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Inphilosophy,systems theory,science, andart,emergence occurs when a complex entity has properties or behaviors that its parts do not have on their own, and emerge only when they interact in a wider whole.
Emergence plays a central role in theories ofintegrative levels and ofcomplex systems. For instance, the phenomenon oflife as studied inbiology is an emergent property ofchemistry andphysics.
In philosophy, theories that emphasize emergent properties have been calledemergentism.[1]
Philosophers often understand emergence as a claim about theetiology of asystem's properties. An emergent property of a system, in this context, is one that is not a property of any component of that system, but is still a feature of the system as a whole.Nicolai Hartmann (1882–1950), one of the first modern philosophers to write on emergence, termed this acategorial novum (new category).[2]
This concept of emergence dates from at least the time ofAristotle.[3] In Heideggerian thought, the notion of emergence is derived from the Greek wordpoiein, meaning "to make", and refers to a bringing-forth that encompasses not just a process of crafting (techne) but also the broader sense of something coming into being or revealing itself.Heidegger used emerging blossoms and butterflies as examples to illustratepoiêsis as a threshold event where something moves from one state to another.[4] Many scientists and philosophers[5] have written on the concept, includingJohn Stuart Mill (Composition of Causes, 1843)[6] andJulian Huxley[7] (1887–1975).
The philosopherG. H. Lewes coined the term "emergent" in 1875, distinguishing it from the merely "resultant":
Every resultant is either a sum or a difference of the co-operant forces; their sum, when their directions are the same – their difference, when their directions are contrary. Further, every resultant is clearly traceable in its components, because these arehomogeneous andcommensurable. It is otherwise with emergents, when, instead of adding measurable motion to measurable motion, or things of one kind to other individuals of their kind, there is a co-operation of things of unlike kinds. The emergent is unlike its components insofar as these are incommensurable, and it cannot be reduced to their sum or their difference.[8][9]
Usage of the notion "emergence" may generally be subdivided into two perspectives, that of "weak emergence" and "strong emergence". One paper discussing this division isWeak Emergence, by philosopherMark Bedau. In terms of physical systems, weak emergence is a type of emergence in which the emergent property is amenable to computer simulation or similar forms of after-the-fact analysis (for example, the formation of a traffic jam, the structure of a flock of starlings in flight or a school of fish, or the formation of galaxies). Crucial in these simulations is that the interacting members retain their independence. If not, a new entity is formed with new, emergent properties: this is called strong emergence, which it is argued cannot be simulated, analysed or reduced.[10]
David Chalmers writes that emergence often causes confusion in philosophy and science due to a failure to demarcate strong and weak emergence, which are "quite different concepts".[11]
Some common points between the two notions are that emergence concerns new properties produced as the system grows, which is to say ones which are not shared with its components or prior states. Also, it is assumed that the properties aresupervenient rather than metaphysically primitive.[10]
Weak emergence describes new properties arising in systems as a result of the interactions at a fundamental level. However, Bedau stipulates that the properties can be determined only by observing or simulating the system, and not by any process of areductionist analysis. As a consequence the emerging properties arescale dependent: they are only observable if the system is large enough to exhibit the phenomenon. Chaotic, unpredictable behaviour can be seen as an emergent phenomenon, while at a microscopic scale the behaviour of the constituent parts can be fullydeterministic.[citation needed]
Bedau notes that weak emergence is not a universal metaphysical solvent, as the hypothesis thatconsciousness is weakly emergent would not resolve the traditionalphilosophical questions about the physicality of consciousness. However, Bedau concludes that adopting this view would provide a precise notion that emergence is involved in consciousness, and second, the notion of weak emergence is metaphysically benign.[10]
Strong emergence describes the direct causal action of a high-level system on its components; qualities produced this way areirreducible to the system's constituent parts.[12] The whole is other than the sum of its parts. It is argued then that no simulation of the system can exist, for such a simulation would itself constitute a reduction of the system to its constituent parts.[10] Physics lacks well-established examples of strong emergence, unless it is interpreted as the impossibilityin practice to explain the whole in terms of the parts. Practical impossibility may be a more useful distinction than one in principle, since it is easier to determine and quantify, and does not imply the use of mysterious forces, but simply reflects the limits of our capability.[13]
