The Philosophy of Henri Bergson Background • Newtonian mechanics could not explain the microscopic world of the atom and the very nature of reality itself was no longer a future scientific certainty. Introduction • His math teacher disappointed, famously claimed: “You could have been a mathematician; you will be a mere philosopher.” Mind and Brain • “We do not experience the world moment by moment, but in a fashion essentially continuous, illustrated by the way we hear a melody, which cannot consist simply in hearing a succession of disjointed notes.” Mind and Brain • “Choice is creation, and creation is labor.” Mind and Brain • “I have simply tried to show that when we leave the domain of mathematics and physics to enter that of life and consciousness, we must make appeal to a certain sense of life which cuts across pure understanding and has its origin in the same vital impulse as instinct. Creative Evolution • Evolution is creative not simply in how it does its job, but in the fact that where it will go and what it will do is undetermined. Summary • “The true statement is of itself able to displace the erroneous idea, and becomes, without our having taken the trouble of refuting anyone, the best of refutations.” Summary • “Before him we were cogs and wheels in a vast and dead machine; now, if we wish it, we can help to write our own parts in the drama of creation.”