Reciprocal Causality in an Event-Filled World
Joseph Bracken examines key writings of process-oriented philosophers like Alfred North Whitehead along with systems-oriented thinkers such as Ludwig von Bertalanffy to create a systems-oriented understanding of the God-world relation that serves as a complement to Pope Francis's reflections on the environmental crisis.
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Become an affiliateJoseph A. Bracken, SJ, is emeritus professor of theology at Xavier University in Cincinnati, Ohio.
Ecology is all about sustaining vital connections. Understanding these connections, however, is not easy. We need the help of philosophers and--at least according to Joseph Bracken--theologians too. This challenging book undertakes the important work of exploring a wide variety of ideas on the complex relationships that tie life, evolution, and humanity to the physical universe and to God. Those who follow its expositions and arguments will be amply rewarded.
Without a view of the world that privileges interrelatedness, events, and systems, major problems of our world will remain unsolved. In this book, Joseph Bracken lays out a conceptual framework that explains why sytsems-oriented thinking matters. His proposal represents a way of seeing reality that not only makes sense but seems necessary to answer our biggest questions!
Spanning over a long philosophical career, Joseph Bracken has been an avid proponent of process thought as the most adequate philosophy for today's complex world. Just as Alfred North Whitehead developed a new philosophical system based on process and flow, so too, Bracken has contributed his own metaphysical scheme based on a trinitarian understanding of intersubjectivity. In this new book, Fr. Bracken brings together a wealth of understanding and insight that allows the reader to appreciate the significant role process philosophy offers to a world of emergent evolution, holons, and systems thinking. This is a wonderful book for those interested in pursuing a new metaphysical understanding of a deeply entangled and interconnected universe.
Joseph Bracken, like me, finds the work of Whitehead extremely helpful. Neither of us is satisfied with his treatment of societies and the relation of societies to its parts or members. Bracken has found help in system theory to remedy this deficiency, and in this book he not only explains his modification of Whitehead, but also shows the value of this modified Whitehead in responding to a variety of issues with special concern for environmental ones. We are in his debt.
This book deepens and clarifies Bracken's on-going efforts to show both the coherence and the urgency of a systems-oriented worldview: individual entities from atoms to persons receive their being within larger organic systems, but at the same time they contribute to the ongoing vitality of those systems. Bracken lays out how such a worldview can foster a dialogue between science and theology, as well as nurture action for social and environmental justice and well-being. This book is as rewarding as it is challenging.
Bracken displays his wide range of familiarity with just about every philosopher who has dealt with the topic of science and religion. Some of Bracken's assertions may cause consternation among metaphysicians. His theses about reciprocal causality reflect a postmodern skepticism toward the classical understanding of the world. However, his new worldview presents a vision of how science can open for us a model of interconnectedness. Take a look at how systems work. There's no answer to human and world problems without it.