- Part-whole theory
Part-whole theory is the name of a loose collection of historical theories, all informal and nearly all unwitting, relating wholes to their parts via inclusion. Part-whole theory has been overtaken by
mereology .Metaphysics , especiallyontology , has invoked part-whole concepts ever sinceAristotle founded the subject.Husserl (1970) (German original first published in 1901) was the first to consciously elaborate a part-whole theory (on which see Tieszen 1995). However he employed no symbolism or logic, even though his doctorate was in mathematics andCantor was his friend and colleague; Husserl wrote only for his fellow philosophers.19th century mathematicians became dimly aware that they were invoking a part-whole theory of sorts only after
Cantor andPeano first articulatedset theory . Before then, mathematicians often confused inclusion and membership. Grattan-Guinness (2000) appears to have been the first to draw attention to this unwitting part-whole theory.Peano was among the first to articulate clearly the distinction between membership in a given set, and being a subset of that set. A subset of a set is usually not also a member of that set. However, the members of a subset are all members of the set. In set theory, asingleton cannot be identified with its member. In part-whole theory and mereology, this identification necessarily holds.The
Cantor -Peano concept of set did not become canonical until about 1910, when the first volume of "Principia Mathematica " appeared, and right afterErnst Zermelo proposed the first axiomatization of set theory in 1908.Starting in 1916, and culminating in his 1929 "
Process and Reality ",A. N. Whitehead published several books invoking part-whole concepts of varying degrees of formality; seeWhitehead's point-free geometry .Part-whole theory has been superseded by a collection of fully formal theories called
mereology ,Stanislaw Lesniewski 's term for a formal part-whole theory he began expositing in 1912. Over the course of the 20th century, a number of Polish logicians and mathematicians contributed to this "Polish mereology." Even though Polish mereology is now only of historical interest, the word "mereology" endures as the name of a collection of first order theories relating parts to their respective wholes. These theories, unlike set theory, can be provedsound andcomplete .Nearly all work that has appeared since 1970 under the heading of
mereology descends from the 1940 calculus of individuals ofHenry Leonard andNelson Goodman . Simons (1987) is a survey of mereology aimed at philosophers.ee also
*
mereology
*Whitehead's point-free geometry References
*
Ivor Grattan-Guinness , 2000. "The Search for Mathematical Roots". Princeton Univ. Press.
*Edmund Husserl , 1970. "Logical Investigations, Vol. 2", John Findlay, trans. Yale Univ. Press.
*Simons, Peter, 1987. "Parts: A Study in Ontology". Oxford University Press.
*Tieszen, Richard, 1995. "Mathematics" in David W. Smith &Barry Smith , eds., "The Cambridge Companion to Husserl". Cambridge University Press.External links
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Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy : " [http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/mereology/ Mereology] " -- by Achille Varzi.*
Synergy and Dysergy in Mereologic Geometries " [http://www.wikinfo.org/index.php/Synergy_and_Dysergy_in_Mereologic_Geometries] "--by Albert P. Carpenter
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