One of the reasons for the importance of distinguishing these two concepts with respect to their difference concerns the relationship of purported emergent properties to science. Some thinkers question the plausibility of strong emergence as contravening our usual understanding of physics. Mark A. Bedau observes:
Although strong emergence is logically possible, it is uncomfortably like magic. How does an irreducible but supervenient downward causal power arise, since by definition it cannot be due to the aggregation of the micro-level potentialities? Such causal powers would be quite unlike anything within our scientific ken. This not only indicates how they will discomfort reasonable forms of materialism. Their mysteriousness will only heighten the traditional worry that emergence entails illegitimately getting something from nothing.[10]
The concern that strong emergence does so entail is that such a consequence must be incompatible with metaphysical principles such as theprinciple of sufficient reason or the Latin dictumex nihilo nihil fit, often translated as "nothing comes from nothing".[14]
Strong emergence can be criticized for leading to causaloverdetermination. The canonical example concerns emergent mental states (M and M∗) that supervene on physical states (P and P∗) respectively. Let M and M∗ be emergent properties. Let M∗ supervene on base property P∗. What happens when M causes M∗?Jaegwon Kim says:
In our schematic example above, we concluded that M causes M∗ by causing P∗. So M causes P∗. Now, M, as an emergent, must itself have an emergence base property, say P. Now we face a critical question: if an emergent, M, emerges from basal condition P, why cannot P displace M as a cause of any putative effect of M? Why cannot P do all the work in explaining why any alleged effect of M occurred? If causation is understood asnomological (law-based) sufficiency, P, as M's emergence base, is nomologically sufficient for it, and M, as P∗'s cause, is nomologically sufficient for P∗. It follows that P is nomologically sufficient for P∗ and hence qualifies as its cause...If M is somehow retained as a cause, we are faced with the highly implausible consequence that every case of downward causation involves overdetermination (since P remains a cause of P∗ as well). Moreover, this goes against the spirit of emergentism in any case: emergents are supposed to make distinctive and novel causal contributions.[15]
If M is the cause of M∗, then M∗ is overdetermined because M∗ can also be thought of as being determined by P. One escape-route that a strong emergentist could take would be to denydownward causation. However, this would remove the proposed reason that emergent mental states must supervene on physical states, which in turn would callphysicalism into question, and thus be unpalatable for some philosophers and physicists.
Carroll and Parola propose a taxonomy that classifies emergent phenomena by how the macro-description relates to the underlying micro-dynamics.[16]
Crutchfield regards the properties of complexity and organization of any system assubjectivequalities determined by the observer.
Defining structure and detecting the emergence of complexity in nature are inherently subjective, though essential, scientific activities. Despite the difficulties, these problems can be analysed in terms of how model-building observers infer from measurements the computational capabilities embedded in non-linear processes. An observer's notion of what is ordered, what is random, and what is complex in its environment depends directly on its computational resources: the amount of raw measurement data, of memory, and of time available for estimation and inference. The discovery of structure in an environment depends more critically and subtly, though, on how those resources are organized. The descriptive power of the observer's chosen (or implicit) computational model class, for example, can be an overwhelming determinant in finding regularity in data.[17]
The lowentropy of an ordered system can be viewed as an example of subjective emergence: the observer sees an ordered system by ignoring the underlying microstructure (i.e. movement of molecules or elementary particles) and concludes that the system has a low entropy.[18]On the other hand, chaotic, unpredictable behaviour can also be seen as subjective emergent, while at a microscopic scale the movement of the constituent parts can be fully deterministic.
Inphysics,weak emergence is used to describe a property, law, or phenomenon which occurs at macroscopic scales (in space or time) but not at microscopic scales, despite the fact that a macroscopic system can be viewed as a very large ensemble of microscopic systems.[19][20]
An emergent behavior of a physical system is a qualitative property that can only occur in the limit that the number of microscopic constituents tends to infinity.[21]
According toRobert Laughlin,[12] for many-particle systems, nothing can be calculated exactly from the microscopic equations, and macroscopic systems are characterised by broken symmetry: the symmetry present in the microscopic equations is not present in the macroscopic system, due to phase transitions. As a result, these macroscopic systems are described in their own terminology, and have properties that do not depend on many microscopic details.
