Vlad,
Do you agree that these properties are irreducible?
Depends what you mean by “irreducible”. Clearly for example water (ie, with its emergent properties) can be “reduced” back to oxygen and hydrogen, but in that case the property of eg wetness itself disappears. Also though, a street of silk goods shops say creates an emergent entity of a silk goods market that’s “reducible” (ie, has fewer interacting constituent parts) by closing one of the shops, but a (less complex) market likely continues nonetheless.
As I said – it depends what you mean by the term.
Anyway (and more to the point) before you do your eel in a bathful of swarfega trade make slippery act again what actually happened here was that in Reply 44487 I told you what emergence means (“
Emergence is "just" the self-organising process of more complex phenomena arising from their individually less complex but interacting parts”).
In your reply 44488 you said as what you intended to be a corrective:
“No it isn't as any proper internet search will show you.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emergencehttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emergentism”
But when I opened the Wiki link funnily enough the first sentence of the article defined emergence more or less identically to the way I had done (“
In philosophy, systems theory, science, and art, emergence occurs when an entity is observed to have properties its parts do not have on their own, properties or behaviors that emerge only when the parts interact in a wider whole.”)
In other words, your “No it isn't as any proper internet search will show you” was
wrong.
Do you not think that perhaps you should acknowledge and withdraw your error rather than just slide away from it as if it wasn’t there?
Since Davies is still writing on emergence I should say he has added considerably to the field since Steven Johnson's pop science ''Emergence'' of 2001 which is your recommended reference.
Ah, I do so love the smell of poisoning the well in the morning with that “pop” before the “science” part as if that in some way made the science part wrong. The point at issue here though (ie, what “emergence” means) is the same as Johnson described it, as I described it and as the Wiki article you so helpfully (for me) linked to describes it.
If you do have any interest in developments in that field as defined though, there are many more recent academic papers online to help you.