It seems "the whole" has additional structure (and interaction) that the collection of "the parts" does not.
I suppose some emergence may be a result of the difference. — jorndoe
Experientially it feels right to me that the whole is at least other than the sum of the parts. If you ever make music you will recognise this. I sing in a choir and the collective feeling when things go right is of a different order from when one is singing individually, or from the notion of a bunch of individuals who happen to be singing with each other. People who play instruments tell me the same. — mcdoodle
The other ontological issue can come up even in 'realism'. (To generalize a point Wayfarer is making) Are for instance abstractions in biology 'reducible' to chemistry or physics? Is 'the economy' reducible to some set of naturalistic terms? Or are there - as I would see it - different levels of abstraction appropriate to different forms of analysis, without the supposed component parts being in some way 'superior' or 'more fundamental'? — mcdoodle
Take a human level example of an army. For an army to make itself constructible, it must take large numbers of young men and simplify their natures accordingly. It must turn people with many degrees of freedom (any variety of personal social histories) into simpler and more uniform components. — apokrisis
So wholes are more than just the sum of their parts ... in that wholes shape those parts to serve their higher order purposes. Wholes aren't accidental in nature. They produce their own raw materials by simplifying the messy world to a collection of parts with no choice but to construct the whole in question. — apokrisis
The army's capacity to "turn people" into "uniform components" is dependent on the willingness of the individual to be turned this way. — Metaphysician Undercover
Following your example then, if it is true that wholes actually "shape those parts to serve higher order purposes" they must do this through the intention of the part. — Metaphysician Undercover
But the army is what has the idea of what it needs the individuals to be. — apokrisis
But the intention comes from the whole and it's common goal, as you just agreed. So the most you can argue for is a lack of effective resistance - some other goal in play. Materials only need to be pliable. — apokrisis
The point though, is that intention is the property of the individuals, it does not come "from the whole", it comes from the individual parts. — Metaphysician Undercover
You are confusing what was a simple point.
Under hierarchy theory, the whole is more than the sum of its parts because it has the power to make the parts less than what they were. The whole contrains the parts with a common purpose and this limits the freedoms they may have "enjoyed".
If you believe this is not how armies are, then you must have no clue about military life. Why do you think boot camps were invented? To aid recruits in discovering their truest selves? ;) — apokrisis
Indeed, the whole, say a car, is an assembly of interacting parts. These parts weren't assembled by themselves, but were put together by human, who also conceive the the property, interactions, forms, and the structure of the car.
However the same parts that wasn't put together by human remains a pile. — miosim
Do we need to invoke emergence to understand this? — miosim
I don't buy emergence beyond it being a way of saying that properties depend on dynamic structures, but again, relations/structures/processes are parts in my opinion (a fortiori because all parts in the normal "object" sense are dynamic structures in the first place) — Terrapin Station
Something similar shows up in all kinds of places.
Say, hydrogen and oxygen atoms (the parts) can combine to water molecules (the whole).
In turn, atomic hydrogen and oxygen has protons and electrons and neutrons, ... — jorndoe
Depends on what counts as emergence I guess.
The car (the whole) can be used for transportation, but the pile (the parts) can't. — jorndoe
Are the water phases/states emergent? The nifty-looking, symmetrical, hexagonal ice-crystals?
The parts on their own can't be water steam/gas, liquid or ice/solid (which also depending on pressure and temperature). — jorndoe
nstead we need to grow up and start talking about reducibility of the properties of water to the properties of its atoms that in most cases is fully reducible and therefore no need to talk about emergence. — miosim
So say we have you, and then standing next to you, a small vat of chemicals - a vat of carbon, water, nitrogen, phosphorous, etc - that is absolutely identical in atomic composition.
What is missing that is present In one but not the other? — apokrisis
...while 'I' am the self organized system. — miosim
So what is "self-organisation"? — apokrisis
In systems theory, it is the limitations that wholes can impose to turn chaos into order, noise into signal. And that is why there is a metaphysical-strength contrast with the parts.
The parts can only construct a state of organization. The whole has the opposite kind of causality in that it can constrain the state of organization. — apokrisis
I am strongly oppose the ontological emergence and believe that any theory based on emergence is wrong. Therefore I don't see much sense not accept or even discuss the definitions provided by such theory. — miosim
Yep. You gotta stick to what you believe and avoid all evidence to the contrary in this life. — apokrisis
The parts can only construct a state of organisation. The whole has the opposite kind of causality in that it can constrain the state of organisation. — apokrisis
However the more I learned the more my hopes have been replacing with growing suspicion that the horizons open by complexity science led to desert filled with mirages. — miosim
So what are you evidences in favor of emergence? — miosim
Change the parts and the system changes. — darthbarracuda
Yep. So that is why a functioning whole needs the power of constraint over its parts. It must limit the freedom or indeterminism of its components to ensure they remain "the right kind of stuff". — apokrisis
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