NovelistArthur Koestler used the metaphor ofJanus (a symbol of the unity underlying complements like open/shut, peace/war) to illustrate how the two perspectives (strong vs. weak orholistic vs.reductionistic) should be treated as non-exclusive, and should work together to address the issues of emergence.[22] Theoretical physicistPhilip W. Anderson states it this way:
The ability to reduce everything to simple fundamental laws does not imply the ability to start from those laws and reconstruct the universe. The constructionist hypothesis breaks down when confronted with the twin difficulties of scale and complexity. At each level of complexity entirely new properties appear. Psychology is not applied biology, nor is biology applied chemistry. We can now see that the whole becomes not merely more, but very different from the sum of its parts.[23]
Meanwhile, others have worked towards developing analytical evidence of strong emergence.Renormalization methods in theoretical physics enable physicists to study critical phenomena that are not tractable as the combination of their parts.[24] In 2009, Guet al. presented a class of infinite physical systems that exhibits non-computable macroscopic properties.[25][26] More precisely, if one could compute certain macroscopic properties of these systems from the microscopic description of these systems, then one would be able to solve computational problems known to be undecidable in computer science. These results concern infinite systems, finite systems being considered computable. However, macroscopic concepts which only apply in the limit of infinite systems, such asphase transitions and therenormalization group, are important for understanding and modeling real, finite physical systems. Guet al.
Recent developments in theoretical physics have explored strong emergence through intrinsic mechanisms for the quantum to classical transition. In theTheory of Emergent Motion, Gheorghe (2025)[27] proposes that classical directional motion emerges as a probabilistic resolution beyond a discrete temporal threshold, where quantum path uncertainty transitions to deterministic trajectories via a switching function, reinterpreting theFeynman path integral over finite histories without relying ondecoherence or measurement collapse. Similarly, Prakash'sVibrational Dynamics framework (2025)[28] describes the emergence of classical spacetime curvature from standing wave patterns in vibrational fields generated by quantum fluctuations interacting with a foam like spacetime structure, modulated by a curvature dependent logarithmic suppression function that governs coherence and leads to theQuantum Equivalence Principle, unifying quantum and classical behaviors geometrically. These approaches suggest that macroscopic laws may involve non-computable elements from microscopic quantum descriptions, complementing earlier work on undecidability in physical systems.[29] Recent work byGheorghe et. al.(2025)[30] synthesizes entropic stochastic resonance in Brownian transport with foundational quantum models likeToEM,[31]EDFPM,[29] andEBM,[32] alongside objective collapse theories such asSpontaneous Unitarity Violation[33] andContinuous Spontaneous Localisation, deriving extensions to colored noise and non-Markovian fluctuation dissipation relations to integrate a stochasticSchrödinger equation for joint position momentum measurement, suggestingentropic mechanisms drive quantum state transitions in stochastic geometries. These approaches suggest that macroscopic laws may involve non-computable elements from microscopic quantum descriptions, complementing earlier work on undecidability in physical systems.
