WilliamC
Member
- Joined
- Nov 27, 2007
- Messages
- 6,682
If such a concept disputes that it is the individual that acts, then yes, its premise is fundamentally wrong.
Sigh. An emergent property does not dispute that it is the mass behavior of the individual, constituent parts that acts, but rather that there is mathematical meaning in considering the effects of that action in aggregate rather than one at a time.
Hitler did not kill a million Jews.

It was the solider who pulled the trigger that killed the person.
You want to try to stop the Hitlers - this has failed for 10,000 years - because the problem does not exist there.
It exist with the man who holds the gun and who would pull the trigger.
I really do not understand your point, and for me to speculate would be futile.
But yes you can use mathematics to model human psychology as well, and this in no way implies that individuals are not inherently responsible for their choices.
See this article for a simple model of panic reaction in human mobs.
Note, the link for some reason is huge, so in case it doesn't parse search for "Emotional Ant Based Modeling of Crowd Dynamics" by S. Banajaree.
And thank you for leading me to something I didn't know, as Robert Heinlein said "I never learned anything from a man who agrees with me".
This may be true, but to argue that this whole refutes the parts is wrong.
That is not my argument at all, rather that there are properties of the whole which simply do not exist for the parts.
Again, I do not detect much of an effort at exposition in your debate, and that combined with some barbed analogies causes me some small level of confusion as to your intent.
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