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On Whitehead's Understanding of the History of Philosophy

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"The baseless metaphysical doctrine of 'undifferentiated endurance' is a subordinate derivative from the misapprehension of the proper character of the extensive scheme."The current accounts of perception are the stronghold of modern metaphysical difficulties. They have their origin in the same misunderstanding which led to the incubus of the substance-quality categories. The Greeks looked at a stone, and perceived that it was grey. The Greeks were ignorant of modern physics; but modern philosophers discuss perception in terms of categories derived from the Greeks.
"The Greeks started from perception in its most elaborate and sophisticated form, namely, visual perception. In visual perception, crude percep,tion is most completely made over by the originative phases in experience, phases which are especially prominent in human experience" (117 [179]; S: 100
f.).

"Iis evident that 'perception in the mode of causal efficacy' is not that sort of perception which has received chief attention inthe philosophical tradition. Philosophers have disdained the information about the universe obtained through their visceral feelings and have concentrated on visual feelings" (121 [184]; S: 100).

"The exclusive dominance of the substance-quality metaphysics was enormously promoted by the logical bias of the medieval period, It was retarded by the study of Plato and Aristotle. These authors included the strains of thought which issued in this doctrine, but included them inconsistently mingled with other notions. The substance-quality metaphysics triumphed with exclusive dominance in Descartes' doctrines" (137 [209]; S: 141).

"Philosophy has always proceeded on the sound principle that its generalization must be based upon the primary elements in actual experience as starting points

Greek philosophy had recourse to the common forms of language to suggest its generalizations. It found the typical statement, 'That stone is grey'; and it evolved the generalization that the actual world can be conceived as a collection of primary substances qualified by universal qualities. Of course, this was not the only generalization evolved: Greek philosophy was subtle and multifonn, also it was not inflexibly consistent. But this general notion was always influencing thought, explicitly or implicitly" (158 [240]; S: 133).

"Traditional philosophy in its account of conscious perception has exclusively fixed attention on its pure conceptual side; and thereby has made difficulties for itself in the theory of knowledge. Locke, with his naive good sense, assumes that perception involves more than this conceptual side; though he fails to grasp the inconsistency of this assumption with the extreme subjectivist sensationalist doctrine. Physical feelings form the nonconceptual elements in our awareness of nature" (243 [371 f.]; 5: 153).

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"The real actual things that endure are all societies. They are not actual occ~ons. It is the mistake that has thwarted European metaphysics from the time of the Greeks, namely, to confuse societies with the completely real things which are the actual occasions" (262).
"Unfortunately the superior dOll1inance in consciousness of the contrast 'Appearance and Reality' has led metaphysicians from the Greeks onwards to make their start from the more superficial characteristic. This error has warped modern philosophy to a greater extent than ancient or medieval philosophy. The warping has taken the form of a consistent reliance q,upon sensationalist perception as the basis of all experiential activity. It has had the effect of decisively separating 'mind' from 'nature,' a lTIodern separation which found its first exemplification in Cartesian dualism. But it must be remembered that this lTIodern development was only the consistent carrying out of principles already present in the older European philosophy. It required two thousand years for the full implication of those principles to dawn upon men's minds in the seventeenth and the eighteenth centuries after Christ" (268 f.).  liThe justification of this procedure of lTIodern epistemology is twofold, and both of its branches ate based upon 111.istakes. The mistakes go back to the Greek philosophers. What is 1110dern is the exclusive reliance upon them" (289).