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  1. Arthur Young’s Theory of Process is a formal analytical tool, a model based on number theory, geometry and topology. It is also based on Young’s extensive study of traditional wisdom, Jungian archetypes, Theosophy, astrology, yoga, mythology and other modes of knowledge and insight.

  2. The Theory of Process. In his major book, The Reflexive Universe, Young introduces the reader gradually and in logical sequence to the basic concepts of his integrative paradigm, known as the theory of process.

  3. Young evolved his theory of process by working deductively from basic principles and testing his ideas against both scientifi c fact and accepted theories over a period of 30 years. He was able to show that the process of nature is more fundamental than the structures it forms.

  4. learned the language of process theory with its precise grammar and syntax and begun to apply it to an analysis of reality, still deeper levels of subtlety and complexity are revealed.

  5. Young’s aim in the theory of process is to achieve a comprehensive theory or metaparadigm that includes and is thoroughly consistent with the best science but which is capable of dealing with nonobjective, nondefinable aspects of reality beyond the accepted limits of science.

  6. After a brief overview of other TOEs, they will present the fundamentals of Young's Theory of (Evolutionary) Process (ToP), which elegantly describes the primacy of light (the quantum of action) in the unfolding of the energetic and then the material universe; how this occurs within 4 Levels of existence, and manifests via a Toroidal 7 Stage ...

  7. Young advocated process philosophy, an attempt to integrate the realm of human thought and experience with the realm of science so that the concept of universe is not limited to that which can be physically measured. Young's theory embraces evolution and the concept of the great chain of being.