Versions Compared

Key

  • This line was added.
  • This line was removed.
  • Formatting was changed.

...

I am struck by how naturally -and repeatedly -Whitehead speaks of an occasion of experience's being related to everything else. 

Wiki Markup
Thus he says, for example, that "the self-knowledge inherent in the bodily event is the knowledge of itself as a complex unity whose ingredients involve all \[_sic\[sid!_\]_ _reality beyond itself, restricted under the limitation of its pattern of aspects. Thus we know ourselves as a function of unification of a plurality of things which are other than ourselves"_ (_(SMW_:_ _216_ _f.). _\\

Wiki Markup
Or, again, he says, O"\[T\]he actual world is a community of epochal occasions. . . . The epochal occasions are the primary units of the actual community, and the community is composed of the units. But each unit has in its nature a reference to every \[_sic\[sid!_\]_ _other member of the community, so that each unit is a microcosm representing in itself the entire_ \[_sic\[sid!_\]_ _all-inclusive universe"_ (_(RM_: 91). _
\\

Wiki Markup
Or, yet again, he says, "Consciousness is only the last and greatest of such elements by which the selective character of the individual obscures the external totality \[_sic\[sid!_\]_ _from which it originates and which it embodies. An actual individual of such higher grade, has tru.cktruck with the totality \[sid_sic\!_\] of things by reason of its sheer actuality. . . . The task of philosophy is to recover the totality_ \[_sic\[sid!_\]_ _obscured by the selection" (PRe_PRc_: 15)._ _
\\

Wiki Markup
Finally, Whitehead says, "We experience more than we can analyse. For we experience the universe \[sid_sic\!_\], and we analyse in our consciousness a minute selection of its details" (_(MYMT_:_ _121)_. _
\\

Compare also the following statement of Hartshorne's: 

Wiki Markup
U"\[I\]t is only the distinct or fully conscious aspect of human experience which is finite; while the faint, slightly conscious background embraces all past time (else this phrase has no meaning), all the future, all space, and all possibilities. And thanks to this dim consciousness of infinity, we can conceive in principle an indefinite extension of the distinct consciousness which in us is finite. For the theist, the infinite we dimly feel is God in whom are distinct all the values that are distinct anywhere, and whose experience is the measure of the infinite variables as such, as well as the integration of all the finite values which happen to be anywhere actualized" (_(BH_: 122)._

8 August 2001