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Mereology

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Mereology is a collection of axiomatic formal systems dealing with parts and their respective wholes. Mereology is an application of logic and a branch of ontology.

History

Before the rise of set theory, part-whole reasoning was casually but unwittingly invoked all over mathematics and metaphysics, including in Aristotle. Ivor Grattan-Guinness (2001) sheds much light on this aspect of the period just before the Cantor-Peano notion of set became canonical. The first to reason consciously and at length about parts and wholes was, apparently, Edmund Husserl in his 1901 Logical Investigations., translated as Husserl (1970). However, the word "mereology" is absent from his writings, and he employed no symbolism even though his doctorate was in mathematics.

Stanisław Leśniewski coined the term in 1927, from the Greek word meros (part). Between 1916 and 1931, he wrote a number of highly technical papers on the subject, translated in Leśniewski (1992). This "Polish mereology" was elaborated over the course of the 20th century by Leśniewski's students, and by students of his students. However, little work in this area dates from after 1985 or so.

Henry Leonard's 1930 Harvard Ph.D. dissertation in philosophy, often cited but never sighted, set out a formal theory of the part-whole relation which first appeared in print in Goodman and Leonard (1940), who called it "the calculus of individuals." Goodman went on to elaborate this calculus in the three editions of his Structure of Appearance, the last being Goodman (1977). Eberle (1970) clarified the relation between mereology and set theory, and showed how to construct a calculus of individuals lacking atoms, i.e., one where every object has a "proper part" (defined below) so that the universe is infinite.

For some time, philosophers and mathematicians were reluctant to explore mereology, believing that it implied a rejection of set theory, a position known as nominalism. Goodman was indeed a nominalist and his fellow nominalist, Richard Milton Martin employed a version of the calculus of individuals throughout his career, starting in 1941. The calculus of individuals began to come into its own starting only around 1970, when the "ontological innocence" of mereology began to be recognized. One can employ mereology regardless of one's ontological stance regarding set theory. Quantified variables ranging over a universe of sets, and schematic monadic predicates with a free variable, can be used interchangeably in the formal description of a mereological system. Since that recognition, formal work in ontology and metaphysics has made increasing use of mereology.

Mereology is mathematics, but has been wholly developed by logicians and computer scientists. To date, the only mathematician to write on mereology is Leśniewski's student Alfred Tarski in the 1920s and 30s (see Tarski 1984). For that matter, mereology is seldom mentioned outside of the literatures on ontology and artificial intelligence. Standard university texts on logic and mathematics are silent about mereology, which has undoubtedly contributed to its undeserved obscurity. Topological notions of boundaries and connection can be married to mereology, resulting in mereotopology.

Mereology and set theory

Much early work on mereology was motivated by a suspicion that set theory was ontologically suspect, and that Occam's Razor requires that one minimise the number of posits in one's theory of the world and of mathematics. Mereology replaces talk of "sets" of objects with talk of "sums" of objects, objects being no more than the various things that make up wholes.

Many logicians and philosophers reject these motivations, on such grounds as:

Nonetheless, mereology is now largely accepted as a useful tool for formal philosophy, although to date it has received much less attention than set theory.

In set theory, unit sets are "atoms" which have no (non-empty) proper parts; many consider set theory useless or incoherent (not "well-founded") if sets cannot be built up from unit sets. The calculus of individuals was thought to require that an object either have no proper parts, in which case it is an "atom," or be built up from atoms. Eberle (1970) showed how to devise mereologies such that all objects have proper parts and so can be divided at will. (Leibniz believed this to be true of matter.)

Lewis (1991) argued that mereology augmented by a few ontological assumptions and some careful reasoning about unit sets, yields a formal system in which the axioms of Peano arithmetic and of Zermelo-Fraenkel set theory are theorems.

Axiomatic mereology

It is possible to formulate a "naive mereology" analogous to naive set theory. Doing so gives rise to paradoxes analogous to Russell's paradox: there is an object whose parts are all the objects that are not parts of themselves. Is it a part of itself? (However, every object is an "improper" part of itself.) Hence mereology requires an axiomatic formulation.

The treatment and terminology below follow Casati and Varzi (1999: chpts. 3,4) closely. Mereology studies first-order theories, called systems, treating of wholes and their respective parts, collectively called objects. Hence mereology presupposes and builds on first-order logic with identity. Mereology is a collection of nested and nonnested axiomatic systems, not unlike the case with modal logic. A mereological theory requires at least one primitive relation e.g., dyadic Parthood, "x is a part of y," written Pxy. Parthood is nearly always assumed to partially order the universe.

An immediate defined predicate is "x is a proper part of y," written PPxy, which holds (i.e., is satisfied, comes out true) if Pxy is true and Pyx is false. An object lacking proper parts is an atom. The mereological universe consists of all objects we wish to think about, plus all of their proper parts. Two other common defined predicates are:

A number of possible axioms follow. Lower case letters denote variables ranging over objects: The above axioms all hold in classical extensional mereology. Other systems of mereology are described in Simons (1987) and Casati and Varzi (1999). There are some analogies between these axioms and those of standard Zermelo-Fraenkel set theory, if "parthood" in mereology is taken as corresponding to subset in set theory.

