theory. In Syntheism - Creating God in The Internet Age, futurologists Alexander Bard and Jan Söderqvist repeatedly credit Whitehead for the process theology they see rising out of the participatory culture expected to dominate the digital era.

Process philosophy is even more difficult to pin down than process theology. In practice, the two fields cannot be neatly separated. The 32-volume State University of New York series in constructive postmodern thought edited by process philosopher and theologian David Ray Griffin displays the range of areas in which different process philosophers work, including physics, ecology, medicine, public policy, nonviolence, politics, and psychology.[140]

One philosophical school which has historically had a close relationship with process philosophy is American pragmatism. Whitehead himself thought highly of William James and John Dewey, and acknowledged his indebtedness to them in the preface to Process and Reality.[103] Charles Hartshorne (along with Paul Weiss) edited the collected papers of Charles Sanders Peirce, one of the founders of pragmatism. Noted neopragmatist Richard Rorty was in turn a student of Hartshorne.[141]

Science edit

 
Theoretical physicist David Bohm. Bohm is one example of a scientist influenced by Whitehead's philosophy.[142]

Scientists of the early 20th century for whom Whitehead's work has been influential include physical chemist Ilya Prigogine, biologist Conrad Hal Waddington, and geneticists Charles Birch and Sewall Wright.[143] Henry Murray dedicated his "Explorations in Personality" to Whitehead, a contemporary at Harvard.

In physics, Whitehead's theory of gravitation articulated a view that might perhaps be regarded as dual to Albert Einstein's general relativity. It has been severely criticized.[144][145] Yutaka Tanaka suggested that the gravitational constant disagrees with experimental findings, and proposed that Einstein's work does not actually refute Whitehead's formulation.[146] Whitehead's view has now been rendered obsolete, with the discovery of gravitational waves, phenomena observed locally that largely violate the kind of local flatness of space that Whitehead assumes. Consequently, Whitehead's cosmology must be regarded as a local approximation, and his assumption of a uniform spatio-temporal geometry, Minkowskian in particular, as an often-locally-adequate approximation. An exact replacement of Whitehead's cosmology would need to admit a Riemannian geometry. Also, although Whitehead himself gave only secondary consideration to quantum theory, his metaphysics of processes has proved attractive to some physicists in that field. Henry Stapp and David Bohm are among those whose work has been influenced by Whitehead.[142]

In the 21st century, Whiteheadian thought is still a stimulating influence: Timothy E. Eastman and Hank Keeton's Physics and Whitehead (2004)[147] and Michael Epperson's Quantum Mechanics and the Philosophy of Alfred North Whitehead (2004)[148] and Foundations of Relational Realism: A Topological Approach to Quantum Mechanics and the Philosophy of Nature (2013),[149] aim to offer Whiteheadian approaches to physics. Brian G. Henning, Adam Scarfe, and Dorion Sagan's Beyond Mechanism (2013) and Rupert Sheldrake's Science Set Free (2012) are examples of Whiteheadian approaches to biology.

Ecology, economy, and sustainability edit

 
Theologian, philosopher, and environmentalist John B. Cobb founded the Center for Process Studies in Claremont, California with David Ray Griffin in 1973, and is often regarded as the preeminent scholar in the field of process philosophy and process theology.[150][151][152][153]

One of the most promising applications of Whitehead's thought in recent years has been in the area of ecological civilization, sustainability, and environmental ethics.

"Because Whitehead's holistic metaphysics of value lends itself so readily to an ecological point of view, many see his work as a promising alternative to the traditional mechanistic worldview, providing a detailed metaphysical picture of a world constituted by a web of interdependent relations."[5]

This work has been pioneered by John B. Cobb, whose book Is It Too Late? A Theology of Ecology (1971) was the first single-authored book in environmental ethics.[154] Cobb also co-authored a book with leading ecological economist and steady-state theorist Herman Daly entitled For the Common Good: Redirecting the Economy toward Community, the Environment, and a Sustainable Future (1989), which applied Whitehead's thought to economics, and received the Grawemeyer Award for Ideas Improving World Order. Cobb followed this with a second book, Sustaining the Common Good: A Christian Perspective on the Global Economy (1994), which aimed to challenge "economists' zealous faith in the great god of growth."[155]

Education edit

Whitehead is widely known for his influence in education theory. His philosophy inspired the formation of the Association for Process Philosophy of Education (APPE), which published eleven volumes of a journal titled Process Papers on process philosophy and education from 1996 to 2008.[156] Whitehead's theories on education also led to the formation of new modes of learning and new models of teaching.

One such model is the ANISA model developed by Daniel C. Jordan, which sought to address a lack of understanding of the nature of people in current education systems. As Jordan and Raymond P. Shepard put it: "Because it has not defined the nature of man, education is in the untenable position of having to devote its energies to the development of curricula without any coherent ideas about the nature of the creature for whom they are intended."[157]

Another model is the FEELS model developed by Xie Bangxiu and deployed successfully in China. "FEELS" stands for five things in curriculum and education: Flexible-goals, Engaged-learner, Embodied-knowledge, Learning-through-interactions, and Supportive-teacher.[158] It is used for understanding and evaluating educational curriculum under the assumption that the purpose of education is to "help a person become whole." This work is in part the product of cooperation between Chinese government organizations and the Institute for the Postmodern Development of China.[57]

Whitehead's philosophy of education has also found institutional support in Canada, where the University of Saskatchewan created a Process Philosophy Research Unit and sponsored several conferences on process philosophy and education.[159] Howard Woodhouse at the University of Saskatchewan remains a strong proponent of Whiteheadian education.[160]

Three recent books which further develop Whitehead's philosophy of education include: Modes of Learning: Whitehead's Metaphysics and the Stages of Education (2012) by George Allan; The Adventure of Education: Process Philosophers on Learning, Teaching, and Research (2009) by Adam Scarfe; and "Educating for an Ecological Civilization: Interdisciplinary, Experiential, and Relational Learning" (2017) edited by Marcus Ford and Stephen Rowe. "Beyond the Modern University: Toward a Constructive Postmodern University," (2002) is another text that explores the importance of Whitehead's metaphysics for thinking about higher education.

Business administration edit

Whitehead has had some influence on philosophy of business administration and organizational theory. This has led in part to a focus on identifying and investigating the effect of temporal events (as opposed to static things) within organizations through an "organization studies" discourse that accommodates a variety of 'weak' and 'strong' process perspectives from a number of philosophers.[161] One of the leading figures having an explicitly Whiteheadian and panexperientialist stance towards management is Mark Dibben,[162] who works in what he calls "applied process thought" to articulate a philosophy of management and business administration as part of a wider examination of the social sciences through the lens of process metaphysics. For Dibben, this allows "a comprehensive exploration of life as perpetually active experiencing, as opposed to occasional – and thoroughly passive – happening."[163] Dibben has published two books on applied process thought, Applied Process Thought I: Initial Explorations in Theory and Research (2008), and Applied Process Thought II: Following a Trail Ablaze (2009), as well as other papers in this vein in the fields of philosophy of management and business ethics.[164]

Margaret Stout and Carrie M. Staton have also written recently on the mutual influence of Whitehead and Mary Parker Follett, a pioneer in the fields of organizational theory and organizational behavior. Stout and Staton see both Whitehead and Follett as sharing an ontology that "understands becoming as a relational process; difference as being related, yet unique; and the purpose of becoming as harmonizing difference."[165] This connection is further analyzed by Stout and Jeannine M. Love in Integrative Process: Follettian Thinking from Ontology to Administration[166]

Political views edit

Whitehead's political views sometimes appear to be libertarian without the label. He wrote:

Now the intercourse between individuals and between social groups takes one of two forms, force or persuasion. Commerce is the great example of intercourse by way of persuasion. War, slavery, and governmental compulsion exemplify the reign of force.[167]

On the other hand, many Whitehead scholars read his work as providing a philosophical foundation for the social liberalism of the New Liberal movement that was prominent throughout Whitehead's adult life. Morris wrote that "... there is good reason for claiming that Whitehead shared the social and political ideals of the new liberals.".[168] However, Whitehead's comment addresses means and methods, not "ideals" or pretexts or excuses.

Primary works edit

Books written by Whitehead, listed by date of publication.

  • A Treatise on Universal Algebra. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1898. ISBN 1-4297-0032-7. Available online at http://projecteuclid.org/euclid.chmm/1263316509 3 September 2014 at the Wayback Machine.
  • The Axioms of Descriptive Geometry. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1907.[169] Available online at http://quod.lib.umich.edu/u/umhistmath/ABN2643.0001.001.
  • with Bertrand Russell. Principia Mathematica, Volume I. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1910. Available online at http://www.hti.umich.edu/cgi/b/bib/bibperm?q1=AAT3201.0001.001. Vol. 1 to *56 is available as a CUP paperback.[170][171][172]
  • An Introduction to Mathematics. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1911. Available online at http://quod.lib.umich.edu/u/umhistmath/AAW5995.0001.001. Vol. 56 of the Great Books of the Western World series.
  • with Bertrand Russell. Principia Mathematica, Volume II. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1912. Available online at http://www.hti.umich.edu/cgi/b/bib/bibperm?q1=AAT3201.0002.001.
  • with Bertrand Russell. Principia Mathematica, Volume III. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1913. Available online at http://www.hti.umich.edu/cgi/b/bib/bibperm?q1=AAT3201.0003.001.
  • The Organization of Thought Educational and Scientific. London: Williams & Norgate, 1917. Available online at https://archive.org/details/organisationofth00whit.
  • An Enquiry Concerning the Principles of Natural Knowledge. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1919. Available online at https://archive.org/details/enquiryconcernpr00whitrich.
  • The Concept of Nature. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1920. Based on the November 1919 Tarner Lectures delivered at Trinity College. Available online at https://archive.org/details/cu31924012068593.
  • The Principle of Relativity with Applications to Physical Science. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1922. Available online at https://archive.org/details/theprincipleofre00whituoft.
  • Science and the Modern World. New York: Macmillan Company, 1925. Vol. 55 of the Great Books of the Western World series.
  • Religion in the Making. New York: Macmillan Company, 1926. Based on the 1926 Lowell Lectures.
  • Symbolism, Its Meaning and Effect. New York: Macmillan Co., 1927. Based on the 1927 Barbour-Page Lectures delivered at the University of Virginia.
  • Process and Reality: An Essay in Cosmology. New York: Macmillan Company, 1929. Based on the 1927–28 Gifford Lectures delivered at the University of Edinburgh. The 1978 Free Press "corrected edition" edited by David Ray Griffin and Donald W. Sherburne corrects many errors in both the British and American editions, and also provides a comprehensive index.
  • The Aims of Education and Other Essays. New York: Macmillan Company, 1929.
  • The Function of Reason. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1929. Based on the March 1929 Louis Clark Vanuxem Foundation Lectures delivered at Princeton University.
  • Adventures of Ideas. New York: Macmillan Company, 1933. Also published by Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1933.
  • Nature and Life. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1934.
  • Modes of Thought. New York: MacMillan Company, 1938.
  • "Mathematics and the Good." In The Philosophy of Alfred North Whitehead, edited by Paul Arthur Schilpp, 666–681. Evanston and Chicago: Northwestern University Press, 1941.
  • "Immortality." In The Philosophy of Alfred North Whitehead, edited by Paul Arthur Schilpp, 682–700. Evanston and Chicago: Northwestern University Press, 1941.
  • Essays in Science and Philosophy. London: Philosophical Library, 1947.
  • with Allison Heartz Johnson, ed. The Wit and Wisdom of Whitehead. Boston: Beacon Press, 1948.

