When the Part Mirrors the Whole: Interactions Beyond Simple Location
Metadatos
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FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
Materia
Simple location International relations Misplaced concreteness Process philosophy Alfred North Whitehead
Fecha
2021Referencia bibliográfica
Gomez-Marin A and Arnau J (2021) When the Part Mirrors the Whole: Interactions Beyond “Simple Location”. Front. Psychol. 11:523885. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2020.523885
Patrocinador
Spanish Ministry of Science, Innovation and Universities BFU-2015-74241-JIN RyC-2017-23599Resumen
Reductionism relies on expectations that it is possible to make sense of the whole by
studying its parts, whereas emergentism considers that program to be unattainable,
partly due to the existence of emergent properties. The emergentist holistic stance
is particularly relevant in biology and cognitive neuroscience, where interactions
amongst system components and environment are key. Here we consider Alfred North
Whitehead’s philosophy as providing important insights to metaphysics of science in
general, and to the reductionism vs. emergentism debate in particular. An appraisal of
Whitehead’s perspective reveals a difficulty shared by both approaches, referred to him
as “simple location”: the commitment to the idea that the nature of things is exhausted by
their intrinsic or internal properties, and does not take into account relations or dynamic
interactions denoting “togetherness.” In a word, that things are simply where they are.
Whitehead criticizes this externalist ontological perspective in which each interacting
element exists, and can be thought, without essential reference to other elements. The
aim of this work is to uncover such a stance, particularly in the context of dynamical
systems, and to show its shortcomings. We propose an alternative relational approach
based on Whitehead’s notion of “internal relations,” which we explicate and illustrate
with several examples. Our work aims to criticize the notion of simple location, even in
the framework of emergentist accounts, so as to contribute to a “relational turn” that
will conceive “inter-identities” as “intra-identities” in which interactants are not enduring
substances, but internally related processes. In sum, we argue that the notion of internal
relations has a strong theoretical power to overcome some fundamental difficulties in the
study of life and mind.