Tag: consciousness

The Last Speck of Dust: Considerations on the Chrisian as a Poet within a Sacramental Cosmos

This essay explores how Christians can cultivate a poetic sensibility to find meaning and purpose in life. By examining the effects of materialism and science on spirituality, it highlights insights from various philosophers and invites an artistic engagement with Creation, emphasizing relationality, creativity, and the transformative power of love in human experience.

The Storm Centre: Radical Empiricism and Embodied Phenomenology

This essay explores embodied phenomenology within William James’ radical empiricism, emphasizing consciousness as a dynamic process emerging from the holistic interplay of mind, body, and environment. It critiques traditional subject-object dichotomies, advocating for a view where pure experience is fundamental to understanding lived reality. James’ insights resonate with later phenomenologists like Heidegger and Merleau-Ponty.

The Faculty of Effort: William James and the Speculative Empiricist Attitude Towards Lived Experience and Approach to Philosophy

This essay outlines speculative empiricism, emphasizing experience’s dynamic nature and human self-seeking behavior. William James argues that our identities and achievements are shaped through social interactions and habits. He posits that life should be understood as a process of becoming, with ethical and existential implications rooted in human experiences and creativity.

The Quintessence of Dust: The Human Hypostasis as the Image and Likeness of God

This essay explores Eastern Orthodox process theology, focusing on human hypostasis as an embodiment of divine likeness. It examines the interactions of active and passive hypostases across the cosmos, emphasizes human dignity through autonomy and self-governance, and integrates insights from thinkers like Hans Jonas and William James to frame human experience within divine creation.