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Holism in science

Holism in science, holistic science, or methodological holism is an approach to research that emphasizes the study of complex systems. Systems are approached as coherent wholes whose component parts are best understood in context and in relation to both each other and to the whole. Holism typically stands in contrast with reductionism, which describes systems by dividing them into smaller components in order to understand them through their elemental properties.[1]

The holism-individualism dichotomy is especially evident in conflicting interpretations of experimental findings across the social sciences, and reflects whether behavioural analysis begins at the systemic, macro-level (ie. derived from social relations) or the component micro-level (ie. derived from individual agents).[2]

Overview edit

David Deutsch calls holism anti-reductionist and refers to the concept of thinking as the only legitimate way to think about science in as a series of emergent, or higher level phenomena. He argues that neither approach is purely correct.[3]

Two aspects of Holism are:

  1. The way of doing science, sometimes called "whole to parts", which focuses on observation of the specimen within its ecosystem first before breaking down to study any part of the specimen.[4]
  2. The idea that the scientist is not a passive observer of an external universe but rather a participant in the system.[5]

Proponents claim that Holistic science is naturally suited to subjects such as ecology, biology, physics and the social sciences, where complex, non-linear interactions are the norm. These are systems where emergent properties arise at the level of the whole that cannot be predicted by focusing on the parts alone, which may make mainstream, reductionist science ill-equipped to provide understanding beyond a certain level. This principle of emergence in complex systems is often captured in the phrase ′the whole is greater than the sum of its parts′. Living organisms are an example: no knowledge of all the chemical and physical properties of matter can explain or predict the functioning of living organisms. The same happens in complex social human systems, where detailed understanding of individual behaviour cannot predict the behaviour of the group, which emerges at the level of the collective. The phenomenon of emergence may impose a theoretical limit on knowledge available through reductionist methodology, arguably making complex systems natural subjects for holistic approaches.[6]

Science journalist John Horgan has expressed this view in the book The End of Science. He wrote that a certain pervasive model within holistic science, self-organized criticality, for example, "is not really a theory at all. Like punctuated equilibrium, self-organized criticality is merely a description, one of many, of the random fluctuations, the noise, permeating nature." By the theorists' own admissions, he said, such a model "can generate neither specific predictions about nature nor meaningful insights. What good is it, then?"[7]

One of the reasons that holistic science attracts supporters is that it seems to offer a progressive, 'socio-ecological' view of the world, but Alan Marshall's book The Unity of Nature offers evidence to the contrary; suggesting holism in science is not 'ecological' or 'socially-responsive' at all, but regressive and repressive.[1]

Examples in various fields of science edit

Physical science edit

Agriculture edit

Permaculture takes a systems level approach to agriculture and land management by attempting to copy what happens in the natural world.[citation needed] Holistic management integrates ecology and social sciences with food production. It was originally designed as a way to reverse desertification.[8] Organic farming is sometimes considered a holistic approach.[citation needed]

In physics edit

Richard Healey offered a modal interpretation and used it to present a model account of the puzzling correlations which portrays them as resulting from the operation of a process that violates both spatial and spatiotemporal separability. He argued that, on this interpretation, the nonseparability of the process is a consequence of physical property holism; and that the resulting account yields genuine understanding of how the correlations come about without any violation of relativity theory or Local Action.[9] Subsequent work by Clifton, Dickson and Myrvold cast doubt on whether the account can be squared with relativity theory’s requirement of Lorentz invariance but leaves no doubt of an spatially entangled holism in the theory.[10][11] Paul Davies and John Gribbin further observe that Wheeler's delayed choice experiment shows how the quantum world displays a sort of holism in time as well as space.[12]

In the holistic approach of David Bohm, any collection of quantum objects constitutes an indivisible whole within an implicate and explicate order.[13][14] Bohm said there is no scientific evidence to support the dominant view that the universe consists of a huge, finite number of minute particles, and offered instead a view of undivided wholeness: "ultimately, the entire universe (with all its 'particles', including those constituting human beings, their laboratories, observing instruments, etc.) has to be understood as a single undivided whole, in which analysis into separately and independently existent parts has no fundamental status".[15]

