Document Type
Article
Abstract
[Editors' Introduction]
The discussion here centers on how self-similarity, or parts resembling a whole, has been a recurring aspect in the most diverse fields of human thinking from antiquity to the present. Primary examples are drawn from physics, biology, cybernetics, alchemy, philosophy, myth and, of course, language and literature. The author argues that self-similar patterns are one of the persistent ways in which the human mind structures its experience and knowledge of the world, and then examines some of the questions that arise when an almost ubiquitous concept, structure or linguistic and literary phenomenon resurfaces in a new guise in hard science.
Repository Citation
Vanderbeke, Dirk. "Of Parts and Wholes: Self-similarity and Synecdoche in Science, Culture and Literature." Reconstruction: Studies in Contemporary Culture vol. 4, no. 4, 2004, pp. 1–20. https://digitalcommons.odu.edu/reconstruction/vol4/iss4/6
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