Saturday, September 24, 2011

Neutrino and Whitehead

Last Tuesday, doing philosophy over rounds of tea and cookies, we considered K's suggestion that Whitehead's elaboration of the nature of an actual entity may primarily be a theory of causation, albeit not in the standard vocabulary of cause and effect. There was however a general discomfort over the use of anthropomorphic language such as 'feeling' to explain an ontology (of things, not all of which are human). I think Whitehead makes it sufficiently clear what he means by 'feeling', and the definition is by no means merely psychological (i.e., restricted to human psychology) even if it seems to carry that baggage. Feeling is the term used for the basic generic operation of passing from the objectivity of the data to the subjectivity of the actual entity in question (PR 83, 65). Whitehead may be a vitalist, but he is also a realist, celebrating the dynamic character of a plurality of things: apples, cinema, genomes, gnomes! For him, therefore, vitalism is not restricted to human beings or even living organisms; everything in the universe is living. Perhaps this is what Thales meant when/if he said 'all things are full of gods' and thought that magnets have soul. Even the seemingly static and lifeless have a life of their own, and are affected by their own histories, their environment and the inherent potentiality to become.

It remains to be seen how this position holds through subsequent readings.


However, to go back to the question of causeeffect, the hypothesis of the faster-than-light flight of Neutrino (ghostly subatomic particles) is both destabilizing and thrilling because: particles that move faster than light are essentially moving backwards in time, which could make the phrase cause and effect obsolete. How will actual entities moving faster than the speed of light affect other actual entities, their slower comrades?




The Persistence of Memory, Salvador Dali, 1931, Oil on canvas, 24 × 33 cm


Thursday, September 22, 2011

An Overview: The Actual Entity, Chapter One

Text: Whitehead, Alfred North and Donald W. Sherburne. 1981. A Key to Whitehead's Process and Reality. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
Process and Reality is Whitehead’s attempt at describing reality and this description contains ‘the becoming, the being and the relatedness of actual entities’ (p. 7), i.e. what a caterpillar is (being), what a caterpillar can be (becoming), and how a caterpillar can affect a white mulberry leaf (relation).

Immediately, one is curious as to what ‘actual entities’ are. Actual entities (where actual is used in the sense of ‘existent’) are the generically uniform, but specifically different, vital microcosmic units that compose reality — the building blocks (if blocks sounds too blocky to be palatable to Whitehead, let’s say processes) of Whitehead’s ontology. 

Given that actual entities are dynamic rather than static, what gives unity to each of them is called ‘concrescence’, the internal constitution of actual entities. What Whitehead calls the diversity of the many, must therefore be temporally diverse and yet successive. Concrescence is then nothing but the process that is to be understood as a unit of reality, a process that is striving towards ‘satisfaction’.

Whitehead’s actual entities seem like Leibniz’s monads, but they differ from them in so far as they are constantly in the process of becoming. Also, they are not windowless as in the case of Leibniz; in fact they are all windows, and in that sense every actual entity is a ‘mode of the process of feeling the world’ (p. 8).

Experience of the world from the available data (derived from the objectification of other actual occasion), then constitutes every actual entity. The transition of the objective data into subjectivity is termed as ‘feeling’. Feeling is the process of the absorption of the so-called ‘others’ of the universe, of transforming the external into a form of internality. 

An actual entity is a product of its interaction with various elements of the universe. Its being is constituted by what the universe is for it. It appropriates some of these elements, and excludes others. Whitehead’s cosmology is then absolutely relational, and the concrete and definite bonds of relatedness are called prehensions. A subject prehends a data by giving it a subjective form (subject, data and the subjective form then being three factors of prehension). Prehensions may be positive or negative, depending on whether the subject excludes or includes the datum. The case of inclusion is called feeling. An actual entity is the subject of feelings.

The initial datum, which we have been discussing, is nothing but another actual entity and the moment of its objectification occurs when it becomes a feeling for the subject. The feeling is constituted of five factors (p.12): (a) the subject which feels (b) the initial data which are to be felt (c) the elimination in virtue of negative prehensions (d) the objective datum which is felt (e) the subjective form, which is how that subject feels the objective datum.

