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).
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Usage notes
Used primarily in philosophy (where the term originated), family therapy and in manufacturing.
Translations
Gothic
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