PhizzicsPhan said:
"Process philosophy" is the term used to describe Whitehead's philosophy and there are journals and countless books on process philosophy, all of which are panpsychist.
Yes, and I was commenting that this seems false advertising as things end up back with essentialism rather than with a true process view.
Whereas Peirce, who came before Whitehead and arguably influenced many people in a roundabout way, was really a process thinker IMO.
One of the things that came out of that last discussion was a better understanding of all the currents or thought that were swirling at that time. Peirce, of course, was a loner and embittered crank for much of his career, not publishing and so only an indirect influence. Yet I think that the vogue for neutral monism seen in Russell and James, the rise of holism, and then the success of Whitehead, shows that at least the thinking was quite adventurous back then.
By contrast, we are now in an era that is again relentlessly materialist and reductionist. So I have no problem considering panpsychism on its merits. But I am very critical of its inability to model the actual causality of reality. It does more to conceal than reveal when you get down to brass tacks.
Whitehead did not deny substance (for what else could be the subject of process?) Rather, he tried to strike a more appropriate balance between process and substance as an antidote to the substantialism of the modern era, which stresses the importance of substance over process. Whitehead is generally a Heraclitean trying to mitigate Parmenidean tendencies that are still deeply rooted in our culture.
Agreed, but then that does not go far enough from the Peircean perspective. The dichotomy is not between substance and process but substance and form (or local constructive actions and global downward acting constraints). And it is that totality which is the process.
So the process is about how the substance constructs the forms and the forms produce (via constraint) those very same substances. This is the radically emergent view of nature.
Applied to the mind-body issue, this means that we would call "mind" the process. And it emerges via that interaction between the local and global, between substance and form. And matter - the material world usually described by micro-physics - is also a process. It also emerges via the same kind of synergistic, systematic, interaction.
So mind is emergent, the material world is emergent. Both are levels of development of the same general process. (Peirce called it semiosis. Systems scientists today might call it hierarchy theory, or dissipative structure theory, or cybenetics, etc).
You keep saying that we have to believe in panpsychism because nothing essential can emerge from something that wasn't already there as an essence. It seems a plain logical fact to you (and many others).
But Peirce is precisely an example of switching the game around. Now the logic is that everything that exists (or rather persists) and so appears to have an inherent or essential character is in fact radically emergent. It is the result of a process of self-organising development. This applies as much to the universe as our own minds. So there just is no fundamental problem about the essential emerging. Even if there is of course still the issue of making working scientific models of a universe that emerges, or a mind that emerges.
Here's the digest of my version of panpsychism, heavily inspired by Whitehead and others, but breaking some new ground also:
- time is quantized (chronon) and the universe is constantly changing from chronon to chronon
- each basic constituent ("actual entity", "simple subject," "occasion of experience," etc.) emanates into actuality from the pure potentiality of the "ground of being" or what Whitehead calls "creativity"
- each basic constituent of the universe oscillates with each time quantum between subject and object
- this oscillation is built into the "creative advance" of the universe, which is the flow of time and the laying down of reality in each moment. This laying down of the universe proceeds through the oscillation of each actual entity from subject to object, which results from the actual entity "prehending" the universe around it and choosing how to manifest based on that information
- actual entities can compound into higher order actual entities given the right energy and communications flows, which allows information to flow through a broader spatial extent than would be possible without these energy and communications flows. The broader spatial extent of each actual entity is perhaps synonymous with forms we call 'life,' which may be characterized by increased energy storage and improved energy flows
Again, there is a reliance here on essentialist statements such as an oscillation between two states - the objective and the subjective - as a fact. What is it that makes these states different?
Now in QM, you do have a definite appeal to process here. You have the state of the system pre-measurement and post-measurement. OK, that then appears to require an observer. Or you can try to make a no-collapse interpretation seem ontologically sensible (and fail). So there are difficulties still. But the process is modeled mathematically in very clear fashion. And has been well tested. Something critical about reality has been captured to many decimal places.
But your subject/object oscillation just appears a play on words. It sounds a little like QM-speak and so piggy-backs on that theory's credibility. But there is nothing really that connects you to "experiential". The process needed to create that aspect of things is just not outlined in a way it can even be checked for logical rigour, let alone measured in practice.
One possibility for falsifying materialism - or at least the epiphenomalist version thereof - from my armchair: why do we feel pain if epiphenomenalism is true? Isn't it enough that a reflex prompts us to move away from things that cause us harm? Why is pain (sometimes extreme pain) necessary to deter harmful behavior?
Pain is a well studied story in neuroscience. The nervous system has a hierarchical structure so that it can handle reality at the most appropriate level. We have hardwired spinal reflexes so we react to things (like a hand on a hot stove) before the signals would even have time to travel up to the brain. Genes have hardwired in an immediate response because millenia have proved its worth.
But more complex brains can make more complex negotiations. So pain signals may be routed to a lower part of the brain, like the periaqueductal gray, and remapped to a higher part, like the anterior cingulate. The higher brain can then make choices. It can ignore pain - suppress it top-down - because some goal is more critical. Or in contrary fashion, it can amplify pain (bad backs are often an example of over-attention that perpetuates a signal of tissue damage that in fact is no longer there).
This hierarchical design also allows for new sources of pain as a motivating signal. We can feel the psychic pain of an interior decorator entering a badly done room. Or less jokingly, the empathetic pain that is basic to social animals.
So pain is a reaction to what it harmful. It drives a response. Simple creatures feel simple pain (there is something that it is like to be a live lobster chucked in the broiler

). And complex creature are able to feel complex pain (there is something that it is like to be to be into S&M too).
And we can explain the difference in process terms. We can point not just to some simple raw measure of complexity, but an actual structural logic that is plainly there in brain architecture. And which is functional in terms of an explicit ecological context. There is no mystery about the reason for things being this way.
So epiphenomenalism has no place here. We have a process that can result in experiences of pain as the result of some often complex negotiations.
We don't really need pain to drive a reflexive action (so we don't need to feel too guilty about lobsters perhaps). But we do need pain nagging on us to do things like protect a damaged limb until it has healed.
That is why complex brains evolved areas like the periaqueductal gray to keep us factoring the fact of inflammation into our ongoing decision making. And then areas on top of that like the anterior cingulate that can both chose to suppress knowledge of a damaged limb (because we really need to use it for some goal), and also connect more complex kinds of choice making (such as those of a socially-intelligent animal) to this "pain circuit", or central choice-making part of the brain.
So you can ask the question of why a pain has to hurt, just like you can ask about the redness of red. Why doesn't red look blue or gruen, etc? Once you get down to a certain level, you run out of counterfactuals and so any way to talk about how things could be reasonably otherwise.
But that is a tautology rather than a legitimate question really. The right kinds of questions are why is pain such a dominating sensation? What is its ecological function? What is its neural architecture? Why does it have such a variety of psychic sources? Why do the drugs work sometimes and not others? What is the placebo effect? What is a phantom limb?
There are a bunch of questions about pain as a process that can have answers. But that is because there is a context (containing counterfactuals) that allows there to be a real question.
If you insist on reducing the scope of the discussion to a question like why does pain have to hurt, then you are not falsifying materialism but instead putting the whole discussion beyond the falsification of any theory, as all real theories must outline a process. They must make counterfactuals available so that "what is" can be contrasted with "what is not".
And, as I say, where are the counterfactuals with panpsychism? Where is the model of a process that is open to falsification? Even just in the terms of logical argument, let alone scientific observation? If you can't say why a chronon is experiential in one phase of its oscillation by virtue of some explicit process, then you have shut off any genuine engagement here. You have assumed a conclusion without demonstrating any working out.