Chaos and complexity edit

Scientific holism holds that the behavior of a system cannot be perfectly predicted, no matter how much data is available. Natural systems can produce surprisingly unexpected behavior, and it is suspected that behavior of such systems might be computationally irreducible, which means it would not be possible to even approximate the system state without a full simulation of all the events occurring in the system. Key properties of the higher level behavior of certain classes of systems may be mediated by rare "surprises" in the behavior of their elements due to the principle of interconnectivity, thus evading predictions except by brute force simulation.[16]

Ecology edit

Holistic thinking can be applied to ecology, combining biological, chemical, physical, economic, ethical, and political insights. The complexity grows with the area, so that it is necessary to reduce the characteristic of the view in other ways, for example to a specific time of duration.[17]

Medicine edit

In primary care the term "holistic," has been used to describe approaches that take into account social considerations and other intuitive judgements.[18] The term holism, and so-called approaches, appear in psychosomatic medicine in the 1970s, when they were considered one possible way to conceptualize psychosomatic phenomena. Instead of charting one-way causal links from psyche to soma, or vice versa, it aimed at a systemic model, where multiple biological, psychological and social factors were seen as interlinked.[citation needed]

Other, alternative approaches in the 1970s were psychosomatic and somatopsychic approaches, which concentrated on causal links only from psyche to soma, or from soma to psyche, respectively. At present it is commonplace in psychosomatic medicine to state that psyche and soma cannot really be separated for practical or theoretical purposes.[citation needed]

The term systems medicine first appeared in 1992 and takes an integrative approach to all of the body and environment.[19][20]

Social science edit

Economics edit

Some economists use a causal holism theory in their work. That is they view the discipline in the manner of Ludwig Wittgenstein and claim that it can't be defined by necessary and sufficient conditions.[21]

Education reform edit

The Taxonomy of Educational Objectives identifies many levels of cognitive functioning, which it is claimed may be used to create a more holistic education. In authentic assessment, rather than using computers to score multiple choice tests, a standards based assessment uses trained scorers to score open-response items using holistic scoring methods.[22] In projects such as the North Carolina Writing Project, scorers are instructed not to count errors, or count numbers of points or supporting statements. The scorer is instead instructed to judge holistically whether "as a whole" is it more a "2" or a "3". Critics question whether such a process can be as objective as computer scoring, and the degree to which such scoring methods can result in different scores from different scorers.[23]

Anthropology edit

Anthropology is holistic in two senses. First, it is concerned with all human beings across times and places, and with all dimensions of humanity (evolutionary, biophysical, sociopolitical, economic, cultural, psychological, etc.) Further, many academic programs following this approach take a "four-field" approach to anthropology that encompasses physical anthropology, archeology, linguistics, and cultural anthropology or social anthropology.[24]

Some anthropologists disagree, and consider holism to be an artifact from 19th century social evolutionary thought that inappropriately imposes scientific positivism upon cultural anthropology.[25]

The term "holism" is additionally used within social and cultural anthropology to refer to a methodological analysis of a society as a whole, in which component parts are treated as functionally relative to each other. One definition says: "as a methodological ideal, holism implies ... that one does not permit oneself to believe that our own established institutional boundaries (e.g. between politics, sexuality, religion, economics) necessarily may be found also in foreign societies."[26]

Psychology of perception edit

A major holist movement in the early twentieth century was gestalt psychology. The claim was that perception is not an aggregation of atomic sense data but a field, in which there is a figure and a ground. Background has holistic effects on the perceived figure. Gestalt psychologists included Wolfgang Koehler, Max Wertheimer, Kurt Koffka. Koehler claimed the perceptual fields corresponded to electrical fields in the brain. Karl Lashley did experiments with gold foil pieces inserted in monkey brains purporting to show that such fields did not exist. However, many of the perceptual illusions and visual phenomena exhibited by the gestaltists were taken over (often without credit) by later perceptual psychologists. Gestalt psychology had influence on Fritz Perls' gestalt therapy, although some old-line gestaltists opposed the association with counter-cultural and New Age trends later associated with gestalt therapy. Gestalt theory was also influential on phenomenology. Aron Gurwitsch wrote on the role of the field of consciousness in gestalt theory in relation to phenomenology. Maurice Merleau-Ponty made much use of holistic psychologists such as work of Kurt Goldstein in his "Phenomenology of Perception."

