I
think I understand what you're trying to say, and I
think it's been something I've been grappling with in my own musings. I think one answer to what you're after is to look at the operation of entropy. We tend to think about entropy in terms of the dissolution of order, but one curious fact about entropy is that 'local' negentropy - hollowed out zones of order among the generalized tendency to cosmic disorder - tends to ultimately be in the service of entropy: highly ordered (negentropic) systems - which are another way of speaking about identities or what we're in this discussion calling 'necessary processes' - require a great deal more work to maintain - and thus churn through the available free energy in the universe - than minimally ordered or unordered systems. Which is just to say that the more (local) negentropy there is, the more efficiently (global) entropy functions.
Now, it seems to me that entropy functions as, as it were, the 'ground' that we're looking for. Although not a process in the sense of the term we're using (i.e. a (minimally) self-sustaining, negentropic system), it plays the role of something like a 'pre-process'. The running down of the cosmic entropic gradient
motivates - although it does not direct or oversee, in the mode of a program or blueprint - the formation of localized currents of 'necessary processes'. Now, clearly entropy is not enough to furnish us with something like a principle of individuation, but it does provide the 'kick', the motor that would set things going in the first place.
Individuation proper, on the other hand, requires something more than just the waning out of entropy: it requires a
linkage or articulation between two heterogeneous orders of magnitude. This is something that's incredibly hard to explain, but I'll try my best, as I'm working though it myself. Recall that negentropy is an
ordered resolution of an energy gradient: an attempt to bring a ∆X to 0 (where ∆X = the difference in energy within a bounded space). Now, if we bring together two separate gradients together and put them into communication such that one disrupts or interferes with the efficient flow (of energy) of the other, as it were, we can set off a process of individuation. John Protevi gives the basic example of hurricane formation, which "involves differential relations among heterogeneous components whose rates of change are connected with each other. [In] hurricane formation... it is intuitively clear that there is no central command but a self-organization of multiple processes of air and water movement propelled by temperature and pressure differences. All hurricanes form when intensive processes of wind and ocean currents reach singular points... triggering updrafts, eyewall formation, and so on." (Protevi,
Life, War, Earth)
In the formations of hurricanes, we have two separate differential orders (temperature and pressure) put into 'communication' with each other, requiring a resolution in the form of a hurricance, which most efficiently dissipates the potential energy involved. Gilbert Simondon puts it's programmatically as follows: "The true principle of individuation is mediation, which generally presumes the existence of the original duality of the orders of magnitude and the initial absence of interactive communication between them, followed by a subsequent communication between orders of magnitude and stabilization. At the same time that a quantity of potential energy (the necessary condition for a higher order of magnitude) is actualized, a portion of matter is organized and distributed (the necessary condition for a lower order of magnitude) into structured individuals of a middle order of magnitude, developing by a mediate process of amplification." (Simondon,
The Genesis of the Individual). In other words,
individuation is the resolution of a differential field polarized between two orders of intensity.
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Now, when you speak of a 'transference mechanism' by which a contingent process becomes a necessary one, what is at stake is how this process of articulation/resolution comes to bear upon itself. In other words, what is at stake is
life itself. As Simondon notes, life differs from non-life to the extent that living beings are not merely the outcome of individuating processes, but
individuate themselves. He calls this self-individuation a matter of attaining 'internal resonance': "In the domain of living things... individuation is no longer produced, as in the physical domain, in an instantaneous fashion, quantum-like, abrupt and definitive, leaving in its wake a duality of milieu and individual - the milieu having been deprived of the individual it no longer is, and the individual no longer possessing the wider dimensions of the milieu. ... [The living being] is matched by a perpetual individuation that is life itself following the fundamental mode of becoming:
the living being conserves in itself an activity of permanent individuation. It is not only the result of individuation, like the crystal or the molecule, but is a veritable theater of individuation. Moreover, the entire activity of the living being is not, like that of the physical individual, concentrated at its boundary with the outside world. There exists within the being a more complete regime of
internal resonance requiring permanent communication and maintaining a metastability that is the precondition of life". (
GI)
What Simondon here calls 'internal resonance' is another name for the way in which - pertinent to our discussion - things, or in this case, living beings,
engender their own operation: "The living being is also the being that results from an initial individuation and amplifies this individuation, not at all the machine to which it is assimilated functionally by the model of cybernetic mechanism. In the living being, individuation is brought about by the individual itself, and is not simply a functioning object that results from an individuation previously accomplished, comparable to the product of a manufacturing process. The living being resolves its problems not only by adapting itself which is to say, by modifying its relationship to its milieu (something a machine is equally able to do) - but by modifying itself through the invention of new internal structures and its complete self-insertion into the axiomatic of organic problems.
