Alfred North Whitehead’s Natural Theology
<p>Whitehead started off his academic life as a professor of mathematics. With Bertrand Russell, he wrote <em>Principia Mathematica</em>, <a href="https://youtu.be/bGtiPTVVFvI?t=396" rel="noopener ugc nofollow" target="_blank">perhaps the most dense book ever written</a>. But like Ludwig Wittgenstein, Whitehead abandoned Russell’s analytical, reductionist view of the world and became a philosophy professor. In a series of books beginning with <em>The Concept of Nature</em> (1920), Whitehead developed the method of process philosophy. Central to his philosophy is that reality needs to be understood as a series of states within constant processes. Whitehead thus called into question the basic assumptions of science, and even of all of Western civilization. He planted seeds of thought that have transformed science and society, but his ideas are now unfairly ignored.</p>
<p><a href="https://medium.com/inserting-philosophy/alfred-north-whiteheads-natural-theology-4786a8039440"><strong>Click Here</strong></a></p>