Teleological psychology edit

Alfred Adler believed that the individual (an integrated whole expressed through a self-consistent unity of thinking, feeling, and action, moving toward an unconscious, fictional final goal), must be understood within the larger wholes of society, from the groups to which he belongs (starting with his face-to-face relationships), to the larger whole of mankind. The recognition of our social embeddedness and the need for developing an interest in the welfare of others, as well as a respect for nature, is at the heart of Adler's philosophy of living and principles of psychotherapy.

Edgar Morin, the French philosopher and sociologist, can be considered a holist based on the transdisciplinary nature of his work.

Skeptical reception edit

According to skeptics, the phrase "holistic science" is often misused by pseudosciences. In the book Science and Pseudoscience in Clinical Psychology it's noted that "Proponents of pseudoscientific claims, especially in organic medicine, and mental health, often resort to the "mantra of holism" to explain away negative findings. When invoking the mantra, they typically maintain that scientific claims can be evaluated only within the context of broader claims and therefore cannot be evaluated in isolation."[27] This is an invocation of Karl Popper's demarcation problem and in a posting to Ask a Philosopher Massimo Pigliucci clarifies Popper by positing, "Instead of thinking of science as making progress by inductive generalization (which doesn’t work because no matter how many times a given theory may have been confirmed thus far, it is always possible that new, contrary, data will emerge tomorrow), we should say that science makes progress by conclusively disconfirming theories that are, in fact, wrong."[28]

Victor J. Stenger states that "holistic healing is associated with the rejection of classical, Newtonian physics. Yet, holistic healing retains many ideas from eighteenth and nineteenth century physics. Its proponents are blissfully unaware that these ideas, especially superluminal holism, have been rejected by modern physics as well".[29]