In addition, the Whitehead Research Project of the Center for Process Studies is currently working on a critical edition of Whitehead's writings, which is set to include notes taken by Whitehead's students during his Harvard classes, correspondence, and corrected editions of his books.[34]

  • Paul A. Bogaard and Jason Bell, eds. The Harvard Lectures of Alfred North Whitehead, 1924–1925: Philosophical Presuppositions of Science. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2017.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Alfred North Whitehead at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
  2. ^ Griffin, David Ray (2001). Reenchantment without Supernaturalism: A Process Philosophy of Religion. Ithaca: Cornell University Press, vii.
  3. ^ a b "The Modern Library's Top 100 Nonfiction Books of the Century". 30 April 1999. The New York Times. Accessed 21 November 2013.
  4. ^ a b C. Robert Mesle, Process-Relational Philosophy: An Introduction to Alfred North Whitehead (West Conshohocken: Templeton Foundation Press, 2009), 9.
  5. ^ a b c d e Philip Rose, On Whitehead (Belmont: Wadsworth, 2002), preface.
  6. ^ Cobb, John B. Jr.; Schwartz, Wm. Andrew (2018). Putting Philosophy to Work: Toward an Ecological Civilization. Process Century Press. ISBN 978-1-940447-33-9.
  7. ^ a b c Victor Lowe, Alfred North Whitehead: The Man and his Work, Vol I (Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins Press, 1985), 2.
  8. ^ a b Lowe, Victor (1985). Alfred North Whitehead: The Man and his Work, Vol I Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins Press, 13.
  9. ^ "Olympedia – Walter Buckmaster".
  10. ^ Griffin Ed., Nicholas (1992). The Selected Letters of Bertrand Russell, Volume 1, pp.215-217. New York: Houghton Miffin. ISBN 0-395-56269-4.
  11. ^ Britannica, The Editors of Encyclopaedia. "Bloomsbury group". Encyclopedia Britannica, 20 Feb. 2021, https://www.britannica.com/topic/Bloomsbury-group. Accessed 29 May 2022.
  12. ^ "Alfred North Whitehead (1861–1947)". The Old Shirburnian Society. 10 October 2020. from the original on 7 November 2021. Retrieved 8 November 2021.
  13. ^ Victor Lowe, Alfred North Whitehead: The Man and his Work, Vol I (Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins Press, 1985), 54–60.
  14. ^ a b Lowe, Victor (1985). Alfred North Whitehead: The Man and his Work, Vol I. Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins Press, 63.
  15. ^ Victor Lowe, Alfred North Whitehead: The Man and his Work, Vol I (Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins Press, 1985), 72.
  16. ^ Victor Lowe, Alfred North Whitehead: The Man and his Work, Vol I (Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins Press, 1985), 103-109.
  17. ^ On Whitehead the mathematician and logician, see Ivor Grattan-Guinness, The Search for Mathematical Roots 1870–1940: Logics, Set Theories, and the Foundations of Mathematics from Cantor through Russell to Gödel (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2000), and Quine's chapter in Paul Schilpp, The Philosophy of Alfred North Whitehead (New York: Tudor Publishing Company, 1941), 125–163.
  18. ^ Victor Lowe, Alfred North Whitehead: The Man and his Work, Vol I (Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins Press, 1985), 112.
  19. ^ Victor Lowe, Alfred North Whitehead: The Man and his Work, Vol II (Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins Press, 1990), 2.
  20. ^ Victor Lowe, Alfred North Whitehead: The Man and his Work, Vol II (Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins Press, 1990), 6-8.
  21. ^ a b Victor Lowe, Alfred North Whitehead: The Man and his Work, Vol II (Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins Press, 1990), 26-27.
  22. ^ Victor Lowe, Alfred North Whitehead: The Man and his Work, Vol II (Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins Press, 1990), 72-74.
  23. ^ Victor Lowe, Alfred North Whitehead: The Man and his Work, Vol II (Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins Press, 1990), 127.
  24. ^ a b Victor Lowe, Alfred North Whitehead: The Man and his Work, Vol II (Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins Press, 1990), 132.
  25. ^ Victor Lowe, Alfred North Whitehead: The Man and his Work, Vol I (Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins Press, 1985), 3–4.
  26. ^ "Alfred North Whitehead". American Academy of Arts & Sciences. 9 February 2023. Retrieved 11 August 2023.
  27. ^ "APS Member History". search.amphilsoc.org. Retrieved 11 August 2023.
  28. ^ Victor Lowe, Alfred North Whitehead: The Man and his Work, Vol II (Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins Press, 1990), 34.
  29. ^ . Fyfield and West Overton Parish Council. 1987. Archived from the original on 25 November 2020. Retrieved 29 November 2020.
  30. ^ Lowe, Victor (31 March 1974). "Whitehead's 1911 Criticism of The Problems of Philosophy". Journal of Bertrand Russell Studies. 13: 1–28.
  31. ^ Victor Lowe, Alfred North Whitehead: The Man and his Work, Vol II (Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins Press, 1990), 262.
  32. ^ Victor Lowe, Alfred North Whitehead: The Man and his Work, Vols I & II (Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins Press, 1985 & 1990).
  33. ^ a b Victor Lowe, Alfred North Whitehead: The Man and his Work, Vol I (Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins Press, 1985), 7.
  34. ^ a b "Critical Edition of Whitehead", last modified 16 July 2013, Whitehead Research Project, accessed 21 November 2013, http://whiteheadresearch.org/research/cew/press-release.shtml 9 December 2013 at the Wayback Machine.
  35. ^ "The Edinburgh Critical Edition of the Complete Works of Alfred North Whitehead". Edinburgh University Press Books. Retrieved 22 May 2018.
  36. ^ a b Christoph Wassermann, "The Relevance of An Introduction to Mathematics to Whitehead's Philosophy", Process Studies 17 (1988): 181. Available online at . Archived from the original on 3 December 2013. Retrieved 21 November 2013.
  37. ^ "Whitehead, Alfred North", last modified 8 May 2007, Gary L. Herstein, Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy, accessed 21 November 2013, http://www.iep.utm.edu/whitehed/.
  38. ^ a b c George Grätzer, Universal Algebra (Princeton: Van Nostrand Co., Inc., 1968), v.
  39. ^ Cf. Michel Weber and Will Desmond (eds.). Handbook of Whiteheadian Process Thought (Frankfurt / Lancaster, Ontos Verlag, Process Thought X1 & X2, 2008) and Ronny Desmet & Michel Weber (edited by), Whitehead. The Algebra of Metaphysics. Applied Process Metaphysics Summer Institute Memorandum, Louvain-la-Neuve, Les Éditions Chromatika, 2010.
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  143. ^ Charles Birch, "Why Aren't We Zombies? Neo-Darwinism and Process Thought", in Back to Darwin: A Richer Account of Evolution, ed. John B. Cobb Jr. (Grand Rapids: William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company, 2008), 252.
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Further reading edit

For the most comprehensive list of resources related to Whitehead, see the thematic bibliography of the Center for Process Studies.

  • Casati, Roberto, and Achille C. Varzi. Parts and Places: The Structures of Spatial Representation. Cambridge, Massachusetts: The MIT Press, 1999.
  • Ford, Lewis. Emergence of Whitehead's Metaphysics, 1925–1929. Albany: State University of New York Press, 1985.
  • Hartshorne, Charles. Whitehead's Philosophy: Selected Essays, 1935–1970. Lincoln and London: University of Nebraska Press, 1972.
  • Henning, Brian G. The Ethics of Creativity: Beauty, Morality, and Nature in a Processive Cosmos. Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press, 2005.
  • Holtz, Harald and Ernest Wolf-Gazo, eds. Whitehead und der Prozeßbegriff / Whitehead and The Idea of Process. Proceedings of the First International Whitehead-Symposion. Verlag Karl Alber, Freiburg i. B. / München, 1984. ISBN 3-495-47517-6
  • Jones, Judith A. Intensity: An Essay in Whiteheadian Ontology. Nashville: Vanderbilt University Press, 1998.
  • Kraus, Elizabeth M. The Metaphysics of Experience. New York: Fordham University Press, 1979.
  • Malik, Charles H. The Systems of Whitehead's Metaphysics. Zouq Mosbeh, Lebanon: Notre Dame Louaize, 2016. 436 pp.
  • McDaniel, Jay. What is Process Thought?: Seven Answers to Seven Questions. Claremont: P&F Press, 2008.
  • McHenry, Leemon. The Event Universe: The Revisionary Metaphysics of Alfred North Whitehead. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2015.
  • Nobo, Jorge L. Whitehead's Metaphysics of Extension and Solidarity. Albany: State University of New York Press, 1986.
  • Price, Lucien. Dialogues of Alfred North Whitehead. New York: Mentor Books, 1956.
  • Quine, Willard Van Orman. "Whitehead and the rise of modern logic." In The Philosophy of Alfred North Whitehead, edited by Paul Arthur Schilpp, 125–163. Evanston and Chicago: Northwestern University Press, 1941.
  • Rapp, Friedrich and Reiner Wiehl, eds. Whiteheads Metaphysik der Kreativität. Internationales Whitehead-Symposium Bad Homburg 1983. Verlag Karl Alber, Freiburg i. B. / München, 1986. ISBN 3-495-47612-1
  • Rescher, Nicholas. Process Metaphysics. Albany: State University of New York Press, 1995.
  • Rescher, Nicholas. Process Philosophy: A Survey of Basic Issues. Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press, 2001.
  • Roelker, Nancy Lyman. An Application Of Whitehead's Concepts Of Conformity and Novelty to the Philosophy of History. Unpublished dissertation, 1940, Harvard University. Held in John Hay Library's Special Collections at Brown University.[1]
  • Schilpp, Paul Arthur, ed. The Philosophy of Alfred North Whitehead. Evanston and Chicago: Northwestern University Press, 1941. Part of the Library of Living Philosophers series.
  • Siebers, Johan. The Method of Speculative Philosophy: An Essay on the Foundations of Whitehead's Metaphysics. Kassel: Kassel University Press GmbH, 2002. ISBN 3-933146-79-8
  • Smith, Olav Bryant. Myths of the Self: Narrative Identity and Postmodern Metaphysics. Lanham: Lexington Books, 2004. ISBN 0-7391-0843-3. It contains a section called Alfred North Whitehead: Toward a More Fundamental Ontology that is an overview of Whitehead's metaphysics.
  • Weber, Michel. [1] Whitehead's Pancreativism — The Basics. Frankfurt: Ontos Verlag, 2006.
  • Weber, Michel. Whitehead's Pancreativism — Jamesian Applications, Frankfurt / Paris: Ontos Verlag, 2011.
  • Weber, Michel and Will Desmond (eds.). Handbook of Whiteheadian Process Thought, Frankfurt / Lancaster: Ontos Verlag, 2008.
  • Alan Van Wyk and Michel Weber (eds.). Creativity and Its Discontents. The Response to Whitehead's Process and Reality, Frankfurt / Lancaster: Ontos Verlag, 2009.
  • Will, Clifford. Theory and Experiment in Gravitational Physics. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1993.

External links edit

  • The Philosophy of Organism in Philosophy Now magazine. An accessible summary of Alfred North Whitehead's philosophy.
  • Center for Process Studies in Claremont, California. A faculty research center of Claremont School of Theology, in association with Claremont Graduate University. The Center organizes conferences and events and publishes materials pertaining to Whitehead and process thought. It also maintains extensive Whitehead-related bibliographies.
  • Summary of Whitehead's Philosophy A Brief Introduction to Whitehead's Metaphysics
  • Society for the Study of Process Philosophies, a scholarly society that holds periodic meetings in conjunction with each of the divisional meetings of the American Philosophical Association, as well as at the annual meeting of the Society for the Advancement of American Philosophy.
  • "Alfred North Whitehead" in the MacTutor History of Mathematics archive, by John J. O'Connor and Edmund F. Robertson.
  • at the Harvard Square Library.
  • "What is Process Thought?" an introductory video series to process thought by Jay McDaniel.
  • Centre de philosophie pratique « Chromatiques whiteheadiennes »
  • "Whitehead's Principle of Relativity" by John Lighton Synge on arXiv.org
  • Whitehead at Monoskop.org, with extensive bibliography.
  • Works by Alfred North Whitehead at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by or about Alfred North Whitehead at Internet Archive
  • Works by Alfred North Whitehead at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  

  1. ^ The Nancy Lyman Roelker papers, Brown University, John Hay Library, Special Collections, Box A, Series 1, Box 2. List of contents at this link accessed 15 August 2023, https://www.riamco.org/render?eadid=US-RPB-ms2012.006&view=all

