The Self-Transforming World and the Universal Procedure

Guo Xiang compared with Finn’s Procedure Monism

 

By Bodhangkur Mahathero

 

 

 

At first glance, Guo Xiang (d. 312 CE) and Finn (b. 1940 – d ?) appear astonishingly close.

Both reject transcendental metaphysics.
Both deny a creator standing outside reality.
Both dissolve rigid essences.
Both describe reality as ongoing process rather than static substance.
Both attack artificial abstractions imposed onto living emergence.
Both collapse the distinction between “ordinary reality” and hidden metaphysical worlds.

Yet beneath these similarities lies a profound structural divergence.

Guo Xiang describes spontaneous emergence.
Finn explains emergence procedurally.

That difference changes everything.

 

1. Guo Xiang: Self-Transformation Without Central Mechanism

Guo Xiang’s core doctrine is zihua or duhua:

things transform spontaneously from themselves.

Reality is a ceaseless process of self-generation (i.e. an automaton) without transcendent source, divine planner, or metaphysical substrate.

Birds fly because they are birds.
Fish swim because they are fish.
Humans think because they are humans.

Nothing stands behind this process.

This produces an elegant radical immanentism:

·         no hidden absolute,

·         no creator,

·         no “other shore,”

·         no metaphysical beyond.

Reality is simply spontaneous transformation all the way down.

But here Finn’s critique begins.

For Finn, “spontaneous transformation” is descriptive, not explanatory.

It says that transformation occurs, but not why stable identities emerge repeatedly instead of collapsing into total incoherence.

Guo Xiang brilliantly dissolves metaphysical substances but leaves procedural structure underdefined.

 

2. Finn’s Procedure Monism: Emergence Requires Constraints

Finn accepts Guo Xiang’s rejection of transcendental metaphysics but introduces a missing mechanism:

constraint.

Procedure Monism argues that emergence is not merely spontaneous.

It is procedurally constrained.

Reality consists of:

·         random energy fluctuation,

·         shaped by stable constraints,

·         generating coherent emergents.

Finn’s universe resembles a universal computational process:

·         endless random input,

·         limited rule-set,

·         stable patterned outputs.

This is why Finn repeatedly invokes the Universal Turing Machine analogy.

The key question becomes:

Why does anything coherent exist at all?

Guo Xiang answers:

because things spontaneously self-transform.

Finn answers:

because one universal procedure continuously constrains random momentum into temporary coherent identities.

This is a massive conceptual shift.

Guo Xiang privileges spontaneity.
Finn privileges procedural limitation.

 

3. The Missing Physics

Guo Xiang remains phenomenological.

His philosophy describes lived emergence beautifully but avoids hard ontological mechanics.

Finn radicalizes the issue by grounding emergence in quantised interaction.

For Finn:

·         discontinuity is fundamental,

·         contact generates realness,

·         identity emerges through repeated constrained collisions,

·         existence is procedural stabilization.

This introduces an explicitly physicalized ontology absent in Guo Xiang.

Guo Xiang’s world flows.

Finn’s world computes.

 

4. Dao vs Universal Procedure

Guo Xiang’s Dao is ultimately elusive.

Although he strips it of creator-like transcendence, Dao still functions as a vaguely holistic descriptor of spontaneous reality.

Finn rejects such vagueness.

Procedure Monism insists:

if something functions, its operation must be describable procedurally.

Thus Finn replaces Dao with:

the Universal Procedure (UP)

The UP is not mystical.

It is:

·         blind,

·         automatic, (i.e. an automaton)

·         non-conscious,

·         constraint-based,

·         endlessly iterative.

Guo Xiang’s language remains poetic and fluid.

Finn operationalizes the cosmos.

 

5. Anti-Metaphysics

Both thinkers are deeply anti-metaphysical, but in different ways.

Guo Xiang dissolves metaphysics into immanence.

Finn attacks metaphysics as semantic fraud or cosmetic rendering.

Guo Xiang says:

there is no hidden world behind appearances.

Finn says:

hidden worlds are generated by cognitive and survival-driven abstraction systems.

Thus Finn’s critique is harsher.

Guo Xiang softens transcendence.
Finn diagnoses transcendence as procedural overproduction or survival-support fiction.

 

6. Identity

Guo Xiang treats identity as temporary situational expression within spontaneous process.

Finn agrees but adds:

identity is generated through repeated procedural stabilization under constraint.

Thus Finn’s identity theory is more mechanistic.

For Guo Xiang, beings flourish by expressing their allotment naturally.

For Finn, beings are local coherent iterations of the same universal procedure.

In Finn:

every emergent is “God in its space.”

But “God” here means the UP locally instantiated.

This is not present in Guo Xiang.

 

7. Consciousness

Guo Xiang never fully naturalizes consciousness.

Finn does.

For Finn, consciousness is:

a survival-oriented analog(ue) rendering interface generated from underlying digital-like quantised interactions.

This is radically modern.

Consciousness becomes dashboard simulation rather than mystical awareness.

Guo Xiang still inhabits contemplative phenomenology.

Finn converts cognition into procedural adaptation machinery.

 

8. “Beyond” and Transcendence

Here the two thinkers become unexpectedly close.

Guo Xiang strongly resists transcendental “other worlds.”

Finn goes further and calls such notions semantic or religious inflation.

For Guo Xiang:

there is no metaphysical beyond.

For Finn:

“beyond” itself becomes a deceptive placeholder unless procedurally definable.

Thus Finn weaponizes Guo Xiang’s immanentism into outright anti-transcendental critique.

 

Final Difference

The deepest difference is this:

Guo Xiang describes the spontaneity of reality.

Finn explains reality as constrained procedural emergence.

Guo Xiang dissolves the metaphysical absolute.

Finn replaces it with operational structure.

Guo Xiang leaves mystery intact.

Finn attempts to compress mystery into mechanics.

Or in one sentence:

Guo Xiang describes a self-flowing cosmos;

Finn describes a self-computing cosmos.

 

The named Tao

A comprehensive summary of Guo Xiang’s thought

 

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