Michel Weber


Michel Weber is a Belgian philosopher. He is best known as an interpreter and advocate of the philosophy of Alfred North Whitehead, and has come to prominence as the architect and organizer of an overlapping array of international scholarly societies and publication projects devoted to Whitehead and the global relevance of process philosophy.
Weber criticizes contemporary academic philosophy for losing touch with its early Greek roots. Philosophy has a practical mission to restore personal and social well being, but it cannot do this, he argues, if it renounces its traditional metaphysical obligation to understand the cosmos. Weber believes that process philosophy is uniquely qualified to fulfill this double function in the post-modern world.
Weber was educated in Belgium and the United States. The primary languages of his publications are English and French.

Education

Michel Weber studied applied economics at the Saint-Louis University, Brussels and philosophy at the University of Louvain in Louvain-la-Neuve. His master's thesis, written under the supervision of Jean Ladrière, dealt with the epistemological status of the "anthropic principle" in cosmology in light of the concepts of teleology found in Aristotle, Thomas Aquinas, and Kant.
From 1993 to 1995, he was Visiting Scholar at the Center for Process Studies of the Claremont School of Theology and at Claremont Graduate University, Claremont, California, where he worked under the supervision of John B. Cobb Jr. and David Ray Griffin.
In 1997, he defended his doctoral thesis, Intuition pré-systématique et intuition ontologique chez Alfred North Whitehead. Euristique du pancréativisme de l’époque de Harvard, written under the supervision of Marcel Crabbé.

Career

From 1997 to 2002 he was Research Fellow at the of the UCLouvain. From 2001 to 2002 he taught philosophy at the École européenne Bruxellensis II. From 2002 to 2007, he was Research Fellow at the Centre for Philosophical Anthropology of the UCLouvain Higher Institute of Philosophy.
In 2000, Weber created, with the support of François Beets and Paul Gochet, the Chromatiques whiteheadiennes and the Whitehead Psychology Nexus, two scholarly societies intended to federate research on different aspects, nuances, and implications of the thought of A. N. Whitehead. In 2001, he created the European William James Project with Jack Barbalet, Jaime Nubiola and the late Timothy L. S. Sprigge.
In 2002, he created the research seminars "Chromatiques whiteheadiennes" with the cooperation of the "Philosophies of Experience" research center at the Université de Nantes Department of Philosophy and the Center for the Study of Pragmatism and Analytic Philosophy at the Sorbonne.
Since 2004, he has been the Editorial Director of the series Chromatiques whiteheadiennes for the academic publisher and Editorial Co-director, along with Nicholas Rescher and Johanna Seibt, of the Process Thought series, also with .
Since 2005, he has co-edited the Chromatikon: Annuaire de la philosophie en procès — Yearbook of Philosophy in Process at the Presses universitaires de Louvain, first with Diane d'Eprémesnil, then with Pierfrancesco Basile, and now with Ronny Desmet.
In 2006, he created the Chromatiques whiteheadiennes "Centre for Philosophical Practice," a non-profit organization. The Center now federates the three networks mentioned above and provides an institutional base for two new activities: first, the publication of a scholarly book series appearing under the label Les Éditions Chromatika and, second, the opening in Brussels of Belgium's first philosophical counseling service or "philosophical praxis."
Since 2007, he has been a member of the "Contemporary Ontological Visions" network of the Institute for Philosophical Research of the Bulgarian Academy of Sciences. In 2008–9, he was Visiting Professor at the New Bulgarian University, Department of Cognitive Science and Psychology & Department of Philosophy and Sociology.
Since 2009, Weber is also a trained hypnotherapist.

Philosophical work

As a principal source of inspiration, Weber promotes the ideas of a group of loosely associated thinkers from the early 20th century who applied evolutionary thinking to psychology, epistemology, cosmology, metaphysics, and theology, giving rise to the school of thought now known as "process philosophy." Alfred North Whitehead, along with C. S. Peirce, Henri Bergson, and William James, is regarded as one of the fathers of process philosophy. This mostly Anglo-American school of thought still finds only minority endorsement in academic philosophy departments. Nevertheless, despite its limited reception in the United States and Great Britain, process philosophy has begun to interest a small but growing number of scholars worldwide. By organizing a global network of like-minded scholars and fostering the publication of their ideas in Europe, Weber has contributed significantly to the visibility of process philosophy in Europe.
There also appears to be a shift of focus. Until recently, interest in Whitehead, especially in the United States, tended to focus on process theology. Whitehead's brief but provocative theological speculations, added almost as an afterthought at the end of his major philosophical opus Process and Reality, were elaborated into an excitingly new natural theology that seemed particularly attractive to Christian theologians because it made naturalistic sense of God's personal love for creatures. This theological emphasis, however, along with a sometimes evangelical tone adopted by Whitehead's more ardent devotees, may be the reason for the marginalization of process philosophy in mainstream academic philosophy.
With his 1996 book Process Metaphysics, the eminent and prolific American philosopher Nicholas Rescher began a campaign to rehabilitate a broadly secular style of process thinking. He defended it as the optimal matrix for any systematic theorizing about the nature of things. Like Rescher in the United States, Weber cultivates a critical and largely secular appreciation for process philosophy. He translated Rescher's Process Metaphysics into French in 2006.
In 2000, his monograph La dialectique de l’intuition chez A. N. Whitehead. Sensation pure, pancréativité et onto-logisme was awarded a prize by the Belgian Royal Academy. Weber argues that the term pancreativism constitutes the more appropriate qualification of Whitehead's metaphysics, which is neither a pantheism or a panentheism.

Professional activities

Weber is the author of 10 monographs and 80 scholarly articles and encyclopedia entries. His monograph La Dialectique de l’intuition chez A. N. Whitehead: sensation pure, pancréativité et contiguïsme was awarded the Prix du Concours annuel 2000 by the Royal Academy of Belgium.
He is also the motive force behind numerous international and intercultural collaborations. He strives to coordinate his professional activities toward the creation of a new, visionary philosophical culture conceived as cooperative, intellectually adventurous, ethically self-aware, and global in reach.
Using process philosophy as a matrix to foster synergies, Weber follows the work of hundreds of scholars worldwide and with each of his projects defines a locus where he thinks creative energies are poised to intersect. Collaborating with some 150 scholars representing all continents, he has to date edited or co-edited 30 collections, bringing together hundreds of original papers on themes relating to process philosophy in an interdisciplinary and multicultural context.
Weber is also the founder of the Centre for Philosophical Practice in Brussels. Philosophical Counseling is a recent movement, probably begun in the United States, employing Socratic methods of dialog for the purpose of short-term counseling that, without seeking to replace more traditional psychotherapies, nevertheless offers an alternative to them.
In July 2010, he organized an Applied Process Metaphysics Summer Institute in Paris, at the Cité universitaire's Fondation Biermans Lapôtre. The second Institute has taken place in July 2011.
In May 2014, the philosophical counselling service moved to the Centre Kinos, now , of the University of Louvain in Louvain-la-Neuve. Dr Weber is also currently Adjunct Professor, Department of Educational Foundations, .