Category:Cosmobiological
Contextual Quote
"Organicism in the maximally broad sense, entails a commitment to the thesis that there is a metaphysical continuity between the natural world, life, and (human) mindedness. We are metaphysically continuous with the rest of the cosmos."
- Otto Paans [1]
Quotes
“I’ve become increasingly convinced that it is the growing immaterialism of modern society that is generating many of our most destructive political impulses and divisions. As we increasingly move into a digital virtual world, we create an immaterial environment where the abstract starts to seem more real than reality. In the past, our frequent engagement with the materiality of work and play had served to bring us back ‘down to earth’ where our shared human commonalities might bridge political divides. But now our identities are increasingly whatever we wish to pretend they are, and politics has become just another spectator sport that we play on the Internet. This, I would suggest, is the logical outcome of the post-modern cultural turn: an environment where immaterial ideas are everything and material reality is largely irrelevant. Any politics that does not recognise and counter this growing immateriality is, I be-lieve, unlikely to succeed in changing much of anything in the real World.”
- Timothy J. LeCain. [2]
"At at some point, through the emergence of modern science leading to the industrial and information revolutions, a gap developed — an ever-widening chasm between interior (cognition, awareness, emotion, value) and exterior (technological) capacities. The longstanding co-evolution of interiors and exteriors has dramatically broken down, and we no longer have a story of value equal to our power. This gap between the wisdom of a civilization and its power has greatly contributed to the existential challenges threatening the future of our social systems. The challenges that resulted in the failure of classical civilization
are now compounded through exponential technologies, which created a vital global civilization as well as existential risk. As scholars have pointed out, all civilizations generally fail due to the same set of causes, most of them rooted in some version of rivalrous, win/lose dynamics and unsustainable resource extraction. We have not yet solved for any of those causes. But if our civilization unravels it will be a failure of an entirely different order, a global failure."
- David J. Temple (CosmoErotic Humanism, draft review, Spring 2023)
Introduction
New section, created March 9, 2023, on the Organicist philosophical and metaphysical approach.
- Before the victory of the modernist mindset of separation and atomization, the Renaissance had attempted the construction of a participatory worldview, which Loren Goldner calls the Cosmobiological Tradition.
- Robert Hanna and Otto Paans, relate a similar trajectory of philosophy under the name of Organicism, and more specifically, Expressive Organicism. Prominent formulations of this philosophy come from philosophers like Edmund Husserl, Henri Bergson, but especially the process philosophy of Whitehead.
See: Robert Hanna on Defining and Defending Human Dignity
- We also include attention to non-European trends such as the Organic Marxism in China, which seeks a blend of both traditional and modern Chinese philosophy (i.e. Confucianism, Taoism but also Open Marxism) while including the kind of Marxism still functioning in China; Thinkers like Zhihe Wang, Huili He and Meijun Fan consider Whitehead's Process Philosophy to originate the fork of Constructive Postmodernism; alternatively, the Mesology of Augustin Berque, which is entirely a philosophy of relations, is inspired by trends in Japanese philosophy.
See: Second Enlightenment as an Aesthetic Enlightenment
- Given the orientation of this wiki towards peer to peer and commons-oriented relational logics, this section will also cover Relational philosophies.
As usual, listing in this wiki is done under a philosophy of pluralistic curation and does not mean an endorsement. However, we do feel, at this stage of our inquiry and mapping, that the Organicist tradition is the most compatible approach to a relational philosophy in harmony with our commons approach.
Essentially, what binds the elements of the organicist philosophy together is the critique of the Cartesian and mechanistic worldview, and the Eight_Core_Commitments_of_Mainstream_Contemporary_Western_Metaphysics.
Some additional approaches:
- Contrasting the Three Worldviews of Materialism, Immaterialism, and Idealism. Following the ideas of Pitirim Sorokin, John Uebersax insists on the difference between 'immaterialism', as the opposite of materialist approaches, and Idealism, which is an integration of the two. [3]
- The Center for World Philosophy and Religion is proposing the development of a CosmoErotic Humanism.
