5.11.10

Ivakhiv on Process-Relational Theory

Adrian Ivakhiv has a fantastic new post up providing a preliminary sketch of his “process-relational” perspective. I tend to agree with much of what Adrian writes and would suggest that anyone who is not familiar with his blog or his views go check him out asap. Ivakhiv is an eco-theorist, philosopher, scholar and professor of environmental studies at the University of Vermont. Enjoy:
One of the tasks of this blog, since its inception in late 2008, has been to articulate a theoretical-philosophical perspective that I have come to call “process-relational.” This is a theoretical paradigm and an ontology that takes the basic nature of the world to be that of relational process: that is, it understands the basic constituents of the world to be events of encounter, acts or moments of experience that are woven together to constitute the processes by which all things occur, unfold, and evolve. Understanding ourselves and our relations with the world around us in this way, it is argued, can help us unwind ourselves from out of a set of dualisms that have ensnared modern thought over the last few centuries. In contrast to materialist, idealist, dualist, and other perspectives that have dominated modern western philosophy, a process-relational perspective more explicitly recognizes the dynamic, complex, systemic, and evolving nature of reality.

What follows is a brief summary of the process-relational perspective. It is followed by some bibliographic starting points and by a list of links to some of the more substantive posts on this blog that have dealt with process-relational theory.
Read More @ Immanence

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