“The safest general characterization of the European philosophical tradition is that it consists of a series of footnotes to Plato.”
–Alfred North Whitehead

Whitehead on Logical and Aesthetic Order

A few weeks ago, Tim Jackson and I discuss M. Beatrice Fazi’s book Contingent Computation: Abstraction, Experience, and Indeterminacy in Computational Aesthetics (2018), focusing in particular on her interpretations of Gilles Deleuze and Alfred North Whitehead. You can listen to that conversation here:

Deleuze, Whitehead, and the Computational Aesthetics of M. Beatrice Fazi

About an hour and seven minutes in, I mentioned Plato’s dialogue, the Euthyphro. In that dialogue, Socrates asks the central question: “Is something pious because the gods love it, or do the gods love it because it is pious?”

There is an analogous issue in Whitehead’s metaphysics that Tim and I explored which has to do with the relationship between Whitehead’s primordial nature of God and the eternal objects. Here’s a rough transcript of my reflections on this question: 

“Whitehead wants there to be a participatory and reciprocal relationship here, but I admit in my attempt to unpack his account of eternality and its relationship to actuality there’s some fuzziness. He’s not always consistent about the independent existence of eternal objects. Fazi has this wonderful phrase that I appreciated where she says (on page 64) “a conceptual prehension is actuality’s friction with the ideal.” This really helps us to avoid any dualism between actuality and ideality, but there’s nonetheless a polarity here, and part of the difficulty has to do with how we think about the relationship between logic and aesthetics. She says “aesthetics is at the heart of logic and not vice versa,” and I think that’s Whitehead’s position, too. In other words logical order becomes a subset of aesthetic order. The way that cashes out—and she doesn’t get into this—but the way I would say that cashes out is that the ordering of the eternal objects is established by this initial aim or or Eros of the divine—the “primordial envisionment” in Whitehead’s terms—that’s what establishes that there is a logical ordering of possibilities or an intelligible ground of the cosmos. It is because of what is ultimately an aesthetic act, a divine aesthetic act. Going back to the Euthyphro, where Plato has Socrates ask if God or the gods are good because it’s good, or is something good because the gods say so? Whitehead is in many ways making aesthetics first philosophy, such that not only logic but morality follows from an aesthetic principle. He’s giving God ultimate aesthetic power, but not ultimate efficient power. I hadn’t considered… I hadn’t run this train of thought through all the way to think about it in these terms before, because usually I would rather say that the gods are good because it’s good. But what Whitehead appears to be suggesting is actually this this divine envisagement of possibility is giving us rationality, that we have a relationship to intelligibility and logic because God loved the infinite realm of possibilities in a certain way. Is Deleuze able to entertain a thought like that? The answer is probably no. But Whitehead’s got this speculative hypothesis, and he’s perfectly willing to admit that there’s a dilemma here, since when we think about the apparent dichotomy between logic and aesthetics we’re at the extreme edges of our finite mentality: we only have partial penetration into the infinite. But in making aesthetics first philosophy, he’s also wanting to affirm that everything rests on feeling or firstness in Peirce’s terms. So he’s got these two different kinds of feeling, the feeling of actuality, and the feeling of eternality. The latter, called “conceptual prehensions,” are really at the core of what Whitehead means by experience: experience is dipolar it’s never just feeling what has already happened in the past and then having the transcendental illusion of possibility (as it appears Bergson and Deleuze argue); no there are real possibilities that we also feel in relationship to our inheritance of the actualized past.” 