Although macroscopic concepts are essential for understanding our world, much of fundamental physics has been devoted to the search for a 'theory of everything', a set of equations that perfectly describe the behavior of all fundamental particles. The view that this is the goal of science rests in part on the rationale that such a theory would allow us to derive the behavior of all macroscopic concepts, at least in principle. The evidence we have presented suggests that this view may be overly optimistic. A 'theory of everything' is one of many components necessary for complete understanding of the universe, but is not necessarily the only one. The development of macroscopic laws from first principles may involve more than just systematic logic, and could require conjectures suggested by experiments, simulations or insight.[25]
Human beings are the basic elements of social systems, which perpetually interact and create, maintain, or untangle mutual social bonds. Social bonds in social systems are perpetually changing in the sense of the ongoing reconfiguration of their structure.[34] An early argument (1904–05) for the emergence of social formations can be found inMax Weber's most famous work,The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism.[35] Recently, the emergence of a new social system is linked with the emergence of order from nonlinear relationships among multiple interacting units, where multiple interacting units are individual thoughts, consciousness, and actions.[36] In the case of the global economic system, undercapitalism, growth, accumulation and innovation can be considered emergent processes where not only does technological processes sustain growth, but growth becomes the source of further innovations in a recursive, self-expanding spiral. In this sense, the exponential trend of the growth curve reveals the presence of a long-term positivefeedback among growth, accumulation, and innovation; and the emergence of new structures and institutions connected to the multi-scale process of growth.[37] This is reflected in the work ofKarl Polanyi, who traces the process by which labor and nature are converted into commodities in the passage from an economic system based on agriculture to one based on industry.[38] This shift, along with the idea of the self-regulating market, set the stage not only for another economy but also for another society. The principle of emergence is also brought forth when thinking about alternatives to the current economic system based on growth facing social andecological limits. Bothdegrowth and socialecological economics have argued in favor of a co-evolutionary perspective for theorizing about transformations that overcome the dependence of human wellbeing oneconomic growth.[39][40]
Economic trends and patterns which emerge are studied intensively by economists.[41] Within the field of group facilitation and organization development, there have been a number of new group processes that are designed to maximize emergence and self-organization, by offering a minimal set of effective initial conditions. Examples of these processes includeSEED-SCALE,appreciative inquiry, Future Search, the world cafe orknowledge cafe,Open Space Technology, and others (Holman, 2010[42]). In international development, concepts of emergence have been used within a theory of social change termedSEED-SCALE to show how standard principles interact to bring forward socio-economic development fitted to cultural values, community economics, and natural environment (local solutions emerging from the larger socio-econo-biosphere). These principles can be implemented utilizing a sequence of standardized tasks thatself-assemble in individually specific ways utilizing recursive evaluative criteria.[43]
Looking at emergence in the context of social andsystems change, invites us to reframe our thinking on parts and wholes and their interrelation. Unlike machines,living systems at all levels of recursion - be it a sentient body, a tree, a family, an organisation, the education system, the economy, the health system, the political system etc - are continuously creating themselves. They are continually growing and changing along with their surrounding elements, and therefore are more than the sum of their parts. As Peter Senge and co-authors put forward in the bookPresence: Exploring profound change in People, Organizations and Society, "as long as our thinking is governed by habit - notably industrial, "machine age" concepts such as control, predictability, standardization, and "faster is better" - we will continue to recreate institutions as they have been, despite their disharmony with the larger world, and the need for all living systems to evolve."[44] While change is predictably constant, it is unpredictable in direction and often occurs at second and nth orders of systemic relationality.[45] Understanding emergence and what creates the conditions for different forms of emergence to occur, either insidious or nourishing vitality, is essential in the search for deep transformations.
The works of Nora Bateson and her colleagues at the International Bateson Institute delve into this. Since 2012, they have been researching questions such aswhat makes a living system ready to change? Can unforeseen ready-ness for change be nourished? Here being ready is not thought of as being prepared, but rather as nourishing theflexibility we do not yet know will be needed. These inquiries challenge the common view that a theory of change is produced from an identified preferred goal or outcome. As explained in their paperAn essay on ready-ing: Tending the prelude to change:[45] "While linear managing or controlling of the direction of change may appear desirable, tending to how the system becomes ready allows for pathways of possibility previously unimagined." This brings a new lens to the field of emergence in social and systems change as it looks to tending the pre-emergent process. Warm Data Labs are the fruit of theirpraxis, they are spaces for transcontextual mutual learning in which aphanipoetic phenomena unfold.[46] Having hosted hundreds of Warm Data processes with 1000s of participants, they have found that these spaces of shared poly-learning across contexts lead to a realm of potential change, a necessarily obscured zone of wild interaction of unseen, unsaid, unknown flexibility.[45] It is such flexibility that nourishes the ready-ing living systems require to respond to complex situations in new ways and change. In other words, this readying process preludes what will emerge. When exploring questions of social change, it is important to ask ourselves, what is submerging in the current social imaginary and perhaps, rather than focus all our resources and energy on driving direct order responses, to nourish flexibility with ourselves, and the systems we are a part of.
