Abstract
For those who like to locate a subject matter within some familiar context before plunging into its content, this book offers a formidable barrier. Bahm has provided neither preface nor introduction to his work. His book presents three loosely connected studies dealing with polarity, dialectic, and negation, with a final chapter on "Organicity," where we discover that Bahm is introducing us to a new philosophy which he calls "organicism." Organicism distinguishes the categories of existence and experience as ultimate and interdependent. It aims "to be anti-reductionistic, i.e. to refuse to reduce existence to experience and to reduce experience to existence whether experienced or not." "As a both-and philosophy," organicism "claims to account for both existence and experience; and for both experienced existence and unexperienced existence, and for both what is experienced as existing and what is experienced as not existing (million dollars in my pocket." Bahm proposes "two lists of categorial polarities for further study. "The two lists will serve as an outline for a work program by the author who aims to explore each pair, both in itself and in relation to every other pair in the same list. That is, two sets of volumes, one on Existence and one on Experience, are projected." The three studies presented in the volume under review are interesting in their own right. However, the book suffers for lack of an introductory essay.--D. R. P.