Some quantum mystics interpret the wave function of quantum mechanics as a vibration in a holistic ether that pervades the universe and wave function collapse as the result of some cosmic consciousness. This is a misinterpretation of the effects of quantum entanglement as a violation of relativistic causality and quantum field theory.[30]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Marshall Alan (4 October 2002). Unity Of Nature, The: Wholeness And Disintegration In Ecology And Science. World Scientific. ISBN 978-1-78326-116-1.
  2. ^ Zahle, J. Methodological Holism and the Social Sciences 2022-05-02 at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ David Deutsch (14 April 2011). The Fabric of Reality. Penguin Books Limited. ISBN 978-0-14-196961-9.
  4. ^ Winther, Rasmus Grønfeldt (29 September 2009). "Part-whole science". Synthese. 178 (3): 397–427. doi:10.1007/s11229-009-9647-0. ISSN 0039-7857. S2CID 18372542.
  5. ^ Andres Moreira-Munoz (19 January 2011). Plant Geography of Chile. Springer Science & Business Media. p. 283. ISBN 978-90-481-8748-5.
  6. ^ Stephan Harding (15 September 2006). Animate Earth: Science, Intuition, and Gaia. Chelsea Green Publishing. ISBN 978-1-60358-149-3.
  7. ^ John Horgan (14 April 2015). The End Of Science: Facing The Limits Of Knowledge In The Twilight Of The Scientific Age. Basic Books. p. 128. ISBN 978-0-465-05085-7.
  8. ^ Coughlin, Chrissy (2013-03-11). "Allan Savory: How livestock can protect the land". GreenBiz. from the original on 2013-04-11. Retrieved 5 April 2013.
  9. ^ Richard Healey (25 January 1991). The Philosophy of Quantum Mechanics: An Interactive Interpretation. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-40874-5.
  10. ^ Dennis Dieks; Pieter E. Vermaas (6 December 2012). The Modal Interpretation of Quantum Mechanics. Springer Science & Business Media. pp. 9–44. ISBN 978-94-011-5084-2.
  11. ^ Myrvold, Wayne C. (2002). "Modal Interpretations and Relativity". Foundations of Physics. 32 (11): 1773–1784. doi:10.1023/a:1021406924313. ISSN 0015-9018. S2CID 67757302.
  12. ^ Paul Davies; John Gribbin (23 October 2007). The Matter Myth: Dramatic Discoveries that Challenge Our Understanding of Physical Reality. Simon and Schuster. p. 283. ISBN 978-0-7432-9091-3.
  13. ^ Richard Healey: Holism and Nonseparability in Physics (Spring 2009 Edition) 2013-12-02 at the Wayback Machine, Edward N. Zalta (ed.), first published July 22, 1999; substantive revision December 10, 2008, Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Section: "Ontological Holism in Quantum Mechanics?" (retrieved June 3, 2011)
  14. ^ David Bohm; Basil J. Hiley (16 January 2006). The Undivided Universe: An Ontological Interpretation of Quantum Theory. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-134-80713-0.
  15. ^ David Bohm (12 July 2005). Wholeness and the Implicate Order. Routledge. p. 221. ISBN 978-1-134-43872-3.
  16. ^ Gatherer, Derek (2010). "So what do we really mean when we say that systems biology is holistic?". BMC Systems Biology. 4 (1): 22. doi:10.1186/1752-0509-4-22. ISSN 1752-0509. PMC 2850881. PMID 20226033.
  17. ^ Rick C. Looijen (6 December 2012). Holism and Reductionism in Biology and Ecology: The Mutual Dependence of Higher and Lower Level Research Programmes. Springer Science & Business Media. ISBN 978-94-015-9560-5.
  18. ^ Julian Tudor Hart (2010) The Political Economy of Health Care pp.106, 258
  19. ^ Federoff, Howard; Gostin, Lawrence O. (2009). "Evolving from Reductionism to Holism: Is There a Future for Systems Medicine?". Journal of the American Medical Association. 302 (9): 994–996. doi:10.1001/jama.2009.1264. PMID 19724047.
  20. ^ Federoff, Howard J.; Gostin, Lawrence O. (2 September 2009). "Evolving From Reductionism to Holism". JAMA. 302 (9): 994–6. doi:10.1001/jama.2009.1264. ISSN 0098-7484. PMID 19724047.
  21. ^ Boylan, Thomas A.; O'Gorman, Pacal F. (2001). "Causal holism and economic methodology : theories, models and explanation". Revue Internationale de Philosophie (3): 395–409. doi:10.3917/rip.217.0395. S2CID 171065508. from the original on 29 June 2018. Retrieved 29 June 2018.
  22. ^ Rubrics (Authentic Assessment Toolbox).[1] 2011-01-28 at the Wayback Machine
  23. ^ Charney, Davida (February 1984). "The Validity of Using Holistic Scoring to Evaluate Writing: A Critical Overview" (PDF). Research in the Teaching of English. 18 (1): 65–81. doi:10.58680/rte198415687. (PDF) from the original on 9 August 2017. Retrieved 29 June 2018.
  24. ^ SHORE, BRADD (1999). "Strange Fate of Holism". Anthropology News. 40 (9): 5–6. doi:10.1111/an.1999.40.9.5. ISSN 1541-6151.
  25. ^ Daniel A. Segal; Sylvia J. Yanagisako (14 April 2005). Unwrapping the Sacred Bundle: Reflections on the Disciplining of Anthropology. Duke University Press. ISBN 978-0-8223-8684-1.
  26. ^ "Definition of Anthropological Holism". anthrobase.com. from the original on 15 July 2017. Retrieved 29 June 2018.
  27. ^ Scott O. Lilienfeld; Steven Jay Lynn; Jeffrey M. Lohr (12 October 2014). Science and Pseudoscience in Clinical Psychology, Second Edition. Guilford Publications. ISBN 978-1-4625-1751-0.
  28. ^ Pigliucci, Massimo (2014-06-09). "Demarcating science from pseudoscience". askaphilosopher.wordpress.com. from the original on 2018-06-27. Retrieved 27 June 2018.
  29. ^ Victor J. Stenger (2003). Has Science Found God?: The Latest Results in the Search for Purpose in the Universe. Prometheus Books, Publishers. p. 274. ISBN 978-1-61592-158-4.
  30. ^ Park, Robert L. (October 1997). "Alternative Medicine and the Laws of Physics". Skeptical Inquirer. 21 (5). from the original on 6 June 2018. Retrieved 28 June 2018.

