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Process philosophy
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==== Causation and concrescence of a process ==== ''Concrescence'' is a term coined by Whitehead for the process of a new occasion manifesting as "fully actual"βi.e., becoming ''concrete''βand, having completed this process of actualization (achieving ''satisfaction'', in his terms), in turn becoming an objective datum for successor occasions.<ref name="Audi (ed.)"/> The concretion process can be regarded as a process of ''subjectification.''<ref name="Cobb">John B. Cobb and David Ray Griffin. 1976, ''Process Theology, An Introduction. Philadelphia: The Westminster Press.''</ref> ''Datum'' is a term coined by Whitehead to show the different variants of information possessed by actual entity. In process philosophy, each datum is obtained through the events of concrescence.<ref name="Audi (ed.)"/><ref name="Cobb"/>
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