In the table below, strings of bold letters name mereological systems. These systems are partially ordered by inclusion, in the sense that if all the theorems of system A are also theorems of system B, but the converse is not necessarily true, then B includes A. The resulting Hasse diagram is [Fig. 2,] and Fig. 3.2 in Casati and Varzi (1999: 48).

Label Name System Included Axioms
M1 Parthood is reflexive
M2 Parthood is antisymmetric
M3 Parthood is transitive M M1-3
M4 Weak Supplementation MM M, M4
M5 Strong Supplementation EM M, M5
M5' Atomistic Supplementation
M6 General Sum Principle CEM EM, M6-7
M7 Product GM M, M8
M8 Unrestricted Fusion GEM EM, M8
M8' Unique Fusion GEM EM, M8'
M9 Atomicity AGEM M2, M8, M9
AGEM M, M5', M8

There are two equivalent ways of asserting that the universe is partially ordered: assume either M1-M3, or that Proper Parthood is transitive and asymmetric. Either axiomatization results in the system M. M2 rules out closed loops formed using Parthood; so that the part relation is well-founded.

M4 and M5 are two ways of asserting supplementation, the mereological analog of set complementation, with M5 being stronger because M4 is derivable from M5. M and M4 yield minimal mereology, MM. In any system in which M5 or M5' are assumed or can be derived, then it can be proved that if two objects share the same proper parts, they are the same object. This property is known as Extensionality, a term borrowed from set theory, where Extensionality is a fundamental axiom. An immediate consequence of Extensionality is that no two atoms can be identical. Mereological systems in which Extensionality holds are termed extensional, a fact designated by the letter E in their symbolic names.

M6 [M7] asserts that any two underlapping [overlapping] objects have a unique sum [product]. If the universe is finite or if Top is assumed, then the universe is closed under sum. Universal closure of product and of supplementation relative to W requires Bottom. W and N are, evidently, the mereological analogues of the universal and null sets, and sum and product are likewise the analogs of set union and intersection. If M6 and M7 are either assumed or derivable, the result is a closure system.

Because sum and product are binary operations, M6 and M7 admit the sum and product of only a finite number of objects. The fusion axiom, M8, enables taking the sum of infinitely many objects. The same holds for product, if defined. At this point, mereology often invokes set theory, but any recourse to set theory is eliminable by replacing a formula with a quantified variable ranging over a universe of sets by a schematic formula with one free variable. The formula comes out true (is satisfied) whenever the name of an object that would be a member of the set (if it existed) replaces the free variable. Hence any axiom with sets can be replaced by an axiom schema with monadic atomic subformulae. M8 and M8' are schemas of just this sort. The syntax of a first-order theory can describe only a denumerable number of sets; hence only denumerably many sets may be eliminated in this fashion, but this limitation is not binding for the sort of mathematics contemplated here.

If M8 holds, then W exists for infinite universes. Hence Top need be assumed only if the universe is infinite and M8 does not hold. Curiously, Top (postulating W) is not controversial, but Bottom (postulating N) is. Leśniewski rejected Bottom and most mereological systems follow his example (an exception is the work of Richard Milton Martin). Hence while the universe is closed under sum, the product of objects that do not overlap is typically undefined. A system with W but not N is isomorphic to a:

Postulating N renders all possible products definable, but also transforms classical extensional mereology into a set-free model of Boolean algebra.

If sets are admitted, M8 asserts the existence of the fusion of all members of any nonempty set. Any mereological system in which M8 holds is called general, and its name includes G. In any general mereology, M6 and M7 are provable. Adding M8 to an extensional mereology results in general extensional mereology, abbreviated GEM; moreover, the extensionality renders the fusion unique. Conversely, if the fusion asserted by M8 is assumed unique, so that M8' replaces M8, then Tarski (1929) showed that M3 and M8' suffice to axiomatize GEM, a remarkably economical result. Simons (1987: 38-41) lists some GEM theorems.

M2 and a finite universe necessarily imply atomicity, namely that everything is either an atom or includes atoms among its proper parts. If the universe is infinite, atomicity requires M9. Adding M9 to any mereological system X results in the atomistic variant thereof, denoted AX. Atomicity permits economies. For instance, assuming M5' implies atomicity and extensionality, and yields an alternative axiomatization of AGEM.

Mereology and natural language

The interpretation of mereology is complicated by the fact that natural language often employs the words "part of" in ambiguous ways. If mereology is merely employed to add nuances to logical reasoning, this need not lead to any problems. But it is doubtful how, if at all, one can translate certain expressions in natural language into mereological predicates.

Bunt (1985), a study of natural language semantics, shows how mereology can help understand such phenomena as the mass/count distinction and grammatical aspect.

Two important books

The books Simons (1987) and Casati and Varzi (1999) differ in their strengths: Both books include excellent bibliographies.

See also

References

External links

 


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