Time and Higher-Order Wholeness: A Response to David Bohm

In David Ray Griffin (ed.), Physics and the Ultimate Significance of Time. State University of New York Press. pp. 219--230 (1986)
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Abstract

This paper explores the meaning of time from three points of view: (1) David Bohm's concepts of "vertical implicate order" and "holomovement"; (2) Alfred North Whitehead's idea of the "actual occasion"; and (3) the author's notion of "nondual duality." The author argues that Bohm and Whitehead alike implicitly divide time into dual and nondual aspects and that, in failing to adequately reconcile these, time, in effect, is denied. The alternative offered seeks to thoroughly integrate dual and nondual (holistic) modalities in the understanding that time as becoming entails a dynamic interpenetration of its opposing aspects. Visual geometry and topology are employed to flesh out the "nondual duality" of temporal structure.

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Steven M. Rosen
College of Staten Island (CUNY)

Citations of this work

Wholeness as the Body of Paradox.Steven M. Rosen - 1997 - Journal of Mind and Behavior 18 (4):391-423.
A Neo-Intuitive Proposal for Kaluza-Klein Unification.Steven M. Rosen - 1988 - Foundations of Physics 18 (11):1093-1139.

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