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The
Philosophy of
Alfred
North Whitehead
Alfred North Whitehead (picture)
was born in 1861 in Ramsgate, Kent, England, and
died in 1947. He studied at Cambridge, where he was
senior lecturer in mathematics until 1910. He then
taught at London from 1910 until 1914, becoming
professor of applied mathematics at Imperial
College from 1914 until 1924. He then taught at
Harvard University from 1924 until 1937.
Whitehead had become famous as a scientist, as
one of the founders of modern mathematical logic,
before he concentrated upon philosophy. He was
sixty-three years old when he renounced his
professorship of mathematics at the Imperial
College of Science and Technology, London, in order
to become professor of philosophy at Harvard.
However, his mathematical investigations remained
relevant to his metaphysics, and even Whitehead,
the metaphysician who protested that "the final
outlook of philosophical thought cannot be based
upon the exact statements which form the basis of
special sciences," retained his grand vision of the
possibilities of abstract theory.
Whitehead never hesitated to confess his
indebtedness to William James, Samuel Alexander and
Henri Bergson for the development of his own
philosophical thoughts, or that Minkowski's
assimilation of space and time and Einstein's
theory of relativity had stimulated his thought.
But this indebtedness meant not so much an actual
influence as rather the creation of a new situation
which allowed Whitehead to proceed in his own
way.
The decisive feature of this new situation was
shaped by James' denial that the subject-object
relation is fundamental to knowledge. By denying
that in the occurrence of knowing one entity,
regarded as the knower, as a mind or soul, standing
in front of an object, be it externally existent or
the self-consciousness of the knower himself, James
also removed the habitual distinction of mind and
matter. Whitehead, while constantly contending that
the "bifurcation of nature," the sharp division
between nature and mind, established by Descartes,
had "poisoned all subsequent philosophy" and
jeopardized the very meaning of life, restored the
subject-object relation as a fundamental structural
pattern of experience, "but not in the sense in
which subject-object is identified with
knower-known."
To Whitehead, "the living organ or experience is
the living body as a whole." Human experience has
its origin in the physical activities of the whole
organism which tends to readjustment when any part
of it becomes unstable. Although such experience
seems to be more particularly related to the brain,
Whitehead held that "we cannot determine with what
molecules the brain begins and the rest of the body
ends." Human experience therefore is deemed as "an
act of self-origination, including the whole of
nature, limited to the perspective of a focal
region, located within the body, but not
necessarily persisting in any fixed coordination
within a definite part of the brain."
Upon this concept of human experience, Whitehead
founded his new philosophy of the organism, his
cosmology, his defense of speculative reason, his
ideas on the process of nature, his rational
approach to God. The aim of his speculative
philosophy was "to frame a coherent, logical,
necessary system of general ideas in terms of which
every item of our experience can be
interpreted."
Whitehead thought that philosophy, speculative
metaphysics included, was not, or should not be, a
ferocious debate between irritable professors but
"a survey of possibilities and their comparison
with actualities," balancing the fact, the theory,
the alternatives and the ideal. In this way the
fundamental beliefs which determine human
character, will be clarified.
The first period of Whitehead's activities was
devoted to mathematics and logic. It began with
Universal Algebra published in 1898 after
seven years of work, continued with Mathematical
Concepts of the Material World (1905) and
culminated in the monumental Principia
Mathematica (1910-1913) written in
collaboration with Bertrand Russell. Characteristic
of Whitehead's second period, in which he was
preoccupied with a philosophy of natural science
without metaphysical exposition, are An Enquiry
Concerning the Principles of Natural Knowledge
(1919), The Concept of Nature (1920), The
Principle of Relativity (1922) and Science
and the Modern World (1925), which already
mentions but not yet attempts a metaphysical
synthesis of existence.
Most significant of Whitehead's metaphysical
views are Process and Reality (1929),
Adventures of Ideas (1933) and Modes of
Thought (1938).
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