The living individual is a system of individuation, an individuation system and also a system that individuates itself. The internal resonance and the translation of its relation to itself into information are all contained in the living being's system" (
GI)
Now the key here is that the internal resonance proper to living beings is not of a different order to individuation process of non-living things. Instead of resolving a differential field once and for all - as with a hurricane, which eventually dissipates once the tension between temperature and pressure is normalized - the living being sustains itself
as a differential field of continual resolution. This is how Simondon links his notion of individuation back to perception itself: "Both the psyche and the collectivity are constituted by a process of individuation supervening on the individuation that was productive of life. The psyche represents the continuing effort of individuation in a being that has to resolve its own problematic through its own involvement as an element of the problem by taking action as a subject. The subject can be thought of as the unity of the being when it is thought of as a living individual, and as a being that represents its activity to itself in the world both as an element and a dimension of the world. Problems that concern living beings are not just confined to their own sphere: only by means of an unending series of successive individuations, which ensure that ever-more preindividual reality is brought into play and incorporated into the relation with the milieu, can we endow living beings with an open-ended axiomatic. Affectivity and perception are seen as forming a single whole in both emotion and science, forcing one to take recourse to new
dimensions" (
GI)
In other words - and here we can finally turn back to the OP - perception is itself no less subject to a process of individuation; to perceive is to 'resolve' a differential field involving body, world, movement, evolutionary and developmental history, surface texture, light, temperature and so on. This is why illusions are 'objective'; the perception of an illusion tends to resolve itself in similar manners to people who have similar evolutionary-developmental histories to us. Anyway, the main takeway here is that metaphysically speaking, what primary here is not an unmoved mover, but simply
movement as such. The running down of a difference which is itself productive of differences (i.e. individuation). We can have our univocal cake and eat it too (If you get the chance, read
Simondon's article (itself only an introduction to a larger book-length work). It is, I'm starting to be convinced, perhaps the most important piece of philosophical writing published in the last century).
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Also see a recent blogpost by
Levi Bryant where he makes some similar points: " The most elementary model of the thing should not be the rock, nor the hammer, but rather the vortex as in instances of whirlpools, tornadoes, and hurricanes. Everywhere being is composed of vortices. There is, first of all, the field that is everywhere populated by turbulence. Here we encounter a very delicate and intricate a-theological issues: motion, turbulence– which is to say, the formation of form –does not come to being or the universe from without, but is always-already immanently operative within being. Being, the universe, requires no prime mover in order for motion to take place. Rather, everywhere there are flows of turbulence. Occasionally those flows come together and a vortex emerges. These vortices arise from these fields of turbulence and continuously draw from these fields of turbulence. Even vortices like rocks require turbulence to continue. This is why rocks are folds of a field that exceed them, while nonetheless being distinct from these fields (conditions of temperature, pressure, etc). If they depart too far from the field out of which they grow and live, they dissipate like so much morning mist.
A vortex is thus a particular organization, as ongoing process, of a field of turbulence. It is turbulence that has attained rotary motion. Yet in attaining rotary motion, vortices do not simply withdraw into themselves. Rather, they rebound back on the field of turbulence out of which they have grown. The field is reconfigured as a result of their rotary motion, creating circumstances in which different forms of turbulence and other vortices come into being."