Hello Ham,

Davis Bohm was a nuclear physicist involved in the Manhattan project
His book "Wholeness and the Implicate Order"  in which he arrives
At a scientific theory much like Essentialism only it refers to
Physical particals. I thought it might interest you.




In Bohm's conception of order, then, primacy is given to the undivided
whole, and the implicate order inherent within the whole, rather than to
parts of the whole, such as particles, quantum states, and continua. For
Bohm, the whole encompasses all things, structures, abstractions and
processes, including processes that result in (relatively) stable
structures as well as those that involve metamorphosis of structures or
things. In this view, parts may be entities normally regarded as
physical, such as atoms or subatomic particles, but they may also be
abstract entities, such as quantum states. Whatever their nature and
character, according to Bohm, these parts are considered in terms of the
whole, and in such terms, they constitute relatively autonomous and
independent "sub-totalities". The implication of the view is, therefore,
that nothing is entirely separate or autonomous."

But he then alludes to the notion that what makes distinctions is human
perception of this undivided whole.

Value sensibility ?

Source:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_Bohm






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