In response to my comments, my friend and fellow Whitehead enthusiast Ben Snyder responded by arguing against my characterization (see comment under the YouTube video):

I think Whitehead takes the opposite stance re the Euthyphro dilemma from what you (Matt) suggest he takes. For one, the truths of logic would be recognized by Whitehead as metaphysical propositions. Metaphysical propositions, and the principles they correspond to, have a logical priority to God. God is not the ultimate category and does not get to determine the essential rules of the universe. That is to say, our concept of God is a derivative concept from the categoreal scheme, and insofar as God’s existence is necessary, it is necessary because of being entailed by the principles of this scheme. Aesthetic value, and derivatively morality, do not derive from God’s valuations of the eternal objects. It is a metaphysical principle definable independently of God, namely the definition of intensity of satisfaction. God, in this way, does not have “ultimate aesthetic power.” Rather, God is the entity such that necessarily they will value all eternal objects in such a way as to be fit for maximal intensity given any relative context. Further, in his essay “Analysis of Meaning” Whitehead offers an aesthetic value theory as a starting basis for philosophy to investigate, but it is to then use the tools of symbolic logic to do so. One does not derive the logic from the aesthetics, but presupposes the logic to study the aesthetics. Whitehead had a very mathematical (and also purely extensional) view of logic’s scope, so that this is overall not too different from Peirce’s own architectonic ordering where the purely formal tools of mathematics (including the truth-preserving structures of deductive logic) come prior to any phenomenology (and then later, from that, aesthetics) and are thus presupposed in phenomenological investigation. Thus, I don’t think it’s very accurate to say that for Whitehead “logic is a subset of aesthetics” nor that primordial nature establishes “logical ordering” of eternal objects, unless we’re referring to a meaning for the word logic that goes beyond how Whitehead would use it. 

Ben and I have been exploring fruitful frictions in our respective interpretations of Whitehead for several years. I am going to share several excerpts from Whitehead’s various works that I believe show the issues are not as cut and dry as Ben claims. Whitehead indeed had a very mathematical view of logic’s scope, but like a good Pythagorean, he understood the contemplation of mathematical order as an active entertainment of and entrainment to a kind of musical rhythm: 

“The concept of completely passive contemplation in abstraction from action and purpose is a fallacious extreme. It omits the final regula­tive factor in the aesthetic complex” (Adventures of Ideas, p. 264). 

But let’s dig into this a bit more. On the question of whether “God…does not get to determine the essential rules of the universe,” here is Whitehead from Process and Reality, p. 40: 

The things which are tem­poral arise by their participation in the things which are eternal. The two sets are mediated by a thing which combines the actuality of what is temporal with the timelessness of what is potential. This final entity is the divine element in the world, by which the barren inefficient disjunction of abstract potentialities obtains primordially the efficient conjunction of ideal realization. This ideal realization of potentialities in a primordial actual entity constitutes the metaphysical stability whereby the actual process exemplifies general principles of metaphysics, and attains the ends proper to specific types of emergent order. By reason of the actuality of this primordial valuation of pure potentials, each eternal object has a definite, effective relevance to each concrescent process. Apart from such orderings, there would be a complete disjunction of eternal objects unrealized in the temporal world. Novelty would be meaningless, and inconceivable.

Ben is of course correct that Whitehead assigns ultimacy to Creativity, rather than God (who is said to be the primordial creature of creativity). But Whitehead is clearly saying above that God is the reason there is any metaphysical stability amidst otherwise indeterminate creative flux, and the reason that the search for metaphysical generalities is possible for finite creatures like us. 

Here is Whitehead addressing this issue in Religion in the Making, p. 104-5: 

“Thus the purpose of God in the attainment of value is in a sense a creative purpose. Apart from God, the remaining formative elements would fail in their functions. There would be no creatures, since, apart from harmonious order, the perceptive fusion would be a confusion neutralizing achieved feeling. Here ‘feeling’ is used as synonym for ‘actuality.’

The adjustment is the reason for the world. It is not the case that there is an actual world which accidentally happens to exhibit an order of nature. There is an actual world because there is an order in nature. If there were no order, there would be no world. Also since there is a world, we know that there is an order. The ordering entity is a necessary element in the metaphysical situation presented by the actual world.

This line of thought extends Kant’s argument. He saw the necessity for God in the moral order. But with his metaphysics he rejected the argument from the cosmos. The metaphysical doctrine, here expounded, finds the foundations of the world in the aesthetic experience, rather than as with Kant in the cognitive and conceptive experience. All order is therefore aesthetic order, and the moral order is merely certain aspects of aesthetic order. The actual world is the outcome of the aesthetic order, and the aesthetic order is derived from the immanence of God.”