alfred, north, whitehead, february, 1861, december, 1947, english, mathematician, philosopher, created, philosophical, school, known, process, philosophy, which, been, applied, wide, variety, disciplines, including, ecology, theology, education, physics, biolo. Alfred North Whitehead OM FRS FBA 15 February 1861 30 December 1947 was an English mathematician and philosopher He created the philosophical school known as process philosophy 2 which has been applied in a wide variety of disciplines including ecology theology education physics biology economics and psychology Alfred North WhiteheadOM FRS FBAWhitehead c 1924Born 1861 02 15 15 February 1861Ramsgate EnglandDied30 December 1947 1947 12 30 aged 86 Cambridge Massachusetts U S EducationTrinity College Cambridge B A 1884 Era20th century philosophyRegionWestern philosophySchoolAnalytic philosophy early Logicism early Process philosophyProcess theologyInstitutionsImperial College LondonHarvard UniversityAcademic advisorsEdward Routh 1 Doctoral studentsRaphael Demos Charles Hartshorne Susanne Langer W V O Quine Bertrand Russell Gregory Vlastos Paul Weiss William T ParryMain interestsMetaphysicsmathematicsNotable ideasProcess philosophyProcess theologySignature In his early career Whitehead wrote primarily on mathematics logic and physics He wrote the three volume Principia Mathematica 1910 1913 with his former student Bertrand Russell Principia Mathematica is considered one of the twentieth century s most important works in mathematical logic and placed 23rd in a list of the top 100 English language nonfiction books of the twentieth century by Modern Library 3 Beginning in the late 1910s and early 1920s Whitehead gradually turned his attention from mathematics to philosophy of science and finally to metaphysics He developed a comprehensive metaphysical system which radically departed from most of Western philosophy Whitehead argued that reality consists of processes rather than material objects and that processes are best defined by their relations with other processes thus rejecting the theory that reality is fundamentally constructed by bits of matter that exist independently of one another 4 Whitehead s philosophical works particularly Process and Reality are regarded as the foundational texts of process philosophy Whitehead s process philosophy argues that 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 consequences for the world around us 4 For this reason one of the most promising applications of Whitehead s thought in recent years has been in the area of ecological civilization and environmental ethics pioneered by John B Cobb 5 6 Contents 1 Life 1 1 Childhood and education 1 2 Career 1 3 Move to the United States 1924 1 4 Family and death 1 5 Legacy 2 Mathematics and logic 2 1 A Treatise on Universal Algebra 2 2 Principia Mathematica 2 3 An Introduction to Mathematics 3 Views on education 4 Philosophy and metaphysics 4 1 Whitehead s conception of reality 4 2 Theory of perception 4 3 Evolution and value 4 4 God 4 5 Religion 5 Influence 5 1 Process philosophy and theology 5 2 Science 5 3 Ecology economy and sustainability 5 4 Education 5 5 Business administration 5 6 Political views 6 Primary works 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksLife editChildhood and education edit nbsp Whewell s Court north range at Trinity College Cambridge Whitehead spent thirty years at Trinity five as a student and twenty five as a senior lecturer Alfred North Whitehead was born in Ramsgate Kent England in 1861 7 His father Alfred Whitehead became an Anglican minister after being headmaster of Chatham House Academy a school for boys previously headed by Alfred s father Thomas Whitehead 8 Whitehead himself recalled both of them as being very successful school masters with his grandfather being the more remarkable man 8 Whitehead s mother was Maria Sarah Buckmaster Her maternal great grandmother was Jane North 1776 1847 whose maiden surname was given to Whitehead and several other members of his family over time His mother Maria Buckmaster had eleven siblings The son of her brother Thomas Walter Selby Buckmaster was twice an Olympics silver medal winner for Polo 1900 1908 for Britain and is said to be one of the finest polo players England has ever produced 9 Whitehead does not appear to have been close to his mother although he and Evelyn full name Evelyn Ada Maud Rice Willoughby Wade whom he married in 1890 are recorded in the English Census of 1891 as living with Alfred s mother and father Lowe notes that there appears to have been mutual dislike between Whitehead s wife Evelyn and his mother Maria Griffin relates how Bertrand Russell a colleague and collaborator of Whitehead was a very close friend of Whitehead and of his wife Evelyn Griffin retells Russell s story of how one evening in 1901 they found Evelyn Whitehead in the middle of what appeared to be a dangerous and acutely painful angina attack but It seems that she suffered from a psychosomatic disorder and the danger was illusory Griffin posits that Russell exaggerated the drama of her illness and that both Evelyn and Russell were habitually given to melodrama 10 Intensity of emotion was encourgaged by their avant garde associates in the turbulent Bloomsbury Group which discussed aesthetic and philosophical questions in a spirit of agnosticism and were strongly influenced by G E Moore s Principia Ethica 1903 and by A N Whitehead s and Bertrand Russell s Principia Mathematica 1910 13 in the light of which they searched for definitions of the good the true and the beautiful 11 Alfred s brother Henry became Bishop of Madras and wrote the closely observed ethnographic account Village Gods of South India Calcutta Association Press 1921 Whitehead was educated at Sherborne 12 a prominent English public school where he excelled in sports and mathematics 13 and was head prefect of his class 14 In 1880 he began attending Trinity College Cambridge and studied mathematics 15 His academic advisor was Edward Routh 1 He earned his B A from Trinity in 1884 writing his dissertation on James Clerk Maxwell s A Treatise on Electricity and Magnetism and graduated as fourth wrangler 16 Career editElected a fellow of Trinity in 1884 Whitehead would teach and write on mathematics and physics at the college until 1910 spending the 1890s writing his Treatise on Universal Algebra 1898 and the 1900s collaborating with his former pupil Bertrand Russell on the first edition of Principia Mathematica 17 He was a Cambridge Apostle 18 nbsp Bertrand Russell in 1907 Russell was a student of Whitehead s at Trinity College and a longtime collaborator and friend In 1910 Whitehead resigned his senior lectureship in mathematics at Trinity and moved to London without first obtaining another job 19 After being unemployed for a year he accepted a position as lecturer in applied mathematics and mechanics at University College London but was passed over a year later for the Goldsmid Chair of Applied Mathematics and Mechanics a position for which he had hoped to be seriously considered 20 In 1914 Whitehead accepted a position as professor of applied mathematics at the newly chartered Imperial College London where his old friend Andrew Forsyth had recently been appointed chief professor of mathematics 21 In 1918 Whitehead s academic responsibilities began to seriously expand as he accepted a number of high administrative positions within the University of London system of which Imperial College London was a member at the time He was elected dean of the Faculty of Science at the University of London in late 1918 a post he held for four years a member of the University of London s Senate in 1919 and chairman of the Senate s Academic leadership Council in 1920 a post which he held until he departed for America in 1924 21 Whitehead was able to exert his newfound influence to successfully lobby for a new history of science department help establish a Bachelor of Science degree previously only Bachelor of Arts degrees had been offered and make the school more accessible to less wealthy students 22 Toward the end of his time in England Whitehead turned his attention to philosophy Though he had no advanced training in philosophy his philosophical work soon became highly regarded After publishing The Concept of Nature in 1920 he served as president of the Aristotelian Society from 1922 to 1923 23 Move to the United States 1924 edit In 1924 Henry Osborn Taylor invited the 63 year old Whitehead to join the faculty at Harvard University as a professor of philosophy 24 The Whiteheads would spend the rest of their lives in the United States During his time at Harvard Whitehead produced his most important philosophical contributions In 1925 he wrote Science and the Modern World which was immediately hailed as an alternative to the Cartesian dualism then prevalent in popular science 25 He was elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences that same year 26 He was elected to the American Philosophical Society in 1926 27 Lectures from 1927 to 1928 were published in 1929 as a book named Process and Reality which has been compared to Immanuel Kant s Critique of Pure Reason 5 Family and death edit In 1890 Whitehead married Evelyn Wade an Irishwoman raised in France they had a daughter Jessie and two sons Thomas and Eric 14 Thomas followed his father to Harvard in 1931 to teach at the Business School Eric died in action at the age of 19 while serving in the Royal Flying Corps during World War I 28 From 1910 the Whiteheads had a cottage in the village of Lockeridge near Marlborough Wiltshire from there he completed Principia Mathematica 29 30 The Whiteheads remained in the United States after moving to Harvard in 1924 Alfred retired from Harvard in 1937 and remained in Cambridge Massachusetts until his death on 30 December 1947 31 Legacy edit The two volume biography of Whitehead by Victor Lowe 32 is the most definitive presentation of the life of Whitehead However many details of Whitehead s life remain obscure because he left no Nachlass personal archive his family carried out his instructions that all of his papers be destroyed after his death 33 Additionally Whitehead was known for his almost fanatical belief in the right to privacy and for writing very few personal letters of the kind that would help to gain insight on his life 33 Wrote Lowe in his preface No professional biographer in his right mind would touch him 7 Led by Executive Editor Brian G Henning and General Editor George R Lucas Jr the Whitehead Research Project of the Center for Process Studies is currently working on a critical edition of Whitehead s published and unpublished works 34 The first volume of the Edinburgh Critical Edition of the Complete Works of Alfred North Whitehead was published in 2017 by Paul A Bogaard and Jason Bell as The Harvard Lectures of Alfred North Whitehead 1924 1925 The Philosophical Presuppositions of Science 35 Mathematics and logic editIn addition to numerous articles on mathematics Whitehead wrote three major books on the subject A Treatise on Universal Algebra 1898 Principia Mathematica co written with Bertrand Russell and published in three volumes between 1910 and 1913 and An Introduction to Mathematics 1911 The former two books were aimed exclusively at professional mathematicians while the latter book was intended for a larger audience covering the history of mathematics and its philosophical foundations 36 Principia Mathematica in particular is regarded as one of the most important works in mathematical logic of the 20th century In addition to his legacy as a co writer of Principia Mathematica Whitehead s theory of extensive abstraction is considered foundational for the branch of ontology and computer science known as mereotopology a theory describing spatial relations among wholes parts parts of parts and the boundaries between parts 37 A Treatise on Universal Algebra edit In A Treatise on Universal Algebra 1898 the term universal algebra had essentially the same meaning that it has today the study of algebraic structures themselves rather than examples models of algebraic structures 38 Whitehead credits William Rowan Hamilton and Augustus De Morgan as originators of the subject matter and James Joseph Sylvester with coining the term itself 38 39 At the time structures such as Lie algebras and hyperbolic quaternions drew attention to the need to expand algebraic structures beyond the associatively multiplicative class In a review Alexander Macfarlane wrote The main idea of the work is not unification of the several methods nor generalization of ordinary algebra so as to include them but rather the comparative study of their several structures 40 In a separate review G B Mathews wrote It possesses a unity of design which is really remarkable considering the variety of its themes 41 A Treatise on Universal Algebra sought to examine Hermann Grassmann s theory of extension Ausdehnungslehre Boole s algebra of logic and Hamilton s quaternions this last number system was to be taken up in Volume II which was never finished due to Whitehead s work on Principia Mathematica 42 Whitehead wrote in the preface Such algebras have an intrinsic value for separate detailed study also they are worthy of comparative study for the sake of the light thereby thrown on the general theory of symbolic reasoning and on algebraic symbolism in particular The idea of a generalized conception of space has been made prominent in the belief that the properties and operations involved in it can be made to form a uniform method of interpretation of the various algebras 43 Whitehead however had no results of a general nature 38 His hope of form ing a uniform method of interpretation of the various algebras presumably would have been developed in Volume II had Whitehead completed it Further work on the subject was minimal until the early 1930s when Garrett Birkhoff and Oystein Ore began publishing on universal algebras 44 Principia Mathematica edit nbsp The title page of the shortened version of the Principia Mathematica to 56 Principia Mathematica 1910 1913 is Whitehead s most famous mathematical work Written with former student Bertrand Russell Principia Mathematica is considered one of the twentieth century s most important works in mathematics and placed 23rd in a list of the top 100 English language nonfiction books of the twentieth century by Modern Library 3 Principia Mathematica s purpose was to describe a set of axioms and inference rules in symbolic logic from which all mathematical truths could in principle be proven Whitehead and Russell were working on such a foundational level of mathematics and logic that it took them until page 86 of Volume II to prove that 1 1 2 a proof humorously accompanied by the comment The above proposition is occasionally useful 45 Whitehead and Russell had thought originally that Principia Mathematica would take a year to complete it ended up taking them ten years 46 When it came time for publication the three volume work was so long more than 2 000 pages and its audience so narrow professional mathematicians that it was initially published at a loss of 600 pounds 300 of which was paid by Cambridge University Press 200 by the Royal Society of London and 50 apiece by Whitehead and Russell themselves 46 Despite the initial loss today there is likely no major academic library in the world which does not hold a copy of Principia Mathematica 47 The ultimate substantive legacy of Principia Mathematica is mixed It is generally accepted that Kurt Godel s incompleteness theorem of 1931 definitively demonstrated that for any set of axioms and inference rules proposed to encapsulate mathematics there would in fact be some truths of mathematics which could not be deduced from them and hence that Principia Mathematica could never achieve its aims 48 However Godel could not have come to this conclusion without Whitehead and Russell s book In this way Principia Mathematica s legacy might be described as its key role in disproving the possibility of achieving its own stated goals 49 But beyond