Foundation of Instancology

作者:中国现代哲学家学会
发表时间:
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Foundation of Instancology: Whole Before Parts, Structure Before Functions, Matching Before Associations


At the heart of Instancology lies a radical departure from the analytical traditions that have dominated Western philosophy for centuries. The foundation of this new philosophical system is encapsulated in three key reversals: whole before parts, structure before functions, and matching before associations. These principles challenge conventional metaphysical and epistemological models, proposing instead a reality grounded in holistic instancing, where meaning and truth arise not from fragments, but from structurally complete configurations.


Whole Before Parts


The first foundational reversal, whole before parts, asserts that the primary unit of reality is not a component but an Instance—a totality that precedes and determines its components. In contrast to reductionist traditions that attempt to construct understanding by assembling smaller units, Instancology affirms that meaning originates from the integrity of the whole. Parts have no independent epistemological or ontological standing outside the instance in which they are embedded. This principle reorients cognition itself: one must grasp the whole to understand the role and position of any part, not the reverse. The implication is revolutionary—not only for philosophy but for science, ethics, and even language learning, which Instancology recasts as processes of re-wholing rather than mere accumulation.


Structure Before Functions


The second principle, structure before functions, further deepens this ontological commitment. In the Instancological view, it is not the utility, outcome, or function that defines existence or identity, but rather the structure in which a phenomenon is embedded. Functions are secondary expressions of structural relations; they emerge from the patterned configuration of elements governed by an instance’s internal logic. A heart does not define a circulatory system by pumping blood; rather, it gains that function because it belongs structurally to that system. Similarly, cognition, morality, and language are not reducible to their functions but are intelligible only when their structural foundations are made explicit.


Matching Before Associations


The third foundational idea, matching before associations, overturns the loose cognitive habits of empirical generalization and probabilistic linking. Instead of building understanding through surface-level association, Instancology demands matching—a precise alignment between the internal structure of the mind and the structure of reality. This alignment is not statistical but metaphysical. True knowledge arises when the cognitive instance mirrors the ontological instance. Thus, associations without grounding in structural match are dismissed as illusion or error.


In Instancology, reality itself is structured—absolute at its core, with relative layers surrounding it. The mind is able to know only because its own internal structure mirrors that of reality. The mind generates cognition, and cognition in turn operates through matching tools—such as intuition, understanding, and reason—to produce knowledge. This entire process is governed not by associative habits or learned patterns, but by deep structural resonance between the knower and the known. When the structure of reality matches the structure of the mind, and the mind matches through its tools, only then does true knowledge emerge.


Conclusion


These three foundational commitments—whole before parts, structure before functions, and matching before associations—form the bedrock upon which the edifice of Instancology is built. They establish a metaphysical and epistemological framework that reclaims unity, coherence, and absolute grounding in a philosophical age increasingly fragmented by relativism and pragmatism. In doing so, Instancology not only critiques the dominant trends of modern thought but offers a radical, constructive alternative: a philosophy capable of reintegrating reality, cognition, and meaning into a single, knowable Instance.