Related Sections:
- Integral Theory covers approaches that aim to integrate the subjective and objective aspects of reality: https://wiki.p2pfoundation.net/Category:Integral_Theory
- Our section on relationality, includes philosophical approach to relational dynamics, https://wiki.p2pfoundation.net/Category:Relational
- In our section on Civilizational Analysis, we pay attention to approaches that link societal evolution, to the evolution of human consciousness, including those that take seriously the data from the mystical tradition and connection to the 'ground of being', for example, the Sophiological tradition: https://wiki.p2pfoundation.net/Category:Civilizational_Analysis
Themes
D: From Human Dignity to Cosmic Dignitarianism
Please read: Robert Hanna on the Distinction Between Identitarianism and Dignitarianism; and: Solidarity vs Identitarian-Based Relationships
- the three basic values of contributory communities: Equipotentiality ; Equiplurality ; Equiprimacy
- The basic concepts of organicist Dignitarianism:
T: Thought-Shapers
- An introduction to the Theory of Thought-Shapers: "Thought-shapers are essentially non-conceptual contents that operate in the construction of mental imagery and thought by arbitrarily picking out some topological and/or processual properties, and subsequently exaggerating or diminishing their presence."
According to Robert Hanna and Otto Paans et al. "In our view, only organicism is a philosophically, scientifically, artistically, morally, and socio-politically fully adequate worldview, and therefore only its root metaphor—the organism — is a fully generative thought-shaper. As a consequence, the root metaphors associated with animism, mysticism, formism, mechanism, and contextualism are all, to some degree, constrictive thought-shapers; and the natural automaton or natural machine, the root metaphor associated with the mechanistic worldview, is the most constrictive."
See: Constrictive vs. Generative Thought-Shapers
See also for related material:
- Religious Ground Motives Behind Human Thought, by Herman Dooyeweerd (i.e. Transcendental Pragmatism)
- The Root Metaphor Theory in the Fourfold World Hypotheses Model of Stephen Pepper which distinguishes Formism (similarity), Mechanism (machine), Contextualism (historical act) and Organicism (living system)
T: Transculturalism
Arran Gare:
As opposed to the transculturalism ... assert their own cultural values against others. Transculturalism advances dialogue; multiculturalism precludes it." [4]
Bibliography
The Sophianic / Sophiological and Cosmobiological Traditions
A tradition that 'sacralizes' the material world.
- Michael Martin
- Intro video: Michael Martin's Introduction to the Sophiological Tradition: course with 8 youtube videos
- Intro article: [5] Boris Groys on the Feminine as Creative Principle]: excellent introductory article.
- Book: The Submerged Reality. Sophiology and the Turn to a Poetic Metaphysics. by Michael Martin. Angelico Press. [6]
- Vladimir Soloviev (also spelled as Solovyov)
- Nicholas Berdjaev
- Book: The End of Our Time
- Book: The Fate of Modern Man
- Sergei Bulgakov
- Book: Philosophy of Economy. The World as Household. Sergei Bulgakov. Yale University Press,
From the materialist tradition, a quite similar argument and approach:
- Loren Goldner
- Intro: 1) The Cosmobiological Tradition 2) P2P and the Cosmobiological Tradition
Quotes
Technology as Artificial Representation
"The very idea of “natural representation,” when combined with the 17th-century Cartesian idea of an objective space in which we can represent by means of coordinates, contributed significantly to the emergence of the mechanistic worldview: not only is the natural world nothing but a large-scale complex machine, but also the human perceptual mind is nothing but a small-scale simple machine like a pinhole camera, i.e., a camera obscura. This thought-shaping mental model—the human perceptual mind as a camera obscura—which more or less covertly lies behind the shaped thought that the technology associated with the leading formal and natural sciences are the final answer to the problem of mental representation—whether it is a pinhole camera, a brownie camera, a movie camera, or a digital camera application in a smart phone—has proven to be a remarkably influential and persistent myth. The increasing mathematization of the sciences, the models for problemsolving derived from engineering, the reduction of biology to statistical mathematics, evolutionary genetics, chemistry, and physics, and the reduction of animal behavior to Turing-computable algorithms, as well as the reduction of consciousness to physico-neural processes, all point in the same conceptual direction: the variety of life itself must be brought under one idealizing system of representation. And, not surprisingly, that very idiom is conceptual and limited to the operations of mathematizability and/or formal logic. The fact that science itself speaks in abstractions and idealizations does not in the slightest stop the advance of mechanistic thinking, because it justifies its existence by appeals to its objectivity and practical efficacy. Thereby, it reduces life (and in its wake, Being) to phenomena that are understood once they can be replicated or described in mathematical (and increasingly digital) terms, potentially making them available for artificial reproduction."
