Nein,
God is the most unimaginable being. — SpaceDweller
Most interesting — Ms. Marple
Ya, it does. The ultimate simple is not a part (one of many), but the Whole (all-encompassing Unity).
But, a better name for that unpartitioned infinite Potential might be a "holicale" (play on Holism). :joke: — Gnomon
Yes. But the "Whole" is the immaterial "extra" (pattern ; arrangement ; logical structure ; metaphorical "glue") which unifies the physical parts into a system, not the parts themselves. It's the "more-than" which adds special properties of its own. If you try to dissect a whole into parts, it's no longer a whole. That's why Systems Theory was devised for Science, to study complex organizations, without killing the goose that laid the golden egg.Isn't the whole made up of (simpler) parts? — Agent Smith
Holism is an ancient philosophical notion (e.g. Taoism). But, my eyes were opened to the modern concept of Holism --- as an Evolutionary Principle and a causal force (phase change) in the real world --- by the 1926 book, Holism and Evolution, by Jan Smuts. Note : NewAge spirituality later mixed ancient & modern versions of Holism into their worldview. However, that same core concept, as applied to physical Science, is what we now know as Systems Theory. For a general philosophical introduction, I highly recommend the Smuts book. I have two hardback copies, would you like to borrow one? :joke:I suppose you're on target. There are some systems that the moment you dissect/disassemble them they immediately stop being what they actually are. Life is a classic example: A cell is alive, as soon as you break it down into its parts like in a centrifuge, it dies. If so, did we really study/understand the cell? — Agent Smith
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