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Order,disorder, and the absolute: An experiment in dialogue
Authors:David Bohm  Sean Kelly  Edgar Morin
Affiliation:1. Birkbeck College , London, England;2. University of Ottawa , Ottawa, Ontario, Canada;3. C.N.R.S. , Paris, France
Abstract:The first section of this dialogue is excerpted from an edited conversation between Sean Kelly and the late David Bohm, and focuses on the concepts of order, disorder, and the Absolute. The second section explores these concepts in greater depth, with Bohm maintaining the impossibility of absolute knowledge and the fundamental unintelligibility of the concept of disorder, preferring instead to speak of “orders of infinite degree” which emerge out of an “unknown ground.” Kelly responds by proposing the concept of “absolute knowing” as the cognitive process within which the concepts of order and disorder, the known and the Unknown are seen as dialectically related moments of the Absolute as complex whole. The third section is Edgar Morin's response to the preceding dialogue. He begins by outlining his views on the nature and limits of rationality, maintaining, with Bohm, the superiority of the “negative modality” of speaking about “being” or “reality.” In the second part, however, he proposes the notion of nature as “chaosmos,” which he understands as a creative “dialogic” of order, disorder, and organization.
Keywords:absolute  Bohm  chaos  complexity  dialectic  dialogic  disorder  Hegel  infinite  Kelly  knowledge  Morin  mysticism  nature  organization  rationality  reality  science
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