holon
English
Noun
holon (plural holons)
Etymology 2
holo- + -on, from Ancient Greek ὅλος (hólos, “whole”) with the suffix -on suggesting a part. Coined by Arthur Koestler in his 1967 book The Ghost in the Machine.
Noun
Examples |
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An individual is autonomous, but also part of a family, which is part of an extended family, which is part of a community, etc. |
holon (plural holons)
- (philosophy) Something that is both a part and a whole.
- 1995, Ken Wilber, “The Pattern That Connects”, in Sex, Ecology, Spirituality, Shambhala, →ISBN, Book One, pages 33–34:
- Before an atom is an atom, it is a holon. Before a cell is a cell, it is a holon. Before an idea is an idea, it is a holon. All of them are wholes that exist in other wholes, and thus they are all whole/parts, or holons, first and foremost (long before any “particular characteristics” are singled out by us).
Usage notes
Used primarily in philosophy (where the term originated), family therapy and in manufacturing.
Translations
Further reading
holon (physics) on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
holon (philosophy) on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
Gothic
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