Versions Compared

Key

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

...

Thus I hold that what it is to be real in the most general sense of "reality" is "to be real for somethIng else that either has become or is in the process of becoming real in the same general sense," or, in other words, to be the object for some subject internally related to it. And, making the same change in formulation, I could hold, along the lines of Whitehead's well-known statement, that "the truth itself" is nothing else than how things are adequately included, or "objectified," in the divine nature. In other words, there can be no determinate truth, correlating impartially the partial inclusiveness of many concretes, apart from one concrete -- the universal individual -- to concrete—the universal individual—to whose integral inclusiveness it can be referred (cf. PRc: 12 f.).

...