Emergent Entity

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Emergent entities are properties, patterns or substances which 'arise' out of more fundamental entities through an emergence process. A property of a system is emergent, if it is not a property of any fundamental element. It is a property of the collection, of the whole system, and arises from the interactions of the individual elements.

"Emergent properties are collective properties, which means they are properties of collections, not properties of individual parts. The cause can often be traced back to the interactions between the parts of which a system is made." ~ Raima Larter

By this criterion, most properties are emergent, Daniel Little says: "the sweetness of sugar, the flammability of woven cotton, the hardness of bronze". One could add the liquidity of water, the elasticity of rubber, or the rigidity of iron.

Emergent entities are not reducible. Although they arise out of more fundamental items, they are 'novel' or 'irreducible' with respect to them. Emergent properties are dependent on underlying processes, and yet independent from underlying processes. This is the paradox of emergence.

The difference between the different terms is:

  • Emergent Property: A property of a system is emergent, if it is not a property of any fundamental element. If a property is not necessary (or does not appear) in the description of all properties of the fundamental elements, elementary actors or basic building blocks, it can only be an emergent property.
  • Emergence: Emergence is the appearance of emergent properties on a higher level of organization without central organizer. It can be observed in complex systems due to the pattern of interactions between the elements of a system over time.
  • Entity: Emergent properties lead to the appearance of new entities and objects on a larger scale. They play an important role in the definition of general terms like being, entity and substance. Russ Abbott defined an entity as follows: "An aggregation counts as an entity if it has emergent properties", see his talk Emergence and Entities

Agent based Models

The basic agent-based models explain the emergence of fundamental properties:

Links