this somewhat ironic legacy the book popularized modern mathematical logic and drew important connections between logic epistemology and metaphysics 50 An Introduction to Mathematics edit Unlike Whitehead s previous two books on mathematics An Introduction to Mathematics 1911 was not aimed exclusively at professional mathematicians but was intended for a larger audience The book covered the nature of mathematics its unity and internal structure and its applicability to nature 36 Whitehead wrote in the opening chapter The object of the following Chapters is not to teach mathematics but to enable students from the very beginning of their course to know what the science is about and why it is necessarily the foundation of exact thought as applied to natural phenomena 51 The book can be seen as an attempt to understand the growth in unity and interconnection of mathematics as a whole as well as an examination of the mutual influence of mathematics and philosophy language and physics 52 Although the book is little read in some ways it prefigures certain points of Whitehead s later work in philosophy and metaphysics 53 Views on education editWhitehead showed a deep concern for educational reform at all levels In addition to his numerous individually written works on the subject Whitehead was appointed by Britain s Prime Minister David Lloyd George as part of a 20 person committee to investigate the educational systems and practices of the UK in 1921 and recommend reform 54 Whitehead s most complete work on education is the 1929 book The Aims of Education and Other Essays which collected numerous essays and addresses by Whitehead on the subject published between 1912 and 1927 The essay from which Aims of Education derived its name was delivered as an address in 1916 when Whitehead was president of the London Branch of the Mathematical Association In it he cautioned against the teaching of what he called inert ideas ideas that are disconnected scraps of information with no application to real life or culture He opined that education with inert ideas is not only useless it is above all things harmful 55 Rather than teach small parts of a large number of subjects Whitehead advocated teaching a relatively few important concepts that the student could organically link to many different areas of knowledge discovering their application in actual life 56 For Whitehead education should be the exact opposite of the multidisciplinary value free school model 55 57 it should be transdisciplinary and laden with values and general principles that provide students with a bedrock of wisdom and help them to make connections between areas of knowledge that are usually regarded as separate In order to make this sort of teaching a reality however Whitehead pointed to the need to minimize the importance of or radically alter standard examinations for school entrance Whitehead writes Every school is bound on pain of extinction to train its boys for a small set of definite examinations No headmaster has a free hand to develop his general education or his specialist studies in accordance with the opportunities of his school which are created by its staff its environment its class of boys and its endowments I suggest that no system of external tests which aims primarily at examining individual scholars can result in anything but educational waste 58 Whitehead argued that curriculum should be developed specifically for its own students by its own staff or else risk total stagnation interrupted only by occasional movements from one group of inert ideas to another Above all else in his educational writings Whitehead emphasized the importance of imagination and the free play of ideas In his essay Universities and Their Function Whitehead writes provocatively on imagination Imagination is not to be divorced from the facts it is a way of illuminating the facts It works by eliciting the general principles which apply to the facts as they exist and then by an intellectual survey of alternative possibilities which are consistent with those principles It enables men to construct an intellectual vision of a new world 59 Whitehead s philosophy of education might adequately be summarized in his statement that knowledge does not keep any better than fish 60 In other words bits of disconnected knowledge are meaningless all knowledge must find some imaginative application to the students own lives or else it becomes so much useless trivia and the students themselves become good at parroting facts but not thinking for themselves Philosophy and metaphysics edit nbsp Richard Rummell s 1906 watercolor landscape view of Harvard University facing northeast 61 Whitehead taught at Harvard from 1924 to 1937 Whitehead did not begin his career as a philosopher 7 In fact he never had any formal training in philosophy beyond his undergraduate education Early in his life he showed great interest in and respect for philosophy and metaphysics but it is evident that he considered himself a rank amateur In one letter to his friend and former student Bertrand Russell after discussing whether science aimed to be explanatory or merely descriptive he wrote This further question lands us in the ocean of metaphysic onto which my profound ignorance of that science forbids me to enter 62 Ironically in later life Whitehead would become one of the 20th century s foremost metaphysicians However interest in metaphysics the philosophical investigation of the nature of the universe and existence had become unfashionable by the time Whitehead began writing in earnest about it in the 1920s The ever more impressive accomplishments of empirical science had led to a general consensus in academia that the development of comprehensive metaphysical systems was a waste of time because they were not subject to empirical testing 63 Whitehead was unimpressed by this objection In the notes of one of his students for a 1927 class Whitehead was quoted as saying Every scientific man in order to preserve his reputation has to say he dislikes metaphysics What he means is he dislikes having his metaphysics criticized 64 In Whitehead s view scientists and philosophers make metaphysical assumptions about how the universe works all the time but such assumptions are not easily seen precisely because they remain unexamined and unquestioned While Whitehead acknowledged that philosophers can never hope finally to formulate these metaphysical first principles 65 he argued that people need to continually reimagine their basic assumptions about how the universe works if philosophy and science are to make any real progress even if that progress remains permanently asymptotic For this reason Whitehead regarded metaphysical investigations as essential to both good science and good philosophy 66 Perhaps foremost among what Whitehead considered faulty metaphysical assumptions was the Cartesian idea that reality is fundamentally constructed of bits of matter that exist totally independently of one another which he rejected in favour of an event based or process ontology in which events are primary and are fundamentally interrelated and dependent on one another 67 He also argued that the most basic elements of reality can all be regarded as experiential indeed that everything is constituted by its experience He used the term experience very broadly so that even inanimate processes such as electron collisions are said to manifest some degree of experience In this he went against Descartes separation of two different kinds of real existence either exclusively material or else exclusively mental 68 Whitehead referred to his metaphysical system as philosophy of organism but it would become known more widely as process philosophy 68 Whitehead s philosophy was highly original and soon garnered interest in philosophical circles After publishing The Concept of Nature in 1920 he served as president of the Aristotelian Society from 1922 to 1923 and Henri Bergson was quoted as saying that Whitehead was the best philosopher writing in English 69 So impressive and different was Whitehead s philosophy that in 1924 he was invited to join the faculty at Harvard University as a professor of philosophy at 63 years of age 24 nbsp Eckhart Hall at the University of Chicago Beginning with the arrival of Henry Nelson Wieman in 1927 Chicago s Divinity School become closely associated with Whitehead s thought for about thirty years 70 This is not to say that Whitehead s thought was widely accepted or even well understood His philosophical work is generally considered to be among the most difficult to understand in all of the Western canon 5 Even professional philosophers struggled to follow Whitehead s writings One famous story illustrating the level of difficulty of Whitehead s philosophy centres around the delivery of Whitehead s Gifford lectures in 1927 28 following Arthur Eddington s lectures of the year previous which Whitehead would later publish as Process and Reality Eddington was a marvellous popular lecturer who had enthralled an audience of 600 for his entire course The same audience turned up to Whitehead s first lecture but it was completely unintelligible not merely to the world at large but to the elect My father remarked to me afterwards that if he had not known Whitehead well he would have suspected that it was an imposter making it up as he went along The audience at subsequent lectures was only about half a dozen in all 71 It may not be inappropriate to speculate that some fair portion of the respect generally shown to Whitehead by his philosophical peers at the time arose from their sheer bafflement The Chicago theologian Shailer Mathews once remarked of Whitehead s 1926 book Religion in the Making It is infuriating and I must say embarrassing as well to read page after page of relatively familiar words without understanding a single sentence 72 However Mathews frustration with Whitehead s books did not negatively affect his interest In fact there were numerous philosophers and theologians at Chicago s Divinity School that perceived the importance of what Whitehead was doing without fully grasping all of the details and implications In 1927 they invited one of America s only Whitehead experts Henry Nelson Wieman to Chicago to give a lecture explaining Whitehead s thoughts 72 Wieman s lecture was so brilliant that he was promptly hired to the faculty and taught there for twenty years and for at least thirty years afterwards Chicago s Divinity School was closely associated with Whitehead s thought 70 Shortly after Whitehead s book Process and Reality appeared in 1929 Wieman famously wrote in his 1930 review Not many people will read Whitehead s recent book in this generation not many will read it in any generation But its influence will radiate through concentric circles of popularization until the common man will think and work in the light of it not knowing whence the light came After a few decades of discussion and analysis one will be able to understand it more readily than can now be done 73 Wieman s words proved prophetic Though Process and Reality has been called arguably the most impressive single metaphysical text of the twentieth century 74 it has been little read and little understood partly because it demands as Isabelle Stengers puts it that its readers accept the adventure of the questions that will separate them from every consensus 75 Whitehead questioned Western philosophy s most dearly held assumptions about how the universe works but in doing so he managed to anticipate a number of 21st century scientific and philosophical problems and provide novel solutions 76 Whitehead s conception of reality edit Whitehead was convinced that the scientific notion of matter was misleading as a way of describing the ultimate nature of things In his 1925 book Science and the Modern World he wrote that There persists a fixed scientific cosmology which presupposes the ultimate fact of an irreducible brute matter or material spread through space in a flux of configurations In itself such a material is senseless valueless purposeless It just does what it does do following a fixed routine imposed by external relations which do not spring from the nature of its being It is this assumption that I call scientific materialism Also it is an assumption which I shall challenge as being entirely unsuited to the scientific situation at which we have now arrived 67 In Whitehead s view there are a number of problems with this notion of irreducible brute matter First it obscures and minimizes the importance of change By thinking of any material thing like a rock or a person as being fundamentally the same thing throughout time with any changes to it being secondary to its nature scientific materialism hides the fact that nothing ever stays the same For Whitehead change is fundamental and inescapable he emphasizes that all things flow 77 In Whitehead s view then concepts such as quality matter and form are problematic These classical concepts fail to adequately account for change and overlook the active and experiential nature of the most basic elements of the world They are useful abstractions but are not the world s basic building blocks 78 What is ordinarily conceived of as a single person for instance is philosophically described as a continuum of overlapping events 79 After all people change all the time if only because they have aged by another second and had some further experience These occasions of experience are logically distinct but are progressively connected in what Whitehead calls a society of events 80 By assuming that enduring objects are the most real and fundamental things in the universe materialists have mistaken the abstract for the concrete what Whitehead calls the fallacy of misplaced concreteness 68 81 To put it another way a thing or person is often seen as having a defining essence or a core identity that is unchanging and describes what the thing or person really is In this way of thinking things and people are seen as fundamentally the same through time with any changes being qualitative and secondary to their core identity e g Mark s hair has turned grey as he has gotten older but he is still the same person But in Whitehead s cosmology the only fundamentally existent things are discrete occasions of experience that overlap one another in time and space and jointly make up the enduring person or thing On the other hand what ordinary thinking often regards as the essence of a thing or the identity core of a person is an abstract generalization of what is regarded as that person or thing s most important or salient features across time Identities do not define people people define identities Everything changes from moment to moment and to think of anything as having an enduring essence misses the fact that all things flow though it is often a useful way of speaking Whitehead pointed to the limitations of language as one of the main culprits in maintaining a materialistic way of thinking and acknowledged that it may be difficult to ever wholly move past such ideas in everyday speech 82 After all every moment of each person s life can hardly be given a different proper name and it is easy and convenient to think of people and objects as remaining fundamentally the same things rather than constantly keeping in mind that each thing is a different thing from what it was a moment ago Yet the limitations of everyday living and everyday speech should not prevent people from realizing that material substances or essences are a convenient generalized description of a continuum of particular concrete processes No one questions that a ten year old person is quite different by the time he or she turns thirty years old and in many ways is not the same person at all Whitehead points out that it is not philosophically or ontologically sound to think that a person is the same from one second to the next nbsp John Locke was one of Whitehead s primary influences In the preface to Process and Reality Whitehead wrote The writer who most fully anticipated the main positions of the