Holotes

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Holotes, Holotis, or Olotis, a sum of dissimilar parts[1] of matter and/or energy and/or mind (mental) creating a new existence[2] (entity), different from its parts (components), and functioning as such.

The sums of similar parts are counted as one part each (quantity/amount, group, total) in this regard

Contents

[edit] Descriptions, Examples

Head in animals is a typical holotes as well as a hypo-holotes (part) of the complete holotes "body"

The (human) brain is a holotes of matter, energy and mind (thought), incessantly attempting to explain phenomena accordingly (similarly), i.e. according to its existence, to itself, and to its complete satisfaction (consummation)

Any form of existence, a living or a non-living thing, animate or inanimate, alive or dead, an animal or a stone, is a holotes, a part (hypo-holotes) of a larger holotes.
Example: 1. a stone, 2. a country, 3. a star, 4. a galaxy, are all holoteses, while at the same time the holotes 1 is a hypo-holotes (part) of the larger holotes 2 and so on.

Something having beginning, middle and end, in matter, and/or energy and/or mind (plan, project, scheme, task, undertaking, construction"[3], study/research, film/play/serial, poem, novel/show, game; song/music piece, trip/itinerary, vacation, convention, lesson/course; life, cooperation) Every day is full of minor or major (short/small, long/big) such holoteses of matter and/or energy and/or mind that man and/or other cause creates, and must be encountered and experienced.

A holotes can be:

1. cause, grounds, justification, reason, purpose, goal, target, objective, (Greek aition, Latin causa);

2. means, medium, tool, assistant, catalyst;

3. result, answer, response, reaction, consequence, effect, conclusion, solution, product, offspring; fruit, yield, return, (Greek aitiaton, Latin eventus, fructus);

Interdependence A<->B

Holotes, cause of existence of a future (following, succeeding) holotes A-->B (e.g. parent -> child relation)

Holotes, cause of existence of a preceding holotes B-->A (e.g. child -> parent relation)

[edit] Etymology-Transliteration-Pronunciation-Grammar

Etymology: From Greek Ὁλότης, from holon, (Greek ὅλον = whole)

Transliteration: The Greek word ὅλον takes aspiration mark (δασεία, /ða'si:a/) on the first accented syllable "o" which is rendered by "h" in Latin transliteration (English etc), hence also the derivative "holotes".

The correct transliteration of the Greek letter "η" (ήτα, pron./'i:tə/) (΄eeta) is "e" in Latin Roman, thus the transliteration of "ὁλότης" is "holotes" in grammatical terms. However, as the aspiration mark is not pronounced in modern Greek and the following vowel "o" is not affected, one can transliterate the word phonetically in just "olotis" in pronunciation terms.

Pronunciation:

Holotes, /hə'ləʊtɪs/, /hə'loʊtɪs/, /hə'lɒtɪs/, or /həʊ.../
Olotis, (Greek pron. [o'lotis]), English pron. /ə'ləʊtɪs/, /ə'loʊtɪs/, /ə'lɒtɪs/, or /əʊ.../
Holon, /'həʊlən/, /'hoʊlən/, or /'hɒlən/
Holotism, /'hɒlətɪzm/ or /'həʊlətɪzm/
Holotics, /hə'ləʊtɪcs/, /hə'loʊtɪcs/, or /həʊ.../
Hypo-holotes, /΄haɪpəhə'ləʊtɪs/

Grammar: Holotes is a noun (in Greek) (countable, i.e. one can say one holotes, two holoteses etc, and Holon is a pronoun (adjective) rarely used as a noun (uncountable, i.e. one cannot say one holon, two holons etc). In modern Greek the word "ὁλοτης" is "ὁλότητα", taken from the accusative case of the word "ὁλότης" which is "oλότητα" and made it of "first declension" (declination), although originally the word "ὁλότης" belongs to the third declension, in literary and old Greek.(Singular: Nom. ὁλότης, Gen. ὁλότητος, Dat. ὁλότητι, Acc. ὁλότητα, Voc. ὁλότης. Plural: Nom. ὁλότητες, Gen. ὁλοτήτων, Dat. ὁλότησι, Acc. ὁλότητας, Voc. ὁλότητες)
Plural of Holotes in English: Holoteses, /hə'ləʊtɪsiz/

[edit] See also

Greek Diacritics
Holon
Holism

[edit] Glossary

Equivalents of "Ὁλότης" (Holotes) in European Languages:
English: wholeness, whole, entirety, entity, unity completeness, totality, sum, aggregate
French: ensemble, totalite, entite
German: Ganze
Italian: integrita, completezza, interezza, somma, universalita
Latin:totum
Hypo-holotes: a holotes as a part of a (larger) holotes