Troodon Roar
Harry Hindu
Then the "parts" aren't part of the whole, but something else entirely.I argue that parts can have properties that the wholes which they form with other parts lack. — Troodon Roar
A semi-circle is not part of a circle. It is a different shape entirely.For example, a semicircle is half of a circle, but the semicircle has two corners/edges/vertices and has a straight side as well as a curved side, whereas the circle has no corners/edges/vertices and has just one curved “side” enclosing it.
So the semicircle has at least two properties — having corners/edges/vertices and having a straight side — which the circle it forms along with another semicircle lacks.
So this is clearly a case of a part having properties that the whole does not have.
So the whole is not necessarily greater, in every way, than the part. — Troodon Roar
Troodon Roar
Troodon Roar
Troodon Roar
Harry Hindu
So the only way to make a circle is by putting two semi-circles together?If you still aren’t convinced that a semicircle is part of a circle, just go out and find two semicircular objects, put them together, and you will find that they make a circle. — Troodon Roar
Troodon Roar
BrianW
christian2017
Troodon Roar
SophistiCat
Brett
So this is clearly a case of a part having properties that the whole does not have. — Troodon Roar
I find this an interesting idea applied to communities or society — Brett
Brett
christian2017
It’s the idea that the community is the collective, (the whole), of the people (the parts).
If the parts have properties/qualities different from the whole then it’s in conflict with the whole, and vice versa. Then the community is not representative of the people, as it’s purported to be. — Brett
Terrapin Station
You've posted the exact same argument before. You didn't get much of a discussion, because the idea is trivial and there is not much to discuss. — SophistiCat
SophistiCat
Terrapin Station
Two cells are not identical to one cell. — SophistiCat
frank
Trinity Stooge
Deleted User
I argue that parts can have properties that the wholes which they form with other parts lack. — Troodon Roar
PossibleAaran
Deleted User
There are some more obvious examples than the circle. One due to Bertrand Russel: a brick wall might be very heavy, although none of the bricks on their own are heavy. — PossibleAaran
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