(no subject)
Apr. 13th, 2007 12:07 am"Smith (1996) and others have shown that mereotopology can be useful in ontology (Smith 1996), by formalizing relations such as contact, connection, boundaries, interiors, holes, and so on."
"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."
Sartre was Husserl's student and incorporates some primitive mereotopological ideas in Being and Nothingness, but curiously doesn't pursue them very far, relative to some of his other ideas.
"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."
Sartre was Husserl's student and incorporates some primitive mereotopological ideas in Being and Nothingness, but curiously doesn't pursue them very far, relative to some of his other ideas.