Another approach that engages with the concept of emergence for social change is Theory U, where "deep emergence" is the result of self-transcending knowledge after a successful journey along the U through layers of awareness.[47] This practice nourishes transformation at the inner-being level, which enables new ways of being, seeing and relating to emerge. The concept of emergence has also been employed in the field offacilitation. InEmergent Strategy,adrienne maree brown defines emergent strategies as "ways for humans to practice complexity and grow the future through relatively simple interactions".[48]
Inlinguistics, the concept of emergence has been applied in the domain ofstylometry to explain the interrelation between the syntactical structures of the text and the author style (Slautina, Marusenko, 2014).[49] It has also been argued that the structure and regularity oflanguagegrammar, or at leastlanguage change, is an emergent phenomenon.[50] While each speaker merely tries to reach their own communicative goals, they use language in a particular way. If enough speakers behave in that way, language is changed.[51] In a wider sense, the norms of a language, i.e. the linguistic conventions of its speech society, can be seen as a system emerging from long-time participation in communicative problem-solving in various social circumstances.[52]
The bulk conductive response of binary (RC) electrical networks with random arrangements, known as theuniversal dielectric response (UDR), can be seen as emergent properties of such physical systems. Such arrangements can be used as simple physical prototypes for deriving mathematical formulae for the emergent responses of complex systems.[53] Internet traffic can also exhibit some seemingly emergent properties. In the congestion control mechanism,TCP flows can become globally synchronized at bottlenecks, simultaneously increasing and then decreasing throughput in coordination. Congestion, widely regarded as a nuisance, is possibly an emergent property of the spreading of bottlenecks across a network in high traffic flows which can be considered as aphase transition.[54] Some artificially intelligent (AI) computer applications simulate emergent behavior.[55] One example isBoids, which mimics theswarming behavior of birds.[56]
In religion, emergence grounds expressions ofreligious naturalism andsyntheism in which a sense of thesacred is perceived in the workings of entirely naturalistic processes by which morecomplex forms arise or evolve from simpler forms. Examples are detailed inThe Sacred Emergence of Nature byUrsula Goodenough &Terrence Deacon andBeyond Reductionism: Reinventing the Sacred byStuart Kauffman, both from 2006, as well asSyntheism – Creating God in The Internet Age byAlexander Bard &Jan Söderqvist from 2014 andEmergentism: A Religion of Complexity for the Metamodern World by Brendan Graham Dempsey (2022).[citation needed]
Michael J. Pearce has used emergence to describe the experience of works of art in relation to contemporary neuroscience.[57] Practicing artistLeonel Moura, in turn, attributes to his "artbots" a real, if nonetheless rudimentary, creativity based on emergent principles.[58]
Objects consist of components with properties differing from the object itself. We call these properties emergent because they did not exist at the component level. The same applies toartifacts (structures, devices, tools, and even works of art). They are created for a specific purpose and are thereforesubjectively emergent: someone who doesn't understand the purpose can't use it.
The artifact is the result of aninvention: through a clever combination of components, something new is created with emergent properties and functionalities.[59] This invention is often difficult to predict and therefore usually based on a chancediscovery. An invention based on discovery is often improved through a feedback loop, making it more applicable. This is an example ofdownward causation.
Example 1: A hammer is a combination of a head and a handle, each with different properties. By cleverly connecting them, the hammer becomes an artifact with new, emergent functionalities. Through downward causation, you can improve the head and handle components in such a way that the hammer's functionality increases.Example 2: A mixture of tin and copper produces thealloy bronze, with new, emergent properties (hardness, lower melting temperature). Finding the correct ratio of tin to copper is an example of downward causation.Example 3: Finding the right combination of chemicals to create asuperconductor at high temperatures (i.e room temperature) is a great challenge for many scientists, where chance plays a significant role. Conversely, however, the properties of all these invented artifacts can be readily explained reductionistically.
Something similar occurs in nature: random mutations in genes rarely create a creature with new, emergent properties, increasing its chances of survival in a changing ecosystem. This is how evolution works. Here too, through downward causation, new creatures can sometimes manipulate their ecosystem in such a way that their chances of survival are further increased.
In both artifacts and living beings, certain components can be crucial to the emergent end result: the end resultsupervenes on these components. Examples include: a construction error, a bug in a software program, an error in the genetic code, or the absence of a particular gene.
