Difference between revisions of "Emergence"

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(Created page with "In philosophy, systems theory, science, art, and elsewhere, '''emergence''' is a process whereby larger entities, patterns, and regularities arise through inte...")
 
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== See also ==
 
== See also ==
  
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* [[Abstraction]]
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* [[Agent-based model]]
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* [[Anthropic principle]]
 
* [[Artificial intelligence]]
 
* [[Artificial intelligence]]
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* [[Big History]]
 
* [[Complexity]]
 
* [[Complexity]]
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* [[Connectionism]]
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* [[Consilience]]
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* [[Constructal theory]]
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* [[Dynamical system]]
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* [[Deus ex machina]]
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* [[Dual-phase evolution]]
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* [[Emergenesis]]
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* [[Emergent algorithm]]
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* [[Emergent evolution]]
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* [[Emergent gameplay]]
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* [[Emergent organization]]
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* [[Epiphenomenon]]
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* [[Externality]]
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* [[Free will]]
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* [[Generative art]]
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* [[Generative sciences]]
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* [[Innovation butterfly]]
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* [[Interconnectedness]]
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* [[Irreducible complexity]]
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* [[Langton's ant]]
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* [[Law of Complexity-Consciousness]]
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* [[Mass action (sociology)]]
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* [[Neural networks]]
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* [[Organic Wholes of G.E. Moore]]
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* [[Polytely]]
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* [[Society of Mind theory]]
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* [[Structuralism]]
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* [[Swarm intelligence]]
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* [[System of systems]]
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* [[Teleology]]
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* [[Synergetics (Fuller)]]
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* [[Synergetics (Haken)]]
  
 
== External links ==
 
== External links ==

Latest revision as of 19:39, 24 May 2016

In philosophy, systems theory, science, art, and elsewhere, emergence is a process whereby larger entities, patterns, and regularities arise through interactions among smaller or simpler entities that themselves do not exhibit such properties.

Description

Emergence is central in theories of integrative levels and of complex systems.

For instance, the phenomenon life as studied in biology is commonly perceived as an emergent property of interacting molecules as studied in chemistry, whose phenomena reflect interactions among elementary particles, modeled in particle physics, that at such higher mass—via substantial conglomeration—exhibit motion as modeled in gravitational physics.

Neurobiological phenomena may provide the underlying basis of psychological phenomena, whereby economic phenomena are in turn presumed to principally emerge.

Philosophy

In philosophy, emergence typically refers to emergentism. Almost all accounts of emergentism include a form of epistemic or ontological irreducibility to the lower levels.

See also

External links