- Otto Paans [7]
Pages in category "Cosmobiological"
The following 123 pages are in this category, out of 123 total.
A
- Action-Shapers
- Against Atomism and Decompositionism-Recompositionism
- Against Professional Philosophy
- Alternative Heterodox Lineage in Evolutionary Thought and Its Emphasis on the Role of Consciousness
- Anti-Hobbesian Trilogy
- Anti-Humanist Turn of History
- Aristotle on the Undivided Self
- Arthur Young on Value and Purpose in Science
- Assemblage
C
- Chinese Harmonism
- Chinese Thought on the Harmony of Diversity
- Constrictive vs. Generative Thought-Shapers
- Contemporary Relational Philosophies
- Contrasting the Three Worldviews of Materialism, Immaterialism, and Idealism
- Cosmic Dignitarianism
- Cosmobiological Tradition
- CosmoErotic Humanism
- Creative Piety
- Creative Piety and Neo-Utopianism
- Critics of the Problem of Science in the Modern World
- Cultivating Our Global Garden Through Creative Piety
E
- Earthism
- Eight Core Commitments of Mainstream Contemporary Western Metaphysics
- Embodied Minds in Action
- Emergence of Machinic Consciousness
- Emergentist Concept of Science , Evolution and Culture
- Entangled Humanism
- Entropy
- Entropy vs Negentropy
- Equiplurality
- Equipotentiality
- Equiprimacy
- Essential Embodiment Theory
- Essential Embodiment Thesis
- Evald Ilyenkov on the Cosmology of the Spirit
- Every Living Activity Is Purposive
- Evolution of Living Matter Is Proceeding in a Definite Direction
- Expressive Organicism
F
- First Principles and First Values
- Four-Fold Cross of Reality of Eugen Rosenstock-Huessy
- Frank Furedi's Critique of Big History as Anti-Humanist
- Freedom Question
- From Scientism and the Mechanistic Worldview To Expressive Organicism
- From Traditional Static Holism, via Modern Fragmentation, To Dynamic Emergent Holism
M
- Manifesto on the Organicist Conception of the World
- Mathesis
- Matter of History
- Matthew Segal on a Participatory Approach to the Life Sciences
- Matthew Segall on How Both Technology and Human Consciousness Are Part of One Cosmic Evolution
- Meaningness
- Mereology
- Mesology
- Mike Levin on Evolution and Agency in the Universe
N
O
P
- Paleo-Capitalism
- Panjectivism
- Participatory Approach to the Life Sciences
- Periodicity of Philosophical Revolutions
- Philosophical Postmodernism
- Philosophy of Civilization Since 1900
- Political Philosophy of Mind
- Politics in an Era of Attitudinal Fragmentation
- Post-Persons
- Postmodernity
- Postmodernity and the Politics of Fragmentation
- Prehistory of the Computer and the Evolution of Consciousness
- Principle of Hope
R
- Rankism
- Re-Centering the Human in Technology
- Religious Ground Motives Behind Human Thought
- Return of Natural Philosophy
- Robert Hanna
- Robert Hanna on Defining and Defending Human Dignity
- Robert Hanna on our Sociable Sociality
- Robert Hanna on the Distinction Between Identitarianism and Dignitarianism
- Robert Ulanowicz
- Root Metaphor Theory
S
- Scientific Naturalism
- Scientistic Statism
- Second Enlightenment as an Aesthetic Enlightenment
- Solidarity vs Identitarian-Based Relationships
- Steps to a Science of Organism
- Struggle between the Communautarianism of the Radical Enlightenment and the Possessive Individualism of the Moderate Enlightenment
- Study of Cosmic Love
T
- Technology as Artificial Representation
- Technology, Nature, and the Human Prospect
- Theoretical Biology Club
- Theory of Thought-Shapers
- Thought-Shapers
- Towards a History and Pre-History of Knowledge
- Transculturalism as the Alternative To Multiculturalism
- Transversal Geophilosophy as Ultimate Philosophy To Save the Earth
- Truth, Meaning, and the Evolution of Consciousness