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(2003) Wholes, sums and unities, Dordrecht, Springer.

Introduction

Ariel Meirav

pp. 1-50

Whole and part are among the most pervasive notions that occur in our thinking, and philosophical thought in particular seems to be bound up with them in its very essence. On the face of it, almost anything we care to think about may be considered as a whole and as having parts, or as being itself a part of some greater whole. In attempting to understand ourselves and our environment, we divide or analyze (a whole into parts), we collect or synthesize (parts into a whole), we discern many parts composing one whole, and one whole composed of many parts. When, aspiring to understand, we reflect on the things we see, hear, imagine or conceive, on everyday objects, on sentences or stories or melodies, on historical events, on our own actions, on mathematical structures, on the products of art, on space and on time, on reality considered metaphysically or theologically — we are almost irresistibly led to consider them in the light of the notions of whole and part.

Publication details

DOI: 10.1007/978-94-017-0209-6_1

Full citation:

Meirav, A. (2003). Introduction, in Wholes, sums and unities, Dordrecht, Springer, pp. 1-50.

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