“…Indeed, the inter-relating of events -called "prehension of events" by Whitehead (1920Whitehead ( , 1929 -means that actors act in their present through engagement with past and anticipated events. Consequently, in this approach, mainly rooted in the process philosophies of Whitehead (1920Whitehead ( , 1929Whitehead ( , 1938 and Mead (1932), and in some works in organization studies (Chia, 1999;Chia & King, 1998;Cobb, 2007;Hernes, 2014aHernes, , 2014b, stability is not only related to past and considered as the impact of the past; nor is novelty only related to the present and future and considered as a rupture with the past. Rather, past and future are continually defined and redefined in actual events.…”