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The
reductionist
hypothesis may still be a topic for controversy among philosophers,
but among the great majority of active scientists I think it is
accepted without question. The workings of our minds and bodies,
and of all the animate or inanimate matter of which we have any
detailed knowledge, are assumed to be controlled by the same set
of fundamental laws, which except under certain extreme conditions
we feel we know pretty well.
It
seems inevitable to go on uncritically to what appears at first
sight to be an obvious corollary of reductionism: that if everything
obeys the same fundamental laws, then the only scientists who are
studying anything really fundamental are those who are working on
those laws. In practice, that amounts to some astrophysicists, some
elementary particle physicists, some logicians and other mathematicians,
and few others
The main fallacy [of] the reductionist hypothesis [is that it] does
not by any means imply a constructionist one: The ability
to reduce everything to simple fundamental laws does not imply the
ability to start from those laws and reconstruct the universe. In
fact, the more the elementary particle physicists tell us about
the nature of the fundamental laws, the less relevance they seem
to have to the very real problems of the rest of science, much less
to those of society.
The
constructionist hypothesis breaks down when confronted with the
twin difficulties of scale and complexity. The behavior of large
and complex aggregates of elementary particles, it turns out, is
not to be understood in terms of a simple extrapolation of the properties
of a few particles. Instead, at each level of complexity entirely
new properties appear, and the understanding of the new behaviors
requires research which I think is as fundamental in its nature
as any other
[and will show] how the whole becomes not only
more than the sum of but very different from the sum of the parts
With
increasing complication
we expect to encounter fascinating
and very fundamental questions in fitting together less complicated
pieces into a more complicated system and understanding the basically
new types of behavior that can result
Quantitative differences
become qualitative ones.
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