Reductionism in philosophy is the theory that asserts that the nature of complex things can always be reduced to (explained by) simpler or more fundamental things. This can be said of objects, phenomena, explanations, theories, and meanings.
Reductionism is often understood to imply the unity of science. For example, fundamental chemistry is based on physics, fundamental biology is based on chemistry, and psychology and sociology are both based on biology. The first two of these reductions are commonly accepted but the last step is controversial. Aspects of evolutionary psychology and sociobiology are rejected by those who claim that complex systems are inherently irreducible or holistic. Reductionists believe that the behavioral sciences should become a "genuine" scientific discipline by being based on genetic biology, and on the systematic study of culture (cf. Dawkins's concept of memes).
In his book The Blind Watchmaker, Dawkins introduced the term "hierarchical reductionism" (p. 13). This means that reductionism is effective in explaining a system in terms of its component parts, but not useful if extended directly to the smallest possible parts. For example, if one throws Stephen Jay Gould out of a window, his fall can be explained by classical mechanics. But it cannot be understood from such principles as elementary particle physics or superstring theory.
The denial of reductionist ideas is holism; the idea that things can have properties as a whole that are not explainable from the sum of their parts. The principle of holism was concisely summarized by Aristotle in the Metaphysics: "The whole is more than the sum of its parts". Phenomena such as emergence and work within the field of complex systems theory are also considered to bring forth possible objections to reductionism.
Outside the field of strictly philosophical discourse, the best known denial of reductionism is religious belief, which, in most of its forms, assigns supernatural or metaphysical original causes to phenomena. In this approach, even if a given system operates by strictly reductionistic causes-and-effects, its "true" genesis and placement within larger (and typically unknown) systems is bound up with an intelligence or "consciousness" beyond normal human perception.
The idea of reductionism was introduced by Descartes in Part V of his Discourses (1637). Descartes argued the world was like a machine, its pieces like clockwork mechanisms, and that the machine could be understood by taking its pieces apart, studying them, and then putting them back together to see the larger picture.
Reductionism | Philosophy of science | Physics | Philosophical theories
Reduktionisme | Reduktionismus | Reduccionismo | Reducionismo | Riduzionismo (filosofia) | רדוקציוניזם | Reductionisme | 還元主義 | Reducionismo | Reduktionism
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"Reductionism".
Home Page • arts • business • computers • games • health • hospitals • home • kids & teens • news • physicians • recreation• reference • regional • science • shopping • society • sports • world