Further reading edit

  • Article "" by Brian Goodwin, from the journal
  • Article "" by Brian Goodwin, from the journal
  • Freire, Olival (2005). "Science and exile: David Bohm, the cold war, and a new interpretation of quantum mechanics". Historical Studies in the Physical and Biological Sciences. 36: 1–34. arXiv:physics/0508184. Bibcode:2005physics...8184F. doi:10.1525/hsps.2005.36.1.1.

holism, science, holistic, science, methodological, holism, approach, research, that, emphasizes, study, complex, systems, systems, approached, coherent, wholes, whose, component, parts, best, understood, context, relation, both, each, other, whole, holism, ty. Holism in science holistic science or methodological holism is an approach to research that emphasizes the study of complex systems Systems are approached as coherent wholes whose component parts are best understood in context and in relation to both each other and to the whole Holism typically stands in contrast with reductionism which describes systems by dividing them into smaller components in order to understand them through their elemental properties 1 The holism individualism dichotomy is especially evident in conflicting interpretations of experimental findings across the social sciences and reflects whether behavioural analysis begins at the systemic macro level ie derived from social relations or the component micro level ie derived from individual agents 2 Contents 1 Overview 2 Examples in various fields of science 2 1 Physical science 2 1 1 Agriculture 2 1 2 In physics 2 1 3 Chaos and complexity 2 1 4 Ecology 2 1 5 Medicine 2 2 Social science 2 2 1 Economics 2 2 2 Education reform 2 2 3 Anthropology 2 2 4 Psychology of perception 2 2 5 Teleological psychology 3 Skeptical reception 4 See also 5 References 6 Further readingOverview editDavid Deutsch calls holism anti reductionist and refers to the concept of thinking as the only legitimate way to think about science in as a series of emergent or higher level phenomena He argues that neither approach is purely correct 3 Two aspects of Holism are The way of doing science sometimes called whole to parts which focuses on observation of the specimen within its ecosystem first before breaking down to study any part of the specimen 4 The idea that the scientist is not a passive observer of an external universe but rather a participant in the system 5 Proponents claim that Holistic science is naturally suited to subjects such as ecology biology physics and the social sciences where complex non linear interactions are the norm These are systems where emergent properties arise at the level of the whole that cannot be predicted by focusing on the parts alone which may make mainstream reductionist science ill equipped to provide understanding beyond a certain level This principle of emergence in complex systems is often captured in the phrase the whole is greater than the sum of its parts Living organisms are an example no knowledge of all the chemical and physical properties of matter can explain or predict the functioning of living organisms The same happens in complex social human systems where detailed understanding of individual behaviour cannot predict the behaviour of the group which emerges at the level of the collective The phenomenon of emergence may impose a theoretical limit on knowledge available through reductionist methodology arguably making complex systems natural subjects for holistic approaches 6 Science journalist John Horgan has expressed this view in the book The End of Science He wrote that a certain pervasive model within holistic science self organized criticality for example is not really a theory at all Like punctuated equilibrium self organized criticality is merely a description one of many of the random fluctuations the noise permeating nature By the theorists own admissions he said such a model can generate neither specific predictions about nature nor meaningful insights What good is it then 7 One of the reasons that holistic science attracts supporters is that it seems to offer a progressive socio ecological view of the world but Alan Marshall s book The Unity of Nature offers evidence to the contrary suggesting holism in science is not ecological or socially responsive at all but regressive and repressive 1 Examples in various fields of science editPhysical science edit Agriculture edit See also agricultural science Permaculture takes a systems level approach to agriculture and land management by attempting to copy what happens in the natural world citation needed Holistic management integrates ecology and social sciences with food production It was originally designed as a way to reverse desertification 8 Organic farming is sometimes considered a holistic approach citation needed In physics edit See also Physics and Quantum physics Richard Healey offered a modal interpretation and used it to present a model account of the puzzling correlations which portrays them as resulting from