Both aspects:supervenience and theunpredictability of the emergent result are characteristic ofstrong emergence (see above). (This definition, however, differs significantly from the definition in philosophical literature[60]).
Emergence has been significantly shaped and debated by numerous philosophers and scientists over the years
| Philosopher or scientist | Contribution | Major work |
|---|---|---|
| Aristotle | One of the earliest thinkers to suggest that the whole could possess properties that its individual parts did not. This idea laid the foundational groundwork by emphasizing that certain phenomena cannot be fully explained by their individual components alone. | Metaphysics[3] |
| George Henry Lewes | Formally introduced the term "emergence" in the 19th century. He distinguished between "resultant" and "emergent" properties where emergent properties could not be predicted from the properties of the parts. | Problems of Life and Mind[61] |
| John Stuart Mill | Early proponent of the concept of emergence in social and political contexts. Mill's work emphasized the importance of understanding social phenomena as more than the sum of individual actions. | A System of Logic[62] |
| C. D. Broad | In his 1925 bookThe Mind and Its Place in Nature, Broad argued thatmental states were emergent properties of brain processes. He developed a comprehensive philosophical framework for emergentism and advocated for the irreducibility of higher-level properties. | The Mind and Its Place in Nature[63] |
| Samuel Alexander | In his workSpace, Time, and Deity, Alexander suggested that emergent qualities likeconsciousness andlife could not be fully explained by underlying physical processes alone. | Space, Time, and Deity[64] |
| Jaegwon Kim | A prominent critic and commentator on emergence. Kim extensively analyzed the limits and scope of emergent properties, particularly in the context of mental causation and thephilosophy of mind, questioning the coherence and causal efficacy of emergent properties. | Mind in a Physical World[65] |
| Michael Polanyi | Advanced the idea that emergent properties are irreducible and possess their own causal powers. Polanyi's work in chemistry and philosophy of science provided empirical and theoretical support for emergentist concepts, especially in complex systems andhierarchical structures. | Personal Knowledge[66] |
| Philip W. Anderson | Nobel laureate in physics, Anderson's work oncondensed matter physics and the theory ofsuperconductivity provided significant empirical examples of emergent phenomena. His famous essay, "More is Different," showed that as systems grow in scale and complexity, qualitatively new properties and principles emerge, requiring autonomous theories rather than simple extrapolations from particle-level laws. | More is Different[67] |
| Stuart Kauffman | A theoretical biologist whose work in complex systems and self-organization highlighted the role of emergence in biological evolution and the origin of life. Kauffman emphasized the unpredictability and novelty of emergent biological properties. | The Origins of Order[68] |
| Roger Sperry | Neuropsychologist and Nobel laureate, Sperry'ssplit-brain research contributed to the understanding of consciousness as an emergent property of brain processes. He argued that emergent mental properties have causal efficacy that influences the lower-level neural processes. | Science and Moral Priority[69] |
| Terrence Deacon | Anthropologist andneuroscientist, Deacon's work on the evolution oflanguage andhuman cognition explored how emergent properties arise from neural and social interactions. His bookIncomplete Nature delves into the emergentist explanation of life and mind. | Incomplete Nature: How Mind Emerged from Matter[70] |
| Steven Johnson | An author and theorist whose popular science books, such asEmergence: The Connected Lives of Ants, Brains, Cities, and Software, have brought the concept of emergentism to a broader audience. Johnson illustrates how complex systems in nature and society exhibit emergent properties. | Emergence: The Connected Lives of Ants, Brains, Cities, and Software[71] |
The higher nexus is, in many of its structural elements, dependent on the lower, but is autonomous in its particular nature (its categorialnovum). The chain of conditions of a real thing in the higher stratum contains an ample number of components from the lower strata; but they are only partial aspects of it, and therefore do not make its real possibility complete; they make it, in fact, neither necessary nor actual. The chain becomes complete only through the addition of real components of its own stratum. But these are under a categorially different kind of determination. Structurally, they belong to the higher real nexus itself, and are not found outside of it.
Emergence is much discussed by both philosophers and scientists.
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