philosophy of organism is John Locke in his Essay 83 A second problem with materialism is that it obscures the importance of relations It sees every object as distinct and discrete from all other objects Each object is simply an inert clump of matter that is only externally related to other things The idea of matter as primary makes people think of objects as being fundamentally separate in time and space and not necessarily related to anything But in Whitehead s view relations take a primary role perhaps even more important than the relata themselves 84 A student taking notes in one of Whitehead s fall 1924 classes wrote that Reality applies to connections and only relatively to the things connected A is real for B and B is real for A but they are not absolutely real independent of each other 85 In fact Whitehead describes any entity as in some sense nothing more and nothing less than the sum of its relations to other entities its synthesis of and reaction to the world around it 86 A real thing is just that which forces the rest of the universe to in some way conform to it that is to say if theoretically a thing made strictly no difference to any other entity i e it was not related to any other entity it could not be said to really exist 87 Relations are not secondary to what a thing is they are what the thing is To Whitehead an entity is not merely a sum of its relations but also a valuation of them and reaction to them 88 For Whitehead creativity is the absolute principle of existence and every entity whether it is a human being a tree or an electron has some degree of novelty in how it responds to other entities and is not fully determined by causal or mechanistic laws 89 Most entities do not have consciousness 90 As a human being s actions cannot always be predicted the same can be said of where a tree s roots will grow or how an electron will move or whether it will rain tomorrow Moreover the inability to predict an electron s movement for instance is not due to faulty understanding or inadequate technology rather the fundamental creativity freedom of all entities means that there will always remain phenomena that are unpredictable 91 The other side of creativity freedom as the absolute principle is that every entity is constrained by the social structure of existence i e its relations each actual entity must conform to the settled conditions of the world around it 87 Freedom always exists within limits But an entity s uniqueness and individuality arise from its own self determination as to just how it will take account of the world within the limits that have been set for it 92 In summary Whitehead rejects the idea of separate and unchanging bits of matter as the most basic building blocks of reality in favour of the idea of reality as interrelated events in the process He conceives of reality as composed of processes of dynamic becoming rather than static being emphasizing that all physical things change and evolve and that changeless essences such as matter are mere abstractions from the interrelated events that are the final real things that make up the world 68 Theory of perception edit Since Whitehead s metaphysics described a universe in which all entities experience he needed a new way of describing perception that was not limited to living self conscious beings The term he coined was prehension which comes from the Latin prehensio meaning to seize 93 The term is meant to indicate a kind of perception that can be conscious or unconscious applying to people as well as electrons It is also intended to make clear Whitehead s rejection of the theory of representative perception in which the mind only has private ideas about other entities 93 For Whitehead the term prehension indicates that the perceiver actually incorporates aspects of the perceived thing into itself 93 In this way entities are constituted by their perceptions and relations rather than being independent of them Further Whitehead regards perception as occurring in two modes causal efficacy or physical prehension and presentational immediacy or conceptual prehension 90 Whitehead describes causal efficacy as the experience dominating the primitive living organisms which have a sense for the fate from which they have emerged and the fate towards which they go 94 It is in other words the sense of causal relations between entities a feeling of being influenced and affected by the surrounding environment unmediated by the senses Presentational immediacy on the other hand is what is usually referred to as pure sense perception unmediated by any causal or symbolic interpretation even unconscious interpretation In other words it is pure appearance which may or may not be delusive e g mistaking an image in a mirror for the real thing 95 In higher organisms like people these two modes of perception combine into what Whitehead terms symbolic reference which links appearance with causation in a process that is so automatic that both people and animals have difficulty refraining from it By way of illustration Whitehead uses the example of a person s encounter with a chair An ordinary person looks up sees a coloured shape and immediately infers that it is a chair However an artist Whitehead supposes might not have jumped to the notion of a chair but instead might have stopped at the mere contemplation of a beautiful colour and a beautiful shape 96 This is not the normal human reaction most people place objects in categories by habit and instinct without even thinking about it Moreover animals do the same thing Using the same example Whitehead points out that a dog would have acted immediately on the hypothesis of a chair and would have jumped onto it by way of using it as such 97 In this way symbolic reference is a fusion of pure sense perceptions on the one hand and causal relations on the other and that it is in fact the causal relationships that dominate the more basic mentality as the dog illustrates while it is the sense perceptions which indicate a higher grade mentality as the artist illustrates 98 Evolution and value edit Whitehead believed that when asking questions about the basic facts of existence questions about value and purpose can never be fully escaped This is borne out in his thoughts on abiogenesis or the hypothetical natural process by which life arises from simple organic compounds Whitehead makes the startling observation that life is comparatively deficient in survival value 99 If humans can only exist for about a hundred years and rocks for eight hundred million then one is forced to ask why complex organisms ever evolved in the first place as Whitehead humorously notes they certainly did not appear because they were better at that game than the rocks around them 100 He then observes that the mark of higher forms of life is that they are actively engaged in modifying their environment an activity which he theorizes is directed toward the three fold goal of living living well and living better 101 In other words Whitehead sees life as directed toward the purpose of increasing its own satisfaction Without such a goal he sees the rise of life as totally unintelligible For Whitehead there is no such thing as wholly inert matter Instead all things have some measure of freedom or creativity however small which allows them to be at least partly self directed The process philosopher David Ray Griffin coined the term panexperientialism the idea that all entities experience to describe Whitehead s view and to distinguish it from panpsychism the idea that all matter has consciousness 102 God edit nbsp Henri Bergson nbsp William James nbsp John Dewey I am also greatly indebted to Bergson William James and John Dewey One of my preoccupations has been to rescue their type of thought from the charge of anti intellectualism which rightly or wrongly has been associated with it Alfred North Whitehead Process and Reality preface 103 Whitehead s idea of God differs from traditional monotheistic notions 104 Perhaps his most famous and pointed criticism of the Christian conception of God is that the Church gave unto God the attributes which belonged exclusively to Caesar 105 Here Whitehead is criticizing Christianity for defining God as primarily a divine king who imposes his will on the world and whose most important attribute is power As opposed to the most widely accepted forms of Christianity Whitehead emphasized an idea of God that he called the brief Galilean vision of humility It does not emphasize the ruling Caesar or the ruthless moralist or the unmoved mover It dwells upon the tender elements in the world which slowly and in quietness operates by love and it finds purpose in the present immediacy of a kingdom not of this world Love neither rules nor is it unmoved also it is a little oblivious as to morals It does not look to the future for it finds its own reward in the immediate present 106 For Whitehead God is not necessarily tied to religion 107 Rather than springing primarily from religious faith Whitehead saw God as necessary for his metaphysical system 107 His system required that an order exist among possibilities an order that allowed for novelty in the world and provided an aim to all entities Whitehead posited that these ordered potentials exist in what he called the primordial nature of God However Whitehead was also interested in religious experience This led him to reflect more intensively on what he saw as the second nature of God the consequent nature Whitehead s conception of God as a dipolar 108 entity has called for fresh theological thinking The primordial nature he described as the unlimited conceptual realization of the absolute wealth of potentiality 106 i e the unlimited possibility of the universe This primordial nature is eternal and unchanging providing entities in the universe with possibilities for realization Whitehead also calls this primordial aspect the lure for feeling the eternal urge of desire 109 pulling the entities in the universe toward as yet unrealized possibilities God s consequent nature on the other hand is anything but unchanging it is God s reception of the world s activity As Whitehead puts it God saves the world as it passes into the immediacy of his own life It is the judgment of a tenderness which loses nothing that can be saved 110 In other words God saves and cherishes all experiences forever and those experiences go on to change the way God interacts with the world In this way God is really changed by what happens in the world and the wider universe lending the actions of finite creatures an eternal significance Whitehead thus sees God and the world as fulfilling one another He sees entities in the world as fluent and changing things that yearn for a permanence which only God can provide by taking them into God s self thereafter changing God and affecting the rest of the universe throughout time On the other hand he sees God as permanent but as deficient in actuality and change alone God is merely eternally unrealized possibilities and requires the world to actualize them God gives creatures permanence while the creatures give God actuality and change Here it is worthwhile to quote Whitehead at length In this way God is completed by the individual fluent satisfactions of finite fact and the temporal occasions are completed by their everlasting union with their transformed selves purged into conformation with the eternal order which is the final absolute wisdom The final summary can only be expressed in terms of a group of antitheses whose apparent self contradictions depend on neglect of the diverse categories of existence In each antithesis there is a shift of meaning which converts the opposition into a contrast It is as true to say that God is permanent and the World fluent as that the World is permanent and God is fluent It is as true to say that God is one and the World many as that the World is one and God many It is as true to say that in comparison with the World God is actual eminently as that in comparison with God the World is actual eminently It is as true to say that the World is immanent in God as that God is immanent in the World It is as true to say that God transcends the World as that the World transcends God It is as true to say that God creates the World as that the World creates God What is done in the world is transformed into a reality in heaven and the reality in heaven passes back into the world In this sense God is the great companion the fellow sufferer who understands 111 The above is some of Whitehead s most evocative writing about God and was powerful enough to inspire the movement known as process theology a vibrant theological school of thought that continues to thrive today 112 113 Religion edit For Whitehead the core of religion was individual While he acknowledged that individuals cannot ever be fully separated from their society he argued that life is an internal fact for its own sake before it is an external fact relating to others 114 His most famous remark on religion is that religion is what the individual does with his own solitariness and if you are never solitary you are never religious 115 Whitehead saw religion as a system of general truths that transformed a person s character 116 He took special care to note that while religion is often a good influence it is not necessarily good an idea which he called a dangerous delusion e g a religion might encourage the violent extermination of a rival religion s adherents 117 However while Whitehead saw religion as beginning in solitariness he also saw religion as necessarily expanding beyond the individual In keeping with his process metaphysics in which relations are primary he wrote that religion necessitates the realization of the value of the objective world which is a community derivative from the interrelations of its component individuals 118 In other words the universe is a community which makes itself whole through the relatedness of each individual entity to all the others meaning and value do not exist for the individual alone but only in the context of the universal community Whitehead writes further that each entity can find no such value till it has merged its individual claim with that of the objective universe Religion is world loyalty The spirit at once surrenders itself to this universal claim and appropriates it for itself 119 In this way the individual and universal social aspects of religion are mutually dependent A connection between the works of William DeWitt Hyde and Whitehead further elucidates this necessary duality of social and individual roles in religious experience 120 Whitehead also described religion more technically as an ultimate craving to infuse into the insistent particularity of emotion that non temporal generality which primarily belongs to conceptual thought alone 121 In other words religion takes deeply felt emotions and contextualizes them within a system of general truths about the world helping people to identify their wider meaning and significance For Whitehead religion served as a kind of bridge between philosophy and the emotions and purposes of a particular society 122 It is the task of religion to make philosophy applicable to the everyday lives of ordinary people Influence editIsabelle Stengers wrote that Whiteheadians are recruited among both philosophers and theologians and the palette has been enriched by practitioners from the most diverse horizons from ecology to feminism practices that unite political struggle and spirituality with the sciences of education 75 In recent decades attention to Whitehead s work has become more widespread with interest extending to intellectuals in Europe and China and coming from such diverse fields as ecology physics biology education economics and psychology One of the first theologians to attempt to interact with Whitehead s thought was the future Archbishop of Canterbury William Temple In Temple s Gifford Lectures of 1932 1934 subsequently published as Nature Man and God Whitehead is one of a number of philosophers of the emergent evolution approach with