the operation of a process that violates both spatial and spatiotemporal separability He argued that on this interpretation the nonseparability of the process is a consequence of physical property holism and that the resulting account yields genuine understanding of how the correlations come about without any violation of relativity theory or Local Action 9 Subsequent work by Clifton Dickson and Myrvold cast doubt on whether the account can be squared with relativity theory s requirement of Lorentz invariance but leaves no doubt of an spatially entangled holism in the theory 10 11 Paul Davies and John Gribbin further observe that Wheeler s delayed choice experiment shows how the quantum world displays a sort of holism in time as well as space 12 In the holistic approach of David Bohm any collection of quantum objects constitutes an indivisible whole within an implicate and explicate order 13 14 Bohm said there is no scientific evidence to support the dominant view that the universe consists of a huge finite number of minute particles and offered instead a view of undivided wholeness ultimately the entire universe with all its particles including those constituting human beings their laboratories observing instruments etc has to be understood as a single undivided whole in which analysis into separately and independently existent parts has no fundamental status 15 Chaos and complexity edit See also Chaos theory Scientific holism holds that the behavior of a system cannot be perfectly predicted no matter how much data is available Natural systems can produce surprisingly unexpected behavior and it is suspected that behavior of such systems might be computationally irreducible which means it would not be possible to even approximate the system state without a full simulation of all the events occurring in the system Key properties of the higher level behavior of certain classes of systems may be mediated by rare surprises in the behavior of their elements due to the principle of interconnectivity thus evading predictions except by brute force simulation 16 Ecology edit See also Holistic community and Ecology Holistic thinking can be applied to ecology combining biological chemical physical economic ethical and political insights The complexity grows with the area so that it is necessary to reduce the characteristic of the view in other ways for example to a specific time of duration 17 Medicine edit See also Medicine In primary care the term holistic has been used to describe approaches that take into account social considerations and other intuitive judgements 18 The term holism and so called approaches appear in psychosomatic medicine in the 1970s when they were considered one possible way to conceptualize psychosomatic phenomena Instead of charting one way causal links from psyche to soma or vice versa it aimed at a systemic model where multiple biological psychological and social factors were seen as interlinked citation needed Other alternative approaches in the 1970s were psychosomatic and somatopsychic approaches which concentrated on causal links only from psyche to soma or from soma to psyche respectively At present it is commonplace in psychosomatic medicine to state that psyche and soma cannot really be separated for practical or theoretical purposes citation needed The term systems medicine first appeared in 1992 and takes an integrative approach to all of the body and environment 19 20 Social science edit Economics edit See also Economics Some economists use a causal holism theory in their work That is they view the discipline in the manner of Ludwig Wittgenstein and claim that it can t be defined by necessary and sufficient conditions 21 Education reform edit See also Education reform The Taxonomy of Educational Objectives identifies many levels of cognitive functioning which it is claimed may be used to create a more holistic education In authentic assessment rather than using computers to score multiple choice tests a standards based assessment uses trained scorers to score open response items using holistic scoring methods 22 In projects such as the North Carolina Writing Project scorers are instructed not to count errors or count numbers of points or supporting statements The scorer is instead instructed to judge holistically whether as a whole is it more a 2 or a 3 Critics question whether such a process can be as objective as computer scoring and the degree to which such scoring methods can result in different scores from different scorers 23 Anthropology edit See also Anthropology Anthropology is holistic in two senses First it is concerned with all human beings across times and places and with all dimensions of humanity evolutionary biophysical sociopolitical economic cultural psychological etc Further many academic programs following this approach take a four field approach to anthropology that encompasses physical anthropology archeology linguistics and cultural anthropology or social