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Instructor: Dr. John B. Cobb, Jr.

In this course Dr. John B. Cobb, Jr. will present a series of ten lectures that critically examine our current condition and constructively propose an alternative for the future, informed primarily by the process philosophy of Alfred North Whitehead. Students will have the opportunity to interact with and learn from one of the world’s foremost experts in process thought, and together think through some of humanity’s greatest challenges.

Each week’s lecture will be presented in front of in-class participants, and also live-streamed and recorded for online participants. Live streams and recordings will be available by clicking on the individual topic pages in the “Course Content” section below.

Course Description

The course assumes that participants are aware that humanity is in dire straits. We will spend very little time describing what is happening to soil, air, forests, grasslands, fresh water, oceans, the ocean level, and climates. The problems are now beginning to have drastic consequences for some people. More are being affected every day. Other species of animals are already dying off at a rapid rate. Some say we are entering a new geological age. In any case, we should be able to agree that “the modern world” is unsustainable and is crashing down around us. Rather than accepting this crash as the last word, we can notice and encourage the emergence of a new civilization, built on the best of modernity, but founded on a different foundation. Some of us call it “and ecological civilization.”

Some people see the losses that are already occurring, and view catastrophes of unimaginable proportions as inevitable. Some fail even to look, and they plan to continue modern militaristic nationalism, mechanistic materialism, and neo-economic liberalism with its consequences in global financial capitalism. This course is for people who see that modernity in that sense speeds us toward self-destruction. They are open to considering a post-modern alternative that could work for the common good. Indeed, focusing on what is still possible may lead to mitigating the now inescapable suffering. I want to show how Whitehead’s philosophy offers that kind of alternative. The following ten titles together with their explanatory paragraphs provide an overview of what will be presented.

Course Schedule

Course Content

Session 1: Freedom vs. Determinism; Meaning vs. Meaninglessness
Session 2: Organism vs. Mechanism
Session 3: Community vs. Competitive Individualism
Session 5: The Priority of Experience Over Its Objects
Session 6: Experiencing as Synthesizing Relations
Session 7: Science and Religion
Session 8: God and Idolatry
Session 9: Radical Religious Pluralism
Session 10: The Primacy of Love