He adds later that “our knowledge of a discernment of ordered relationships, especially in aesthetic valuations…stretches far beyond anything which has been expressed systematically in words” (p. 143). 

Now, Ben is not wrong to say that, as Whitehead puts it, “[God] is a necessary element in the metaphysical situation presented by the actual world.” But we must tread lightly here, as I do not think Whitehead is claiming some variation on the ontological proof (ie, that God’s existence is a metaphysical necessity). I read his speculative method as an application of William James’ radical empiricism, where God is to be known only as an experiential fact and not through logical proof. His point is that, in our finite reflection upon the conditions of this actual world, dispassionate reason leads inextricably to what he terms a “principle of limitation” or “concretion.” Here is how Whitehead puts it later in Science and the Modern World (p. 178): 

“This attribute provides the limitation for which no reason can be given: for all reason flows from it. God is the ultimate limita­tion, and His existence is the ultimate irrationality. For no reason can be given for just that limitation which it stands in His nature to impose. God is not concrete, but He is the ground for concrete actu­ality. No reason can be given for the nature of God, because that nature is the ground of rationality.

In this argument the point to notice is, that what is metaphysically indeterminate has nevertheless to be categorically determinate. We have come to the limit of rationality. For there is a categorical limi­tation which does not spring from any metaphysical reason. There is a metaphysical need for a principle of determination, but there can be no metaphysical reason for what is determined. If there were such a reason, there would be no need for any further principle: for meta­physics would already have provided the determination. The general principle of empiricism depends upon the doctrine that there is a principle of concretion which is not discoverable by abstract reason. What further can be known about God must be sought in the region of particular experiences, and therefore rests on an empirical basis.”

I do not think we can square Whitehead’s statements above with Ben’s claim that moral, logical, and aesthetic order can be defined independently of God. Further, when it comes to the priority I believe Whitehead assigns to aesthetics over logic, I am just taking him at his word when he writes that, “while the harmony of logic lies upon the universe as an iron necessity, the aesthetic harmony stands before it [my italics] as a living ideal moulding the general flux in its broken progress towards finer, subtler issues” (Science and the Modern World, p. 18). Or, as he puts it rather plainly over a decade later in Modes of Thought (p. 62): “By reason of the greater concreteness of the aesthetic experience, it is a wider topic than that of the logical ex­perience.”

In both logic and aesthetics, there is an interaction between the many and the one. The key difference between the two lies in the degree of abstraction. While logical reflection moves from the many to the one (details leading to a unity of understanding), aesthetic enjoyment begins with an overwhelming whole, from which details are later distinguished​. This distinction marks logic and aesthetics as polar ends of how the finite mind approaches the infinite, each playing a role in the comprehension and appreciation of reality. But logic ultimately appeals to self-evidence in the same way aesthetic judgments do, suggesting to my mind at least that logic’s ultimate basis rests in aesthetic order​.

Now, Whitehead is very clear that God does not create the eternal objects. But it seems to me he is just as clear that these eternal objects are barren inefficient disjunctions of which no sense can be made until and unless concretized by God’s primordial envisagement, an envisagement for which no reason can be given! The Schellingian in me sees this as deeply resonant with the understanding that God is a life, and not a system, the archetype of freedom, rather than simple necessity. We could distinguish here, as Schelling does, between the unprethinkable fact of God’s (and, relatedly, the world-order’s) positive existence, and the a priori nature of God’s essence. The divine essence may be a kind of necessity for reason, since it thinks negatively or by negation about what is possible; but negative reason remains entirely powerless before the thatness of actual existence.

There can be no final conclusions on these matters, but let me at least try to conclude this post. Whitehead’s idea of God’s primordial envisionment of possibility suggests that logical order is itself derived from a deeper aesthetic act, where divine love and the yearning after concrete fact creates, not the eternal objects themselves, but the intelligible order of the cosmos. Whitehead thereby assigns ultimate aesthetic power to God, making aesthetics first philosophy, such that logic and morality follow from aesthetic principles of harmony. This reframes our understanding of metaphysical order as a creative, aesthetic expression, rather than a system governed by necessity or logical rules alone.