The politics of actual entities governs how one entity will be objectified for the other, i.e. how much power it holds over the other. Feelings are the manner in which elements of nature immortalize themselves.

Every actual entity has a point of termination which is concomitant with the attainment of what Whitehead calls satisfaction. When an actual entity has successfully established a concrete relationship with every other entity in the universe, either positively or negatively, it is satisfied and complete. This completing is also a termination of the process. In every phase of the process of concrescence, something new is added to the process until it is completely satisfied. This integration is essential to the character of actual entities, and there is a telos towards which they move — the final cause being a complete determination, a definiteness. To attain this definiteness, completeness and satisfaction is to become objectively immortal. Now, even though its own existence has evaporated, the actual entity can still affect other entities, and showcase its power.

What is central to the system of Whitehead, is the relatedness of actualities. Things that have seemingly perished, are absorbed into the living and that is how reality continues to become. Mr Caterpillar is immortalized in becoming a butterfly. Each actual entity has a potentiality for process and must perfect itself. Once perfect, and satisfied, the entity seems to close-up. And yet, in spite of the dead, there is no real death for the satisfied entity is objectively immortal — a being beyond itself, for the future, potentiality. 

Wednesday, September 14, 2011

Reading Group: 20 September 2011

Next week we read Chapter 1: The Actual Entity from A Key to Whitehead's Process and Reality.
Date: 20 September, 2011 (Tuesday) 
Time: 2.00 pm 
Venue: Library, Department of Philosophy, University of Delhi


'Actual entities', also termed 'actual occasions', are the final real things of which the world is made up. There is no going behind actual entities to find anything more real. (A. N. Whitehead. 1978. Process and Reality. New York: Free Press. p. 18)



I showed my masterpiece to the grown-ups, and asked them whether the drawing frightened them. But they answered: Frighten? Why should any one be frightened by a hat? My drawing was not a picture of a hat. It was a picture of a boa constrictor digesting an elephant. But since the grown-ups were not able to understand it, I made another drawing: I drew the inside of a boa constrictor, so that the grown-ups could see it clearly. They always need to have things explained. My drawing number two looked like this.



[Antoine de Saint-Exupéry, The Little Prince]




Monday, September 12, 2011

Process and Reality: Course


Primary Text: Whitehead, Alfred North and Donald W. Sherburne. 1981. A Key to Whitehead's Process and Reality. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

Schedule (tentative): September to November

Chapter 1: The Actual Entity - 20.09.2011                       
Chapter 2: The Formative Elements - 27.09.2011                       
Chapter 3: The Phases of Concrescence - 11.10.2011; 18.10.2011                                           
Chapter 4: Nexus and the Macrocosmic - 25.10.2011                       
Chapter 5: Perception - 01.11.2011                       
Chapter 6: Whitehead and Other Philosophers - 08.11.2011; 15.11.2011                      
Chapter 7: God and the World - 22.11.2011                       
Chapter 8: In Defense of Speculative Philosophy - 29.11.2011




Thursday, September 8, 2011

Reading Group: 13 September 2011

The proposed reading for next week's discussion is Chapter 13: Requisites for Social Change (pp. 192-208) from A. N. Whitehead's Science and the Modern World.

Date: 13 September, 2011 (Tuesday) 
Time: 2.30 pm 
Venue: Library, Department of Philosophy, University of Delhi




2001: A Space Odyssey and Samsung-Apple patent war!
What seems like a technological fiction at one moment in history, transforms into the actual, concrete and ‘real’ in no time. Now we talk of space elevators and Domino's Pizza on moon.

Monday, September 5, 2011

Reading Group: 6 September 2011

This is to unveil the Philosophy Reading Group, New Delhi. This week we discuss Chapter 7: Relativity (pp. 115-130) from A. N. Whitehead's Science and the Modern World.

Date: 6 September, 2011 (Tuesday)
Time: 2.00 pm
Venue: Library, Department of Philosophy, University of Delhi

All are invited.







The rabbit, at rest. Or is it?