- Jan 2024
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it doesn't matter how good it is they just refuse to look at it you know i had argument daniel dennett two three years ago we were at a conference and and i said you know what about a public debate
for - adjacency - Rupert Sheldrake - Daniel Dennett - Michael Levin
adjacency - between - Rupert Sheldrake - Daniel Dennett - Michael Levin - adjacency statement - 6 degrees of separation between - Rupert Sheldrake - Daniel Dennett - Michael Levin - Rupert met Daniel and challenged him to a debate, which Daniel flatly refused. - Daniel has coauthored paper with Michael Levin - Michael's ideas adopted from William James's definition of intelligence parallels Sheldrake's ideas of future to past trajectory of mental causation
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the epiphany philosophers
for - The epiphany philosophers
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there's always a little bit of novelty with each new drop of experience and so 00:17:17 there's a kind of uh reality at its fundamental basis is a kind of evolving relationship among all of these white heads technical term again 00:17:30 actual occasions of experience
for - definition - actual occasion of experience - Whitehead - definition - society - Whitehead - Whitehead - process relational ontology - adjacency - Whitehead's philosophy - morphic resonance
definition - actual occasion of experience - Whitehead question - does Whitehead mean that reality itself is intrinsically evolutionary in nature and that it is constantly metamorphosizing? Is he making a claim similiar to Rupert Sheldrake's morphic resonance? Or we might say Sheldrake follows Whitehead
Explanation - Whitehead's Process Relational Ontology - Passage below is explanation of Whitehead's Process Relational Ontology
- There's always a little bit of novelty with each new drop of experience and so
- There's a kind of reality
- At its fundamental basis is a kind of evolving relationship among all of these
- Whitehead's technical term again actual occasions of experience and
- as they co-evolve new habits emerge and these habits allow nature at various scales to form what Whitehead calls societies
- An example of a society of occasions or experiential events would be hydrogen atoms
- The first hydrogen atoms which emerge i think a few hundred thousand years after the big bang represent the growing together of what had been distinct processes
- protons and electrons
- to form this relationship that would be enduring which we call the hydrogen atom
- That's a society of actual occasions of experience that has formed
- and then hydrogen atoms continue this evolutionary process and collect together into the first stars
- and a star would be another example of a society of actual occasions of experience
- and as these new forms of social organization are emerging over the course of cosmic evolution
- what physics describes in terms of laws begin to take shape
- but again for Whitehead these are not eternally fixed laws imposed on the process of evolution that's unfolding
- Rather what we call laws
- emerge from out of that process itself
- as a result of the creative relationships being formed by these actual occasions of experience
- So rather than speaking of laws imposed from outside,
- Whitehead understands uh physical law
- in terms of the habits which emerge over the course of time
- as a result of relationships
- So for Whitehead, the task of philosophy is really
- to situate us in our experience
- His is a is an experiential metaphysics and
- as we've seen in our study of Goethe
- the idea here is not to look behind or beyond experience for something which might be the cause of experience
- The participatory approach to science that Goethe and Whitehead were both attempting to articulate
- requires that we stay with experience
- so metaphysics then
- is not an effort to explain away our common sense experience
- it's really the effort to bring logical coherence and consistency to experience
- to find the all-pervasive relationships among various aspects of experience
- so metaphysics then
- requires that we stay with experience
- And so science becomes the search for those relationships within experience
- rather than the search for some mechanical explanation which would be
- before,
- behind or
- beneath experience
- rather than the search for some mechanical explanation which would be
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- Dec 2023
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docdrop.org docdrop.org
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if we live in a 00:01:03 radically evolutionary Universe which we do then why should the laws of nature all be fixed in advance why can't they evolve like everything else
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for: Rupert Sheldrake, morphogenetic universe, evolving natural laws, question - morphogenetic universe
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question
- This is Sheldrake's key claim. Has there been any experiment setup to either validate or refute it yet?
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