Ben’s response, which argued that Whitehead gives priority to logical and metaphysical principles independent of God, brings out important tensions in interpreting Whitehead. Ben emphasized that God’s power in Whitehead’s thought is conditioned by metaphysical necessities, such as the principle of intensity of satisfaction. While Ben sees Whitehead’s framework as prioritizing logic over aesthetics, my interpretation suggests that Whitehead ultimately positions God as the reason for metaphysical stability amidst creative flux—an aesthetic ordering, rather than a purely logical one.

Thus, the core issue is not whether Whitehead prioritizes logic or aesthetics, but how he positions aesthetic value (ie, the aim at evermore intense forms of beauty) as the fountain from which logical and moral orders arise.


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6 responses to “Whitehead on Logical and Aesthetic Order”

  1. perkwunos Avatar
    perkwunos

    Whitehead may reject the reality of any “completely passive contemplation in abstraction from action and purpose”–but this concerns the acts of contemplation, i.e., the propositional or intellectual feelings and their subjective forms. As I argue in an article due to come out in the upcoming issue of Process Studies, propositions, i.e., the things that are true or false, are objective data of feelings, capable of being identified (including having their truth-values identified) independently of any particular feelings and thus any particular subjective forms. This is why Whitehead distinguishes between a proposition, on the one hand, and a judgment, belief, or a psychological attitude a subject may have in regard to that proposition, on the other. I will have to once again stress this distinction, for its relevance here. Eternal objects, and then the metaphysical principles that seem to be expressible purely in terms of eternal objects and a quantification over a domain of any possible actualities (that is, a domain that does not require reference to any real actual entities), are in this way purely objects and not derivative from what is subjective.

     The primordial nature consists of conceptual feelings of all eternal objects, that thus includes valuations of each eternal object as their subjective forms. The eternal objects, as the data for these feelings, however, are not created by God. Thus, when he says that the eternal objects acquire “effective relevance” due to the primordial nature, this is in reference to the subjective forms of God’s feelings of said eternal objects. As each actual occasion then feels God’s primordial nature, these valuations influence the actual occasion’s own subjective aim and thus how it values eternal objects. In all of this, the reality of eternal objects, their own being as just those forms of definiteness, and the reality of the metaphysical principles governing how they ingress into actuality, remains only as presupposed but not at all affected by this process.

    But the crux of the issue comes down to how God is the primordial exemplification of the metaphysical principles and thus the primordial reason for the eternal objects themselves. This use of “reason” is in the specific sense of the ontological principle. So this leads to the question: is it sensible to say God both did not create the eternal objects, and that God is their primordial reason for existing? I would want to put forward a reading where we can assert both, as that seems closer to Whitehead’s original intent. Eternal objects—and the metaphysical propositions that will be true of all things, including God—are objective data in God’s conceptual feelings, and indeed govern and constrain the logical and metaphysical possibilities of God’s prehensions in the same way they do for all other actual entities.

    Also, I think we should distinguish between order as in a contingent social order, and the metaphysical essence to reality that is necessary and universal. We could say God’s primordial nature provides the fundamental reason for both, and yet in different ways. God is the primordial instantiation of the metaphysical essence: that is, the metaphysical propositions will be just as true of God as any other actuality. On the other hand, God’s primordial nature is not itself an instantiation of a social order. Rather, God’s valuations of all eternal objects provides a harmonious ideal (an order in a whole other sense also), which is the lure for actual occasions to realize some eternal objects rather than others, and those eternal objects are then passed down across a nexus to become a society and thus an enduring (but contingent) form of order. Thus, I wouldn’t say “that moral, logical, and aesthetic order can be defined independently of God.” Rather, I would say that the _principle_ that makes something of aesthetic value or not is so definable. If by logical order we mean the principles of inference, expressible in the metaphysical propositions, then this similarly is indeed definable independently of God.