anthropology 24 Some anthropologists disagree and consider holism to be an artifact from 19th century social evolutionary thought that inappropriately imposes scientific positivism upon cultural anthropology 25 The term holism is additionally used within social and cultural anthropology to refer to a methodological analysis of a society as a whole in which component parts are treated as functionally relative to each other One definition says as a methodological ideal holism implies that one does not permit oneself to believe that our own established institutional boundaries e g between politics sexuality religion economics necessarily may be found also in foreign societies 26 Psychology of perception edit See also Perception A major holist movement in the early twentieth century was gestalt psychology The claim was that perception is not an aggregation of atomic sense data but a field in which there is a figure and a ground Background has holistic effects on the perceived figure Gestalt psychologists included Wolfgang Koehler Max Wertheimer Kurt Koffka Koehler claimed the perceptual fields corresponded to electrical fields in the brain Karl Lashley did experiments with gold foil pieces inserted in monkey brains purporting to show that such fields did not exist However many of the perceptual illusions and visual phenomena exhibited by the gestaltists were taken over often without credit by later perceptual psychologists Gestalt psychology had influence on Fritz Perls gestalt therapy although some old line gestaltists opposed the association with counter cultural and New Age trends later associated with gestalt therapy Gestalt theory was also influential on phenomenology Aron Gurwitsch wrote on the role of the field of consciousness in gestalt theory in relation to phenomenology Maurice Merleau Ponty made much use of holistic psychologists such as work of Kurt Goldstein in his Phenomenology of Perception Teleological psychology edit See also Teleology Alfred Adler believed that the individual an integrated whole expressed through a self consistent unity of thinking feeling and action moving toward an unconscious fictional final goal must be understood within the larger wholes of society from the groups to which he belongs starting with his face to face relationships to the larger whole of mankind The recognition of our social embeddedness and the need for developing an interest in the welfare of others as well as a respect for nature is at the heart of Adler s philosophy of living and principles of psychotherapy Edgar Morin the French philosopher and sociologist can be considered a holist based on the transdisciplinary nature of his work Skeptical reception editAccording to skeptics the phrase holistic science is often misused by pseudosciences In the book Science and Pseudoscience in Clinical Psychology it s noted that Proponents of pseudoscientific claims especially in organic medicine and mental health often resort to the mantra of holism to explain away negative findings When invoking the mantra they typically maintain that scientific claims can be evaluated only within the context of broader claims and therefore cannot be evaluated in isolation 27 This is an invocation of Karl Popper s demarcation problem and in a posting to Ask a Philosopher Massimo Pigliucci clarifies Popper by positing Instead of thinking of science as making progress by inductive generalization which doesn t work because no matter how many times a given theory may have been confirmed thus far it is always possible that new contrary data will emerge tomorrow we should say that science makes progress by conclusively disconfirming theories that are in fact wrong 28 Victor J Stenger states that holistic healing is associated with the rejection of classical Newtonian physics Yet holistic healing retains many ideas from eighteenth and nineteenth century physics Its proponents are blissfully unaware that these ideas especially superluminal holism have been rejected by modern physics as well 29 Some quantum mystics interpret the wave function of quantum mechanics as a vibration in a holistic ether that pervades the universe and wave function collapse as the result of some cosmic consciousness This is a misinterpretation of the effects of quantum entanglement as a violation of relativistic causality and quantum field theory 30 See also editAntireductionism Emergence Holarchy Holism Holism in ecological anthropology Holistic management Holistic health Holon philosophy Interdisciplinarity Organicism Scientific reductionism Systems thinkingReferences edit a b Marshall Alan 4 October 2002 Unity Of Nature The Wholeness And Disintegration In Ecology And Science World Scientific ISBN 978 1 78326 116 1 Zahle J Methodological Holism and the Social Sciences Archived 2022 05 02 at the Wayback Machine David Deutsch 14 April 2011 The Fabric of Reality Penguin Books Limited ISBN 978 0 14 196961 9 Winther Rasmus Gronfeldt 29 September 2009 Part whole science