Supervenience
From CasGroup
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'''Supervenience''' is a form of strong [[Emergence|emergence]] characterized by independence in interdependence: a system A is causal independent from a system B, and yet physically embedded in it. To say that A supervenes on B means that there can be no change in A without a change in B. If a system A is embedded in a system B, it is usually not possible to say who chances in system B affect system A. They are causal independent of each other. And yet there cannot be a difference in the system A without difference in the underlying system B, because the system A is embedded and realized by system B. | '''Supervenience''' is a form of strong [[Emergence|emergence]] characterized by independence in interdependence: a system A is causal independent from a system B, and yet physically embedded in it. To say that A supervenes on B means that there can be no change in A without a change in B. If a system A is embedded in a system B, it is usually not possible to say who chances in system B affect system A. They are causal independent of each other. And yet there cannot be a difference in the system A without difference in the underlying system B, because the system A is embedded and realized by system B. | ||
| - | + | In a more formal way, supervenience is a kind of dependency relationship, typically held to obtain between sets of properties. A set of properties A is supervenient on a set of properties B, if and only if any two objects x and y which share all properties in B (are "B-indiscernible") must also share all properties in A. | |
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| + | Supervenience is related to trancendence, the state of being or existence above and beyond the limits of a system. It can be considered as a first step towards trancendence: if a system A which supervenes B is embedded and implemented in a system C, it has transcended B, because it exists above and beyond the limits of system B. | ||
== Examples == | == Examples == | ||