In this episode of the Integration podcast, Robb Smith joins Nick Hedlund and Brendan Graham Dempsey to make the case for Integrative Metatheory 2.0. Drawing on a project that began with Sean Esbjörn-Hargens’ meta-integral work in 2010-2013, they explore how frameworks like critical realism, Edgar Morin’s complex thought, and metamodernism entered the conversation alongside integral theory, and what it now takes to bring them into genuine dialogue.
Key themes include a typology of metatheories (philosophical, scientific, and synthetic), the causal force of worldviews in shaping our understanding of and response to planetary-scale systems, and why AI and other accelerating developments make adequate conceptual foundations more urgent than ever. The group also takes up negative transfiguration as a core commitment: the aim is for frameworks to genuinely learn from and alter each other, rather than collapse into a single grand synthesis.
The conversation closes on what success looks like for the project: frameworks that change as a result of dialogue, and the emergence of a shared grammar adequate to navigating between disciplines and philosophical traditions.
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Timestamps
00:00:15 – Introduction and Project Overview
00:02:48 – The Project’s History: From Meta-Integral to IMT 2.0
00:05:40 – The “So What?” Critique
00:13:47 – Modernity Scaled the Planet on a Fragmented Worldview
00:20:41 – Worldview, AI, and the Question of Agency
00:46:08 – A Typology of Metatheories
00:54:22 – What Does Success Look Like?
00:57:07 – Negative Transfiguration