Synthese 178 3 397 427 doi 10 1007 s11229 009 9647 0 ISSN 0039 7857 S2CID 18372542 Andres Moreira Munoz 19 January 2011 Plant Geography of Chile Springer Science amp Business Media p 283 ISBN 978 90 481 8748 5 Stephan Harding 15 September 2006 Animate Earth Science Intuition and Gaia Chelsea Green Publishing ISBN 978 1 60358 149 3 John Horgan 14 April 2015 The End Of Science Facing The Limits Of Knowledge In The Twilight Of The Scientific Age Basic Books p 128 ISBN 978 0 465 05085 7 Coughlin Chrissy 2013 03 11 Allan Savory How livestock can protect the land GreenBiz Archived from the original on 2013 04 11 Retrieved 5 April 2013 Richard Healey 25 January 1991 The Philosophy of Quantum Mechanics An Interactive Interpretation Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 40874 5 Dennis Dieks Pieter E Vermaas 6 December 2012 The Modal Interpretation of Quantum Mechanics Springer Science amp Business Media pp 9 44 ISBN 978 94 011 5084 2 Myrvold Wayne C 2002 Modal Interpretations and Relativity Foundations of Physics 32 11 1773 1784 doi 10 1023 a 1021406924313 ISSN 0015 9018 S2CID 67757302 Paul Davies John Gribbin 23 October 2007 The Matter Myth Dramatic Discoveries that Challenge Our Understanding of Physical Reality Simon and Schuster p 283 ISBN 978 0 7432 9091 3 Richard Healey Holism and Nonseparability in Physics Spring 2009 Edition Archived 2013 12 02 at the Wayback Machine Edward N Zalta ed first published July 22 1999 substantive revision December 10 2008 Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Section Ontological Holism in Quantum Mechanics retrieved June 3 2011 David Bohm Basil J Hiley 16 January 2006 The Undivided Universe An Ontological Interpretation of Quantum Theory Routledge ISBN 978 1 134 80713 0 David Bohm 12 July 2005 Wholeness and the Implicate Order Routledge p 221 ISBN 978 1 134 43872 3 Gatherer Derek 2010 So what do we really mean when we say that systems biology is holistic BMC Systems Biology 4 1 22 doi 10 1186 1752 0509 4 22 ISSN 1752 0509 PMC 2850881 PMID 20226033 Rick C Looijen 6 December 2012 Holism and Reductionism in Biology and Ecology The Mutual Dependence of Higher and Lower Level Research Programmes Springer Science amp Business Media ISBN 978 94 015 9560 5 Julian Tudor Hart 2010 The Political Economy of Health Care pp 106 258 Federoff Howard Gostin Lawrence O 2009 Evolving from Reductionism to Holism Is There a Future for Systems Medicine Journal of the American Medical Association 302 9 994 996 doi 10 1001 jama 2009 1264 PMID 19724047 Federoff Howard J Gostin Lawrence O 2 September 2009 Evolving From Reductionism to Holism JAMA 302 9 994 6 doi 10 1001 jama 2009 1264 ISSN 0098 7484 PMID 19724047 Boylan Thomas A O Gorman Pacal F 2001 Causal holism and economic methodology theories models and explanation Revue Internationale de Philosophie 3 395 409 doi 10 3917 rip 217 0395 S2CID 171065508 Archived from the original on 29 June 2018 Retrieved 29 June 2018 Rubrics Authentic Assessment Toolbox 1 Archived 2011 01 28 at the Wayback Machine Charney Davida February 1984 The Validity of Using Holistic Scoring to Evaluate Writing A Critical Overview PDF Research in the Teaching of English 18 1 65 81 doi 10 58680 rte198415687 Archived PDF from the original on 9 August 2017 Retrieved 29 June 2018 SHORE BRADD 1999 Strange Fate of Holism Anthropology News 40 9 5 6 doi 10 1111 an 1999 40 9 5 ISSN 1541 6151 Daniel A Segal Sylvia J Yanagisako 14 April 2005 Unwrapping the Sacred Bundle Reflections on the Disciplining of Anthropology Duke University Press ISBN 978 0 8223 8684 1 Definition of Anthropological Holism anthrobase com Archived from the original on 15 July 2017 Retrieved 29 June 2018 Scott O Lilienfeld Steven Jay Lynn Jeffrey M Lohr 12 October 2014 Science and Pseudoscience in Clinical Psychology Second Edition Guilford Publications ISBN 978 1 4625 1751 0 Pigliucci Massimo 2014 06 09 Demarcating science from pseudoscience askaphilosopher wordpress com Archived from the original on 2018 06 27 Retrieved 27 June 2018 Victor J Stenger 2003 Has Science Found God The Latest Results in the Search for Purpose in the Universe Prometheus Books Publishers p 274 ISBN 978 1 61592 158 4 Park Robert L October 1997 Alternative Medicine and the Laws of Physics Skeptical Inquirer 21 5 Archived from the original on 6 June 2018 Retrieved 28 June 2018 Further reading editArticle Patterns of Wholeness Introducing Holistic Science by Brian Goodwin from the journal Resurgence Article From Control to Participation by Brian Goodwin from the journal Resurgence Freire Olival 2005 Science and exile David Bohm the cold war and a new interpretation of quantum mechanics Historical Studies in the Physical and Biological Sciences 36 1 34 arXiv physics 0508184 Bibcode 2005physics 8184F doi 10 1525 hsps 2005 36 1 1 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Holism in science amp oldid 1220207108, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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