    You quote, “while the harmony of logic lies upon the universe as an iron necessity, the aesthetic harmony stands before it as a living ideal moulding the general flux in its broken progress towards finer, subtler issues” (Science and the Modern World, p. 18). What does the aesthetic harmony “stand before”? I would think it is standing before “the universe,” thus luring it as an ideal. You, however, seem to be reading him as saying aesthetic harmony stands before logic, meaning thereby that it is in some way prior to logic. I do not find that reading as plausible. More to the point, here Whitehead himself also seems to agree with me: logic concerns what is necessary, whereas any aesthetic order is a contingent response to God’s lure (which is itself a valuation of objects, not the creation of said objects). Thus, again, what is at issue in this quote is the way God’s valuations of eternal objects then influence our later valuations. Similarly, to say aesthetics concerns what is more concrete than logic does not suggest that it therefore has a logical (or conceptual) priority to logic: in fact, I would argue it is the opposite, with the most abstract and formal sciences concerning what is most necessarily presupposed by all more concrete sciences.

    I also think it is misleading to quote from Science and the Modern World here when arguing about Whitehead’s metaphysics, as he would come to (what I at least would assert is) a more mature, and systematic, view on this matter in Process and Reality. God no longer needs to be described as the “ultimate irrationality” (nor merely as a principle that is not concrete, for that matter), because God is an actual entity, and actual entities are conceived as the final reasons for things. Importantly, every actual entity, in the novelty of their own conceptual feelings, and the valuations that are the subjective forms of said conceptual feelings, is causa sui, their own reason. This is not unique to God, but God is in this way the primordial instance of a being that is causa sui. But what is novel here, and most directly dependent upon God for its determination, is the subjective forms (i.e., the valuations and their intensities, and thus the purposes that will lure later occasions into social orders). What comes (at least logically) prior to such a feeling is the datum felt, in this case the eternal objects, and this datum for feeling must be identifiable independently of any particular feeling.

    1. Matthew David Segall Avatar

      I worry we have covered this ground before… but it never hurts to keep refining our respective positions. I do appreciate the important distinction Whitehead makes between propositions and propositional feelings, objective data and subjective forms. However, can we really say that a proposition housed in God’s primordial nature is “true or false” while it remains isolated from the world-process and God’s physical feelings? Whitehead doesn’t seem to think so:

      “The truth itself is nothing else than how the composite natures of the organic actualities of the world obtain adequate representation in the divine nature. Such representations compose the ‘consequent nature’ of God, which evolves in its relationship to the evolving world without derogation to the eternal completion of its primordial conceptual nature. In this way the ‘ontological principle’ is maintained—since there can be no determinate truth, correlating impartially the partial experiences of many actual entities, apart from one actual entity to which it can be referred.”  (PR, p. 12-13).

      Thus it is not some eternally imposed System of Logic but rather God’s consequent Love for the World that allows for determinate truth despite the many partial competing perspectives of finite occasions of experience.

      Further, I do not see how we can avoid falling afoul of the ontological principle if we try to affirm that possibilities already realize some predicative pattern prior to God’s primordial envisagement, as if God is just conceptually recognizing a logical order that is already given.

      1. perkwunos Avatar
        perkwunos

        Returning to this after a short pause: Can any proposition be true or false independently of the actual world? I would argue that the answer, for Whitehead, must be yes–or else he falls into performative self-contradiction. Metaphysical propositions are true or false in this way, because they are necessarily true (or false). Any actual entity will presuppose the metaphysical propositions that are, necessarily, going to be true of it. Further, Whitehead’s method of speculative philosophy depends on presupposing metaphysical propositions, since the expression of true metaphysical propositions is clearly thus his operative ideal. In terms of what Whitehead said to explain this, things are more muddled: he does explicitly introduce the type of proposition termed “metaphysical proposition” and define it the way I did, and it is clear from many statements right from the start of Process and Reality that the ability for propositions to be necessary is a key assumption of his methodology, baked into his operative ideal. His theory of propositions, however, is sketchy, and especially because of the role of the ontological principle, his correspondence theory of truth, and some other features of creativity, it’s left up for a deeper debate as to how a proposition may be necessarily true of any possible actual entity (or, more to the point, what could make it true in this way). Still, something has to give here: either deny that Whitehead is following through on his speculative method, i.e., deny that there is such a thing as propositions that are true necessarily of all actual entities (including God), or deny the ontological principle or Whitehead’s correspondence theory of truth, or find some interpretation of how God provides the “reason” for necessary truths by virtue of feeling them as given data, i.e., as propositions already true independently of how they will be felt by God. That is to say, no matter what, some very serious work is left to be done requiring more depth in understanding what, in Whitehead’s scheme, a proposition is, what it means to predicate truth of a proposition, what it means for it to be necessary, and what it means to feel a proposition. (So, if you wanted to have a set of difficult but genuine questions to bring to the Whitehead and idealism conference, please go ask everyone there about the meaning of all those terms.)