which Temple interacts 123 However it was not until the 1970s and 1980s that Whitehead s thought drew much attention outside of a small group of philosophers and theologians primarily Americans and even today he is not considered especially influential outside of relatively specialized circles Early followers of Whitehead were found primarily at the University of Chicago Divinity School where Henry Nelson Wieman initiated an interest in Whitehead s work that would last for about thirty years 70 Professors such as Wieman Charles Hartshorne Bernard Loomer Bernard Meland and Daniel Day Williams made Whitehead s philosophy arguably the most important intellectual thread running through the divinity school 124 They taught generations of Whitehead scholars the most notable of whom is John B Cobb Although interest in Whitehead has since faded at Chicago s divinity school Cobb effectively grabbed the torch and planted it firmly in Claremont California where he began teaching at Claremont School of Theology in 1958 and founded the Center for Process Studies with David Ray Griffin in 1973 125 Largely due to Cobb s influence today Claremont remains strongly identified with Whitehead s process thought 126 127 But while Claremont remains the most concentrated hub of Whiteheadian activity the place where Whitehead s thought currently seems to be growing the most quickly is in China In order to address the challenges of modernization and industrialization China has begun to blend traditions of Taoism Buddhism and Confucianism with Whitehead s constructive post modern philosophy in order to create an ecological civilization 57 To date the Chinese government has encouraged the building of twenty three university based centres for the study of Whitehead s philosophy 57 128 and books by process philosophers John Cobb and David Ray Griffin are becoming required reading for Chinese graduate students 57 Cobb has attributed China s interest in process philosophy partly to Whitehead s stress on the mutual interdependence of humanity and nature as well as his emphasis on an educational system that includes the teaching of values rather than simply bare facts 57 Overall however Whitehead s influence is very difficult to characterize In English speaking countries his primary works are little studied outside of Claremont and a select number of liberal graduate level theology and philosophy programs Outside of these circles his influence is relatively small and diffuse and has tended to come chiefly through the work of his students and admirers rather than Whitehead himself 129 For instance Whitehead was a teacher and long time friend and collaborator of Bertrand Russell and he also taught and supervised the dissertation of Willard Van Orman Quine 130 both of whom are important figures in analytic philosophy the dominant strain of philosophy in English speaking countries in the 20th century 131 Whitehead has also had high profile admirers in the continental tradition such as French post structuralist philosopher Gilles Deleuze who once dryly remarked of Whitehead that he stands provisionally as the last great Anglo American philosopher before Wittgenstein s disciples spread their misty confusion sufficiency and terror 132 French sociologist and anthropologist Bruno Latour even went so far as to call Whitehead the greatest philosopher of the 20th century 133 Deleuze s and Latour s opinions however are minority ones as Whitehead has not been recognized as particularly influential within the most dominant philosophical schools 134 It is impossible to say exactly why Whitehead s influence has not been more widespread but it may be partly due to his metaphysical ideas seeming somewhat counterintuitive such as his assertion that matter is an abstraction or his inclusion of theistic elements in his philosophy 135 or the perception of metaphysics itself as passe or simply the sheer difficulty and density of his prose 5 Process philosophy and theology edit nbsp Philosopher Nicholas Rescher Rescher is a proponent of both Whiteheadian process philosophy and American pragmatism Historically Whitehead s work has been most influential in the field of American progressive theology 112 127 The most important early proponent of Whitehead s thought in a theological context was Charles Hartshorne who spent a semester at Harvard as Whitehead s teaching assistant in 1925 and is widely credited with developing Whitehead s process philosophy into a full blown process theology 136 Other notable process theologians include John B Cobb David Ray Griffin Marjorie Hewitt Suchocki C Robert Mesle Roland Faber and Catherine Keller Process theology typically stresses God s relational nature Rather than seeing God as impassive or emotionless process theologians view God as the fellow sufferer who understands and as the being who is supremely affected by temporal events 137 Hartshorne points out that people would not praise a human ruler who was unaffected by either the joys or sorrows of his followers so why would this be a praiseworthy quality in God 138 Instead as the being who is most affected by the world God is the being who can most appropriately respond to the world However process theology has been formulated in a wide variety of ways C Robert Mesle for instance advocates a process naturalism i e a process theology without God 139 In fact process theology is difficult to define because process theologians are so diverse and transdisciplinary in their views and interests John B Cobb is a process theologian who has also written books on biology and economics Roland Faber and Catherine Keller integrate Whitehead with poststructuralist postcolonialist and feminist theory Charles Birch was both a theologian and a geneticist Franklin I Gamwell writes on theology and political theory In Syntheism Creating God in The Internet Age futurologists Alexander Bard and Jan Soderqvist repeatedly credit Whitehead for the process theology they see rising out of the participatory culture expected to dominate the digital era Process philosophy is even more difficult to pin down than process theology In practice the two fields cannot be neatly separated The 32 volume State University of New York series in constructive postmodern thought edited by process philosopher and theologian David Ray Griffin displays the range of areas in which different process philosophers work including physics ecology medicine public policy nonviolence politics and psychology 140 One philosophical school which has historically had a close relationship with process philosophy is American pragmatism Whitehead himself thought highly of William James and John Dewey and acknowledged his indebtedness to them in the preface to Process and Reality 103 Charles Hartshorne along with Paul Weiss edited the collected papers of Charles Sanders Peirce one of the founders of pragmatism Noted neopragmatist Richard Rorty was in turn a student of Hartshorne 141 Science edit nbsp Theoretical physicist David Bohm Bohm is one example of a scientist influenced by Whitehead s philosophy 142 Scientists of the early 20th century for whom Whitehead s work has been influential include physical chemist Ilya Prigogine biologist Conrad Hal Waddington and geneticists Charles Birch and Sewall Wright 143 Henry Murray dedicated his Explorations in Personality to Whitehead a contemporary at Harvard In physics Whitehead s theory of gravitation articulated a view that might perhaps be regarded as dual to Albert Einstein s general relativity It has been severely criticized 144 145 Yutaka Tanaka suggested that the gravitational constant disagrees with experimental findings and proposed that Einstein s work does not actually refute Whitehead s formulation 146 Whitehead s view has now been rendered obsolete with the discovery of gravitational waves phenomena observed locally that largely violate the kind of local flatness of space that Whitehead assumes Consequently Whitehead s cosmology must be regarded as a local approximation and his assumption of a uniform spatio temporal geometry Minkowskian in particular as an often locally adequate approximation An exact replacement of Whitehead s cosmology would need to admit a Riemannian geometry Also although Whitehead himself gave only secondary consideration to quantum theory his metaphysics of processes has proved attractive to some physicists in that field Henry Stapp and David Bohm are among those whose work has been influenced by Whitehead 142 In the 21st century Whiteheadian thought is still a stimulating influence Timothy E Eastman and Hank Keeton s Physics and Whitehead 2004 147 and Michael Epperson s Quantum Mechanics and the Philosophy of Alfred North Whitehead 2004 148 and Foundations of Relational Realism A Topological Approach to Quantum Mechanics and the Philosophy of Nature 2013 149 aim to offer Whiteheadian approaches to physics Brian G Henning Adam Scarfe and Dorion Sagan s Beyond Mechanism 2013 and Rupert Sheldrake s Science Set Free 2012 are examples of Whiteheadian approaches to biology Ecology economy and sustainability edit nbsp Theologian philosopher and environmentalist John B Cobb founded the Center for Process Studies in Claremont California with David Ray Griffin in 1973 and is often regarded as the preeminent scholar in the field of process philosophy and process theology 150 151 152 153 One of the most promising applications of Whitehead s thought in recent years has been in the area of ecological civilization sustainability and environmental ethics Because Whitehead s holistic metaphysics of value lends itself so readily to an ecological point of view many see his work as a promising alternative to the traditional mechanistic worldview providing a detailed metaphysical picture of a world constituted by a web of interdependent relations 5 This work has been pioneered by John B Cobb whose book Is It Too Late A Theology of Ecology 1971 was the first single authored book in environmental ethics 154 Cobb also co authored a book with leading ecological economist and steady state theorist Herman Daly entitled For the Common Good Redirecting the Economy toward Community the Environment and a Sustainable Future 1989 which applied Whitehead s thought to economics and received the Grawemeyer Award for Ideas Improving World Order Cobb followed this with a second book Sustaining the Common Good A Christian Perspective on the Global Economy 1994 which aimed to challenge economists zealous faith in the great god of growth 155 Education edit Whitehead is widely known for his influence in education theory His philosophy inspired the formation of the Association for Process Philosophy of Education APPE which published eleven volumes of a journal titled Process Papers on process philosophy and education from 1996 to 2008 156 Whitehead s theories on education also led to the formation of new modes of learning and new models of teaching One such model is the ANISA model developed by Daniel C Jordan which sought to address a lack of understanding of the nature of people in current education systems As Jordan and Raymond P Shepard put it Because it has not defined the nature of man education is in the untenable position of having to devote its energies to the development of curricula without any coherent ideas about the nature of the creature for whom they are intended 157 Another model is the FEELS model developed by Xie Bangxiu and deployed successfully in China FEELS stands for five things in curriculum and education Flexible goals Engaged learner Embodied knowledge Learning through interactions and Supportive teacher 158 It is used for understanding and evaluating educational curriculum under the assumption that the purpose of education is to help a person become whole This work is in part the product of cooperation between Chinese government organizations and the Institute for the Postmodern Development of China 57 Whitehead s philosophy of education has also found institutional support in Canada where the University of Saskatchewan created a Process Philosophy Research Unit and sponsored several conferences on process philosophy and education 159 Howard Woodhouse at the University of Saskatchewan remains a strong proponent of Whiteheadian education 160 Three recent books which further develop Whitehead s philosophy of education include Modes of Learning Whitehead s Metaphysics and the Stages of Education 2012 by George Allan The Adventure of Education Process Philosophers on Learning Teaching and Research 2009 by Adam Scarfe and Educating for an Ecological Civilization Interdisciplinary Experiential and Relational Learning 2017 edited by Marcus Ford and Stephen Rowe Beyond the Modern University Toward a Constructive Postmodern University 2002 is another text that explores the importance of Whitehead s metaphysics for thinking about higher education Business administration edit Whitehead has had some influence on philosophy of business administration and organizational theory This has led in part to a focus on identifying and investigating the effect of temporal events as opposed to static things within organizations through an organization studies discourse that accommodates a variety of weak and strong process perspectives from a number of philosophers 161 One of the leading figures having an explicitly Whiteheadian and panexperientialist stance towards management is Mark Dibben 162 who works in what he calls applied process thought to articulate a philosophy of management and business administration as part of a wider examination of the social sciences through the lens of process metaphysics For Dibben this allows a comprehensive exploration of life as perpetually active experiencing as opposed to occasional and thoroughly passive happening 163 Dibben has published two books on applied process thought Applied Process Thought I Initial Explorations in Theory and Research 2008 and Applied Process Thought II Following a Trail Ablaze 2009 as well as other papers in this vein in the fields of philosophy of management and business ethics 164 Margaret Stout and Carrie M Staton have also written recently on the mutual influence of Whitehead and Mary Parker Follett a pioneer in the fields of organizational theory and organizational behavior Stout and Staton see both Whitehead and Follett as sharing an ontology that understands becoming as a relational process difference as being related yet unique and the purpose of becoming as harmonizing difference 165 This connection is further analyzed by Stout and Jeannine M Love in Integrative Process Follettian Thinking from Ontology to Administration 166 Political views editWhitehead s political views sometimes appear to be libertarian without the label He wrote Now the intercourse between individuals and between social groups takes one of two forms force or persuasion Commerce is the great example of intercourse by way of persuasion War slavery and governmental compulsion exemplify the reign of force 167 On the other hand many Whitehead scholars read his work as providing a philosophical foundation for the social liberalism of the New Liberal movement that was prominent throughout Whitehead s adult life Morris wrote that there is good reason for claiming that Whitehead shared the social and political ideals of the new liberals 168 However Whitehead s comment addresses means and methods not ideals or pretexts or excuses Primary works editBooks written by Whitehead listed by date of publication A Treatise on Universal Algebra Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1898 ISBN 1 4297 0032 7 Available online at http projecteuclid org euclid chmm 1263316509 Archived 3 September 2014 at the Wayback Machine The Axioms of Descriptive Geometry Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1907 169 Available online at http quod lib umich edu u umhistmath ABN2643 0001 001 with Bertrand Russell Principia Mathematica Volume I Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1910 Available online at http www hti umich edu cgi b bib bibperm q1 AAT3201 0001 001 Vol 1 to 56 is available as a CUP