      2. Matthew David Segall Avatar

        PR, p. 258: “its own truth, or its own falsity, is no business of a proposition.” Whitehead says this after specifying that, without the actual world as a systematic environment, no logical subjects could be indicated by a proposition, and thus no sense could be made of its truth-value. In addition, truth-value can only be established when the proposition (including its logical subjects in the actual world) is felt by some actual entity. A proposition as such, isolated from the world and a prehending subject, is completely indeterminate as regards its own truth or falsehood. Even considering a proposition isolated from the actual world is already to maim it, since this would mean its logical subjects could not be properly indicated.

        The question of the status of metaphysical propositions is somewhat vexing. While necessary to say anything about the actual world, it is clear that Whitehead cannot allow them to exist independently of that world, or sequester them outside the creative advance, wherein new propositions (including some with universal applicability) are continually created, thus enriching God’s ever-lasting envisagement. I would think that experiential adequacy, as a criterion of speculative philosophy, would require accounting for the fact that we do not yet know for sure whether we are in possession of metaphysical propositions. Thus the truth-value of such propositions would appear to have a certain futurity or “promise to pay” status.

      3. perkwunos Avatar
        perkwunos

        I don’t disagree with (at least part of) your point in regards to non-metaphysical propositions. That is, non-metaphysical propositions require the indication of particular logical subjects (even if this involves quantification over some such set of particular subjects). Thus for non-metaphysical propositions, they (1) in themselves are not intelligible or identifiable independently of the actual world, since they include logical subjects that are parts of said world, and (2) their truth-values are not intelligible independently of the actual world, since a proposition’s truth-value is its relation of conformity or nonconformity with the actual world. (I entirely disagree with the idea that the particular prehending subject is required to determine a proposition’s truth-value, and think this is just a misreading. The fall issue of Process Studies will have my piece on that though, so I won’t belabor the point now.)

        It is far less clear to me that metaphysical propositions would require any such indication, however. Creativity ensures that new actual entities are always coming into being, so that when we say “the actual world” at distinct standpoints, we are referring to distinct sets of actual entities. “The actual world” now has more members than “the actual world” an hour before did. A true metaphysical proposition, however, will by definition be true of any actual occasions. When a new actual occasion comes into being, does that mean the metaphysical proposition also changes its indication to now indicate the new member? It would therefore be a new proposition, so that there’s no such thing as the metaphysical proposition. Most importantly, this wouldn’t capture the necessity involved in its truth at all: that feature whereby the metaphysical proposition is saying its predicate will hold for all possible actual entities, past, present, or future. A metaphysical proposition, thus, doesn’t seem to involve the indication of any particular, real actual entities: it indicates possible logical subjects, and is true in relation to all such possible logical subjects. This is where Whiteheadians must grit their teeth and face the more sophisticated debates and conceptual tools developed in analytic metaphysics vis a vis the semantics of modal logic, in my opinion (not that Whitehead’s thought is merely to be reduced to or even fully integrated with these). I’d like to eventually write a paper about this issue.

  2. charles conway Avatar
    charles conway

    Look at Peirce’s Normative Sciences—-Aesthetics, Ethics, Logic– for similar thinking.. Plus,he said the cosmos is God’s poem. Charles G. Conway

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