paperback 170 171 172 An Introduction to Mathematics Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1911 Available online at http quod lib umich edu u umhistmath AAW5995 0001 001 Vol 56 of the Great Books of the Western World series with Bertrand Russell Principia Mathematica Volume II Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1912 Available online at http www hti umich edu cgi b bib bibperm q1 AAT3201 0002 001 with Bertrand Russell Principia Mathematica Volume III Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1913 Available online at http www hti umich edu cgi b bib bibperm q1 AAT3201 0003 001 The Organization of Thought Educational and Scientific London Williams amp Norgate 1917 Available online at https archive org details organisationofth00whit An Enquiry Concerning the Principles of Natural Knowledge Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1919 Available online at https archive org details enquiryconcernpr00whitrich The Concept of Nature Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1920 Based on the November 1919 Tarner Lectures delivered at Trinity College Available online at https archive org details cu31924012068593 The Principle of Relativity with Applications to Physical Science Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1922 Available online at https archive org details theprincipleofre00whituoft Science and the Modern World New York Macmillan Company 1925 Vol 55 of the Great Books of the Western World series Religion in the Making New York Macmillan Company 1926 Based on the 1926 Lowell Lectures Symbolism Its Meaning and Effect New York Macmillan Co 1927 Based on the 1927 Barbour Page Lectures delivered at the University of Virginia Process and Reality An Essay in Cosmology New York Macmillan Company 1929 Based on the 1927 28 Gifford Lectures delivered at the University of Edinburgh The 1978 Free Press corrected edition edited by David Ray Griffin and Donald W Sherburne corrects many errors in both the British and American editions and also provides a comprehensive index The Aims of Education and Other Essays New York Macmillan Company 1929 The Function of Reason Princeton Princeton University Press 1929 Based on the March 1929 Louis Clark Vanuxem Foundation Lectures delivered at Princeton University Adventures of Ideas New York Macmillan Company 1933 Also published by Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1933 Nature and Life Chicago University of Chicago Press 1934 Modes of Thought New York MacMillan Company 1938 Mathematics and the Good In The Philosophy of Alfred North Whitehead edited by Paul Arthur Schilpp 666 681 Evanston and Chicago Northwestern University Press 1941 Immortality In The Philosophy of Alfred North Whitehead edited by Paul Arthur Schilpp 682 700 Evanston and Chicago Northwestern University Press 1941 Essays in Science and Philosophy London Philosophical Library 1947 with Allison Heartz Johnson ed The Wit and Wisdom of Whitehead Boston Beacon Press 1948 In addition the Whitehead Research Project of the Center for Process Studies is currently working on a critical edition of Whitehead s writings which is set to include notes taken by Whitehead s students during his Harvard classes correspondence and corrected editions of his books 34 Paul A Bogaard and Jason Bell eds The Harvard Lectures of Alfred North Whitehead 1924 1925 Philosophical Presuppositions of Science Cambridge Cambridge University Press 2017 See also editGreat refusal Pancreativism Relationalism Speculative realism Whitehead s point free geometry A N Whitehead at Sherborne SchoolReferences edit a b Alfred North Whitehead at the Mathematics Genealogy Project Griffin David Ray 2001 Reenchantment without Supernaturalism A Process Philosophy of Religion Ithaca Cornell University Press vii a b The Modern Library s Top 100 Nonfiction Books of the Century 30 April 1999 The New York Times Accessed 21 November 2013 a b C Robert Mesle Process Relational Philosophy An Introduction to Alfred North Whitehead West Conshohocken Templeton Foundation Press 2009 9 a b c d e Philip Rose On Whitehead Belmont Wadsworth 2002 preface Cobb John B Jr Schwartz Wm Andrew 2018 Putting Philosophy to Work Toward an Ecological Civilization Process Century Press ISBN 978 1 940447 33 9 a b c Victor Lowe Alfred North Whitehead The Man and his Work Vol I Baltimore The Johns Hopkins Press 1985 2 a b Lowe Victor 1985 Alfred North Whitehead The Man and his Work Vol I Baltimore The Johns Hopkins Press 13 Olympedia Walter Buckmaster Griffin Ed Nicholas 1992 The Selected Letters of Bertrand Russell Volume 1 pp 215 217 New York Houghton Miffin ISBN 0 395 56269 4 Britannica The Editors of Encyclopaedia Bloomsbury group Encyclopedia Britannica 20 Feb 2021 https www britannica com topic Bloomsbury group Accessed 29 May 2022 Alfred North Whitehead 1861 1947 The Old Shirburnian Society 10 October 2020 Archived from the original on 7 November 2021 Retrieved 8 November 2021 Victor Lowe Alfred North Whitehead The Man and his Work Vol I Baltimore The Johns Hopkins Press 1985 54 60 a b Lowe Victor 1985 Alfred North Whitehead The Man and his Work Vol I Baltimore The Johns Hopkins Press 63 Victor Lowe Alfred North Whitehead The Man and his Work Vol I Baltimore The Johns Hopkins Press 1985 72 Victor Lowe Alfred North Whitehead The Man and his Work Vol I Baltimore The Johns Hopkins Press 1985 103 109 On Whitehead the mathematician and logician see Ivor Grattan Guinness The Search for Mathematical Roots 1870 1940 Logics Set Theories and the Foundations of Mathematics from Cantor through Russell to Godel Princeton Princeton University Press 2000 and Quine s chapter in Paul Schilpp The Philosophy of Alfred North Whitehead New York Tudor Publishing Company 1941 125 163 Victor Lowe Alfred North Whitehead The Man and his Work Vol I Baltimore The Johns Hopkins Press 1985 112 Victor Lowe Alfred North Whitehead The Man and his Work Vol II Baltimore The Johns Hopkins Press 1990 2 Victor Lowe Alfred North Whitehead The Man and his Work Vol II Baltimore The Johns Hopkins Press 1990 6 8 a b Victor Lowe Alfred North Whitehead The Man and his Work Vol II Baltimore The Johns Hopkins Press 1990 26 27 Victor Lowe Alfred North Whitehead The Man and his Work Vol II Baltimore The Johns Hopkins Press 1990 72 74 Victor Lowe Alfred North Whitehead The Man and his Work Vol II Baltimore The Johns Hopkins Press 1990 127 a b Victor Lowe Alfred North Whitehead The Man and his Work Vol II Baltimore The Johns Hopkins Press 1990 132 Victor Lowe Alfred North Whitehead The Man and his Work Vol I Baltimore The Johns Hopkins Press 1985 3 4 Alfred North Whitehead American Academy of Arts amp Sciences 9 February 2023 Retrieved 11 August 2023 APS Member History search amphilsoc org Retrieved 11 August 2023 Victor Lowe Alfred North Whitehead The Man and his Work Vol II Baltimore The Johns Hopkins Press 1990 34 Valley Heritage booklet Fyfield and West Overton Parish Council 1987 Archived from the original on 25 November 2020 Retrieved 29 November 2020 Lowe Victor 31 March 1974 Whitehead s 1911 Criticism of The Problems of Philosophy Journal of Bertrand Russell Studies 13 1 28 Victor Lowe Alfred North Whitehead The Man and his Work Vol II Baltimore The Johns Hopkins Press 1990 262 Victor Lowe Alfred North Whitehead The Man and his Work Vols I amp II Baltimore The Johns Hopkins Press 1985 amp 1990 a b Victor Lowe Alfred North Whitehead The Man and his Work Vol I Baltimore The Johns Hopkins Press 1985 7 a b Critical Edition of Whitehead last modified 16 July 2013 Whitehead Research Project accessed 21 November 2013 http whiteheadresearch org research cew press release shtml Archived 9 December 2013 at the Wayback Machine The Edinburgh Critical Edition of the Complete Works of Alfred North Whitehead Edinburgh University Press Books Retrieved 22 May 2018 a b Christoph Wassermann The Relevance of An Introduction to Mathematics to Whitehead s Philosophy Process Studies 17 1988 181 Available online at The Relevance of An Introduction to Mathematics to Whitehead s Philosophy Archived from the original on 3 December 2013 Retrieved 21 November 2013 Whitehead Alfred North last modified 8 May 2007 Gary L Herstein Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy accessed 21 November 2013 http www iep utm edu whitehed a b c George Gratzer Universal Algebra Princeton Van Nostrand Co Inc 1968 v Cf Michel Weber and Will Desmond eds Handbook of Whiteheadian Process Thought Frankfurt Lancaster Ontos Verlag Process Thought X1 amp X2 2008 and Ronny Desmet amp Michel Weber edited by Whitehead The Algebra of Metaphysics Applied Process Metaphysics Summer Institute Memorandum Louvain la Neuve Les Editions Chromatika 2010 Alexander Macfarlane Review of A Treatise on Universal Algebra Science 9 1899 325 G B Mathews 1898 A Treatise on Universal Algebra from Nature 58 385 to 7 1504 Victor Lowe Alfred North Whitehead The Man and his Work Vol I Baltimore The Johns Hopkins Press 1985 190 191 Alfred North Whitehead A Treatise on Universal Algebra Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1898 v Available online at http projecteuclid org DPubS Repository 1 0 Disseminate handle euclid chmm 1263316510 amp view body amp content type pdf 1 Barron Brainerd Review of Universal Algebra by P M Cohn American Mathematical Monthly 74 1967 878 880 Alfred North Whitehead Principia Mathematica Volume 2 Second Edition Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1950 83 a b Hal Hellman Great Feuds in Mathematics Ten of the Liveliest Disputes Ever Hoboken John Wiley amp Sons 2006 Available online at https books google com books id ft8bEGf OOcC amp pg PT12 Principia Mathematica last modified 3 December 2013 Andrew David Irvine ed Edward N Zalta The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Winter 2013 Edition accessed 5 December 2013 http plato stanford edu entries principia mathematica HOPM Stephen Cole Kleene Mathematical Logic New York Wiley 1967 250 Principia Mathematica Celebrates 100 Years last modified 22 December 2010 NPR accessed 21 November 2013 https www npr org 2010 12 22 132265870 Principia Mathematica Celebrates 100 Years Principia Mathematica last modified 3 December 2013 Andrew David Irvine ed Edward N Zalta The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Winter 2013 Edition accessed 5 December 2013 http plato stanford edu entries principia mathematica SOPM Alfred North Whitehead An Introduction to Mathematics New York Henry Holt and Company 1911 8 Christoph Wassermann The Relevance of An Introduction to Mathematics to Whitehead s Philosophy Process Studies 17 1988 181 182 Available online at The Relevance of An Introduction to Mathematics to Whitehead s Philosophy Archived from the original on 3 December 2013 Retrieved 21 November 2013 Christoph Wassermann The Relevance of An Introduction to Mathematics to Whitehead s Philosophy Process Studies 17 1988 182 Available online at The Relevance of An Introduction to Mathematics to Whitehead s Philosophy Archived from the original on 3 December 2013 Retrieved 21 November 2013 Committee To Inquire into the Position of Classics in the Educational System of the United Kingdom Report of the Committee Appointed by the Prime Minister to Inquire into the Position of Classics in the Educational System of the United Kingdom London His Majesty s Stationery Office 1921 1 282 Available online at https archive org details reportofcommitt00grea a b Alfred North Whitehead The Aims of Education and Other Essays New York The Free Press 1967 1 2 Alfred North Whitehead The Aims of Education and Other Essays New York The Free Press 1967 2 a b c d e f China embraces Alfred North Whitehead last modified 10 December 2008 Douglas Todd The Vancouver Sun accessed 5 December 2013 http blogs vancouversun com 2008 12 10 china embraces alfred north whitehead Archived 10 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine Alfred North Whitehead The Aims of Education and Other Essays New York The Free Press 1967 13 Alfred North Whitehead The Aims of Education and Other Essays New York The Free Press 1967 93 Alfred North Whitehead The Aims of Education and Other Essays New York The Free Press 1967 98 An Iconic College View Harvard University circa 1900 Richard Rummell 1848 1924 last modified 6 July 2011 Graham Arader accessed 5 December 2013 http grahamarader blogspot com 2011 07 iconic college view harvard university html Alfred North Whitehead to Bertrand Russell 13 February 1895 Bertrand Russell Archives Archives and Research Collections McMaster Library McMaster University Hamilton Ontario Canada A J Ayer Language Truth and Logic New York Penguin 1971 22 George P Conger Whitehead lecture notes Seminary in Logic Logical and Metaphysical Problems 1927 Manuscripts and Archives Yale University Library Yale University New Haven Connecticut Alfred North Whitehead Process and Reality New York The Free Press 1978 4 Alfred North Whitehead Process and Reality New York The Free Press 1978 11 a b Alfred North Whitehead Science and the Modern World New York The Free Press 1967 17 a b c d Alfred North Whitehead Process and Reality New York The Free Press 1978 18 Victor Lowe Alfred North Whitehead The Man and his Work Vol II Baltimore The Johns Hopkins Press 1990 127 133 a b c Gary Dorrien The Making of American Liberal Theology Crisis Irony and Postmodernity 1950 2005 Louisville Westminster John Knox Press 2006 123 124 Victor Lowe Alfred North Whitehead The Man and his Work Vol II Baltimore The Johns Hopkins Press 1990 250 a b Gary Dorrien The Lure and Necessity of Process Theology CrossCurrents 58 2008 320 Henry Nelson Wieman A Philosophy of Religion The Journal of Religion 10 1930 137 Peter Simons Metaphysical systematics A lesson from Whitehead Erkenntnis 48 1998 378 a b Isabelle Stengers Thinking with Whitehead A Free and Wild Creation of Concepts trans Michael Chase Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press 2011 6 David Ray Griffin Whitehead s Radically Different Postmodern Philosophy An Argument for Its Contemporary Relevance Albany State University of New York Press 2007 viii ix Alfred North Whitehead Process and Reality New York The Free Press 1978 208 Alfred North Whitehead Science and the Modern World New York The Free Press 1967 52 55 Alfred North Whitehead Process and Reality New York The Free Press 1978 34 35 Alfred North Whitehead Process and Reality New York The Free Press 1978 34 Alfred North Whitehead Science and the Modern World New York The Free Press 1967 54 55 Alfred North Whitehead Process and Reality New York The Free Press 1978 183 Alfred North Whitehead Process and Reality New York The Free Press 1978 xi Alfred North Whitehead Symbolism Its Meaning and Effect New York Fordham University Press 1985 38 39 Louise R Heath Notes on Whitehead s Philosophy 3b Philosophical Presuppositions of Science 27 September 1924 Whitehead Research Project Center for Process Studies Claremont California Alfred North Whitehead Symbolism Its Meaning and Effect New York Fordham University Press 1985 26 a b Alfred North Whitehead Symbolism Its Meaning and Effect New York Fordham University Press 1985 39 Alfred North Whitehead Process and Reality New York The Free Press 1978 19 Alfred North Whitehead Process and Reality New York The Free Press 1978 21 a b Alfred North Whitehead Process and Reality New York The Free Press 1978 23 Charles Hartshorne Freedom Requires Indeterminism and Universal Causality The Journal of Philosophy 55 1958 794 John B Cobb A Christian Natural Theology Louisville Westminster John Knox Press 1978 52 a b c David Ray Griffin Reenchantment Without Supernaturalism A Process Philosophy of Religion Ithaca Cornell University Press 2001 79 Alfred North Whitehead Symbolism Its Meaning and Effect New York Fordham University Press 1985 44 Alfred North Whitehead Symbolism Its Meaning and Effect New York Fordham University Press 1985 24 Alfred North Whitehead Symbolism Its Meaning and Effect New York Fordham University Press 1985 3 Alfred North Whitehead Symbolism Its Meaning and Effect New York Fordham University Press 1985 4 Alfred North Whitehead Symbolism Its Meaning and Effect New York Fordham University Press 1985 49 Alfred North Whitehead The Function of Reason Boston Beacon Press 1958 4 Alfred North Whitehead The Function of Reason Boston Beacon Press 1958 4 5 Alfred North Whitehead The Function of Reason Boston Beacon Press 1958 8 David Ray Griffin Reenchantment Without Supernaturalism A Process Philosophy of Religion Ithaca Cornell University Press 2001 97 a b Alfred North Whitehead Process and Reality New York The Free Press 1978 xii Roland Faber God as Poet of the World Exploring Process Theologies Louisville Westminster John Knox Press 2008 chapters 4 5 Alfred North Whitehead Process and Reality New York The Free Press 1978 342 a b Alfred North Whitehead Process and Reality New York The Free Press 1978 343 a b Alfred North Whitehead Process and Reality New York The Free Press 1978 207 Alfred North Whitehead Process and Reality New York The Free Press 1978 345 Alfred North Whitehead Process and Reality New York The Free Press 1978 344 Alfred North Whitehead Process and Reality New York The Free Press 1978 346 Alfred North Whitehead Process and Reality New York The Free Press 1978 347 348 351 a b Bruce G Epperly Process Theology A Guide for the Perplexed New York T amp T Clark 2011 12 Roland Faber God as Poet of the World Exploring Process Theologies Louisville Westminster John Knox Press 2008 chapter 1 Alfred North Whitehead Religion in the Making New York Fordham University Press 1996 15 16 Alfred North Whitehead Religion in the Making New York Fordham University Press 1996 16 17 Alfred North Whitehead Religion in the Making New York Fordham University Press 1996 15 Alfred North Whitehead Religion in the Making New York Fordham University Press 1996 18 Alfred North Whitehead Religion in the Making New York Fordham University Press 1996 59 Alfred North Whitehead Religion in the Making New York Fordham University Press 1996 60 Unraveling the Seven Riddles of the Universe Hamilton Books 2022 ISBN 978 0 7618 7290 0 Alfred North Whitehead Process and Reality New York The Free Press 1978 16 Alfred North Whitehead Process and Reality New York The Free Press 1978 15 George Garin Theistic Evolution in a Sacramental Universe The Theology of William Temple Against the Background of Process Thinkers Whitehead Alexander Etc Protestant University Press Kinshasa The Congo 1991 Gary Dorrien The Lure and Necessity of Process Theology CrossCurrents 58 2008 321 322 David Ray Griffin John B Cobb Jr A Theological Biography in Theology and the University Essays in Honor of John B Cobb Jr ed David Ray Griffin and Joseph C Hough Jr Albany State University of New York Press 1991 229 Gary Dorrien The Lure and Necessity of Process Theology CrossCurrents 58 2008 334 a b Victor Lowe Alfred North Whitehead The Man and his Work Vol I Baltimore The Johns Hopkins Press 1985 5 About Us www postmodernchina org The Institute for the Postmodern Development of China Archived from the original on 2 December 2013 Retrieved 21 November 2013 Whitehead Alfred North last modified 8 May 2007 Gary L Herstein Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy accessed 20 July 2015 http www iep utm edu whitehed Quine Biography last modified October 2003 John J O Connor and Edmund F Robertson MacTutor History of Mathematics archive University of St Andrews accessed 5 December 2013 http www history mcs st andrews ac uk Biographies Quine html John Searle Contemporary Philosophy in the United States in N Bunnin and E P Tsui James eds The Blackwell Companion to Philosophy 2nd ed Oxford Blackwell 2003 1 Gilles Deleuze The Fold Leibniz and the Baroque trans Tom Conley Minneapolis University of Minnesota Press 1993 76 Bruno Latour preface to Thinking with Whitehead A Free and Wild Creation of Concepts by Isabelle Stengers trans Michael Chase Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press 2011 x Alfred North Whitehead last modified 10 March 2015 Andrew David Irvine ed Edward N Zalta The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Spring 2015 Edition accessed 20 July 2015 http plato stanford edu entries whitehead WI Alfred North Whitehead last modified 1 October 2013 Andrew David Irvine ed Edward N Zalta The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Winter 2013 Edition accessed 21 November 2013 http plato stanford edu entries whitehead WI Charles Hartshorne A Christian Natural Theology 2nd edition Louisville Westminster John Knox Press 2007 112 Alfred North Whitehead Process and Reality New York The Free Press 1978 351 Charles Hartshorne The Divine Relativity A Social Conception of God New Haven Yale University Press 1964 42 43 See part IV of Mesle s Process Theology A Basic Introduction St Louis Chalice Press 1993 Search Results For SUNY series in Constructive Postmodern Thought Sunypress edu accessed 5 December 2013 http www sunypress edu Searchadv aspx IsSubmit true amp CategoryID 6899 Archived 19 November 2013 at the Wayback Machine Richard Rorty last modified 16 June 2007 Bjorn Ramberg ed Edward N Zalta The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Spring 2009 Edition accessed 5 December 2013 http plato stanford edu archives spr2009 entries rorty a b See David Ray Griffin Physics and the Ultimate Significance of Time Albany State University of New York Press 1986 Charles Birch Why Aren t We Zombies Neo Darwinism and Process Thought in Back to Darwin A Richer Account of Evolution ed John B Cobb Jr Grand Rapids William B Eerdmans Publishing Company 2008 252 Chandrasekhar S 1979 Einstein and general relativity Am J Phys 47 212 217 Will C M 1981 1993 Theory and Experiment in Gravitational Physics revised edition Cambridge University Press Cambridge UK ISBN 978 0 521 43973 2 p 139 Yutaka Tanaka The Comparison between Whitehead s and Einstein s Theories of Relativity Historia Scientiarum 32 1987 Timothy E Eastman and Hank Keeton eds Physics and Whitehead Quantum Process and Experience Albany State University of New York Press 2004 Michael Epperson Quantum Mechanics and the Philosophy of Alfred North Whitehead New York Fordham University Press 2004 Michael Epperson amp Elias Zafiris Foundations of Relational Realism A Topological Approach to Quantum Mechanics and the Philosophy of Nature New York Rowman amp Littlefield 2013 Roland Faber God as Poet of the World Exploring Process Theologies Louisville Westminster John Knox Press 2008 35 C Robert Mesle Process Theology St Louis Chalice Press 1993 126 Gary Dorrien The Lure and Necessity of Process Theology CrossCurrents 58 2008 316 Monica Coleman Nancy R Howell and Helene Tallon Russell Creating Women s Theology A Movement Engaging Process Thought Wipf and Stock 2011 13 History of Environmental Ethics for the Novice last modified 15 March 2011 The Center for Environmental Philosophy accessed 21 November 2013 http www cep unt edu novice html John B Cobb Jr Sustaining the Common Good A Christian Perspective on the Global Economy Cleveland The Pilgrim Press 1994 back cover See Process Papers a publication of the Association for Process Philosophy of Education Volume 1 published in 1996 Volume 11 final volume published in 2008 Daniel C Jordan and Raymond P Shepard The Philosophy of the ANISA Model Process Papers 6 38 39 FEELS A Constructive Postmodern Approach To Curriculum and Education Xie Bangxiu JesusJazzBuddhism org accessed 5 December 2013 http www jesusjazzbuddhism org feels html Archived 2 November 2013 at the Wayback Machine International Conferences University of Saskatchewan University of Saskatchewan accessed 5 December 2013 https www usask ca usppru international conferences php Archived 7 May 2016 at the Wayback Machine Dr Howard Woodhouse Archived 7 May 2016 at the Wayback Machine University of Saskatchewan accessed 5 December 2013 Tor Hernes A Process Theory of Organization Oxford University Press 2014 Mark R Dibben and John B Cobb Jr Special Focus Process Thought and Organization Studies in Process Studies 32 2003 Mark Dibben School of Management University of Tasmania Australia last modified 16 July 2013 University of Tasmania accessed 21 November 2013 http www utas edu au business and economics people profiles accounting Mark Dibben Archived 13 December 2013 at the Wayback Machine Mark Dibben Exploring the Processual Nature of Trust and Cooperation in Organisations A Whiteheadian Analysis in Philosophy of Management 4 2004 25 39 Mark Dibben Organisations and Organising Understanding and Applying Whitehead s Processual Account in Philosophy of Management 7 2009 Cristina Neesham and Mark Dibben The Social Value of Business Lessons from Political Economy and Process Philosophy in Applied Ethics Remembering Patrick Primeaux Research in Ethical Issues in Organizations Volume 8 ed Michael Schwartz and Howard Harris Emerald Group Publishing Limited 2012 63 83 Margaret Stout amp Carrie M Staton The Ontology of Process Philosophy in Follett s Administrative Theory Administrative Theory amp Praxis 33 2011 268 Margaret Stout amp Jeannine M Love Integrative Process Follettian Thinking from Ontology to Administration Anoka MN Process Century Press 2015 Adventures of Ideas p 105 1933 edition p 83 1967 ed Morris Randall C Journal of the History of Ideas 51 75 92 p 92 F W Owens Review The Axioms of Descriptive Geometry by A N Whitehead Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society 15 1909 465 466 Available online at http www ams org journals bull 1909 15 09 S0002 9904 1909 01815 4 S0002 9904 1909 01815 4 pdf James Byrnie Shaw Review Principia Mathematica by A N Whitehead and B Russell Vol I 1910 Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society 18 1912 386 411 Available online at http www ams org journals bull 1912 18 08 S0002 9904 1912 02233 4 S0002 9904 1912 02233 4 pdf Benjamin Abram Bernstein Review Principia Mathematica by A N Whitehead and B Russell Vol I Second Edition 1925 Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society 32 1926 711 713 Available online at http www ams org journals bull 1926 32 06 S0002 9904 1926 04306 8 S0002 9904 1926 04306 8 pdf Alonzo Church Review Principia Mathematica by A N Whitehead and B Russell Volumes II and III Second Edition 1927 Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society 34 1928 237 240 Available online at http www ams org journals bull 1928 34 02 S0002 9904 1928 04525 1 S0002 9904 1928 04525 1 pdf Further reading editFor the most comprehensive list of resources related to Whitehead see the thematic bibliography of the Center for Process Studies Casati Roberto and Achille C Varzi Parts and Places The Structures of Spatial Representation Cambridge Massachusetts The MIT Press 1999 Ford Lewis Emergence of Whitehead s Metaphysics 1925 1929 Albany State University of New York Press 1985 Hartshorne Charles Whitehead s Philosophy Selected Essays 1935 1970 Lincoln and London University of Nebraska Press 1972 Henning Brian G The Ethics of Creativity Beauty Morality and Nature in a Processive Cosmos Pittsburgh University of Pittsburgh Press 2005 Holtz Harald and Ernest Wolf Gazo eds Whitehead und der Prozessbegriff Whitehead and The Idea of Process Proceedings of the First International Whitehead Symposion Verlag Karl Alber Freiburg i B Munchen 1984 ISBN 3 495 47517 6 Jones Judith A Intensity An Essay in Whiteheadian Ontology Nashville Vanderbilt University Press 1998 Kraus Elizabeth M The Metaphysics of Experience New York Fordham University Press 1979 Malik Charles H The Systems of Whitehead s Metaphysics Zouq Mosbeh Lebanon Notre Dame Louaize 2016 436 pp McDaniel Jay What is Process Thought Seven Answers to Seven Questions Claremont P amp F Press 2008 McHenry Leemon The Event Universe The Revisionary Metaphysics of Alfred North Whitehead Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press 2015 Nobo Jorge L Whitehead s Metaphysics of Extension and Solidarity Albany State University of New York Press 1986 Price Lucien Dialogues of Alfred North Whitehead New York Mentor Books 1956 Quine Willard Van Orman Whitehead and the rise of modern logic In The Philosophy of Alfred North Whitehead edited by Paul Arthur Schilpp 125 163 Evanston and Chicago Northwestern University Press 1941 Rapp Friedrich and Reiner Wiehl eds Whiteheads Metaphysik der Kreativitat Internationales Whitehead Symposium Bad Homburg 1983 Verlag Karl Alber Freiburg i B Munchen 1986 ISBN 3 495 47612 1 Rescher Nicholas Process Metaphysics Albany State University of New York Press 1995 Rescher Nicholas Process Philosophy A Survey of Basic Issues Pittsburgh University of Pittsburgh Press 2001 Roelker Nancy Lyman An Application Of Whitehead s Concepts Of Conformity and Novelty to the Philosophy of History Unpublished dissertation 1940 Harvard University Held in John Hay Library s Special Collections at Brown University 1 Schilpp Paul Arthur ed The Philosophy of Alfred North Whitehead Evanston and Chicago Northwestern University Press 1941 Part of the Library of Living Philosophers series Siebers Johan The Method of Speculative Philosophy An Essay on the Foundations of Whitehead s Metaphysics Kassel Kassel University Press GmbH 2002 ISBN 3 933146 79 8 Smith Olav Bryant Myths of the Self Narrative Identity and Postmodern Metaphysics Lanham Lexington Books 2004 ISBN 0 7391 0843 3 It contains a section called Alfred North Whitehead Toward a More Fundamental Ontology that is an overview of Whitehead s metaphysics Weber Michel 1 Whitehead s Pancreativism The Basics Frankfurt Ontos Verlag 2006 Weber Michel Whitehead s Pancreativism Jamesian Applications Frankfurt Paris Ontos Verlag 2011 Weber Michel and Will Desmond eds Handbook of Whiteheadian Process Thought Frankfurt Lancaster Ontos Verlag 2008 Alan Van Wyk and Michel Weber eds Creativity and Its Discontents The Response to Whitehead s Process and Reality Frankfurt Lancaster Ontos Verlag 2009 Will Clifford Theory and Experiment in Gravitational Physics Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1993 External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Alfred North Whitehead nbsp Wikisource has original works by or about Alfred North Whitehead nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Alfred North Whitehead The Philosophy of Organism in Philosophy Now magazine An accessible summary of Alfred North Whitehead s philosophy Center for Process Studies in Claremont California A faculty research center of Claremont School of Theology in association with Claremont Graduate University The Center organizes conferences and events and publishes materials pertaining to Whitehead and process thought It also maintains extensive Whitehead related bibliographies Summary of Whitehead s Philosophy A Brief Introduction to Whitehead s Metaphysics Society for the Study of Process Philosophies a scholarly society that holds periodic meetings in conjunction with each of the divisional meetings of the American Philosophical Association as well as at the annual meeting of the Society for the Advancement of American Philosophy Alfred North Whitehead in the MacTutor History of Mathematics archive by John J O Connor and Edmund F Robertson Alfred North Whitehead New World Philosopher at the Harvard Square Library Jesus Jazz and Buddhism Process Thinking for a More Hospitable World What is Process Thought an introductory video series to process thought by Jay McDaniel Centre de philosophie pratique Chromatiques whiteheadiennes Whitehead s Principle of Relativity by John Lighton Synge on arXiv org Whitehead at Monoskop org with extensive bibliography Works by Alfred North Whitehead at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Alfred North Whitehead at Internet Archive Works by Alfred North Whitehead at LibriVox public domain audiobooks nbsp The Nancy Lyman Roelker papers Brown University John Hay Library Special Collections Box A Series 1 Box 2 List of contents at this link accessed 15 August 2023 https www riamco org render eadid US RPB ms2012 006 amp view all Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Alfred North Whitehead amp oldid 1223332049, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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