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Glossary›Holistic Thinking

Glossary

Holistic Thinking

A cognitive approach that emphasizes understanding systems through their interconnections and context rather than isolated parts, viewing the whole as greater than the sum of its components.

What is Holistic Thinking?

Holistic thinking is a cognitive approach that examines phenomena by understanding the relationships, patterns, and context that connect disparate elements within a system, rather than analyzing components in isolation. The approach focuses on the context of a situation, and the relationships between the disparate elements of that situation, operating from the principle that the whole possesses emergent properties not predictable from studying its parts alone. Unlike reductionist methods that break problems into smaller pieces, holistic thinking begins by examining the nature and behavior of the entire system and, if necessary, expands to consider the larger systems of which it forms a part.

Origins & Lineage

Elements of holistic thinking can be found in ancient Greece, where education was associated with cultivating both mind and body, and in many indigenous cultures, which integrated spiritual, community, and ecological dimensions into teaching and learning. The idea traces back to Aristotle’s observation that “the whole is more than the sum of its parts”. Holistic thinking in a unifying whole can also be found in several religious traditions, such as Buddhism and Daoism. Chinese philosophy adheres to the belief that the universe is a fundamental whole made up of two opposing forces known as yin and yang.

The modern term holism was introduced by South African statesman and philosopher Jan Smuts, whose 1926 book Holism and Evolution described nature as tending to form wholes greater than the sum of their parts. Smuts built the word from the Greek holos, meaning “whole,” and defined holism as “a tendency in nature to form wholes that are greater than the sum of the parts through creative evolution”. Smuts’ theory of holism influenced later developments in systems thinking, ecology, psychology, and education. Holistic thinkers often draw from the work of theorists from the early and mid twentieth century including Alfred North Whitehead (“process” philosophy), Carl Jung (archetypal psychology), Sri Aurobindo (integral philosophy), Gregory Bateson (cybernetics), and Ludwig von Bertalanffy (systems theory) among others. Smuts was an early influence on the thinking of the developer of Gestalt therapy, Frederick Perls during Perls’s stay in South Africa.

How It’s Practiced

Holistic thinking manifests in several practical forms. Holistic thinkers spend time following their thoughts in an exploratory way, rather than simply trying to find an answer and moving on; thinking holistically entails looking at things from different angles, and considering options carefully before making a decision; holistic thinkers tend to consider the “big picture,” and resist getting caught up in the smaller details.

In problem-solving contexts, practitioners create system maps to visualize connections between factors, practice perspective-switching to view situations from multiple stakeholder angles, and engage in scenario exploration to anticipate long-term consequences. Systems thinking mapping techniques include causal loop diagrams that visualize the causal relationships between variables within a system, highlighting feedback loops and interdependencies.

Mindfulness practices support holistic cognition. Body scan meditation brings awareness to different parts of the body and their interconnectedness; walking meditation pays attention to the sensation of each step, considering the complex interplay between the body, environment, and surroundings; loving-kindness meditation focuses on cultivating compassion and understanding for oneself and others, recognizing the interconnectedness of all beings.

Holistic Thinking Today

Contemporary seekers encounter holistic thinking across diverse fields. Examples of holistic practices include mindfulness-based stress reduction (MBSR), holistic nutrition, ecotherapy, and systems thinking. Holism has influenced various branches of modern philosophy, including systems theory, ecology, and philosophy of mind. The approach appears in integrative health practices, organizational leadership training, environmental management, and conscious education models. Practitioners might attend workshops on systems thinking, engage in contemplative practice communities, or study interdisciplinary approaches that bridge multiple fields of knowledge.

Eastern Philosophy often emphasizes holistic approaches, interconnectedness, and inner experience, focusing on spirituality and self-realization, in contrast to Western thought’s focus on individualism and empirical methods. This cross-pollination between Eastern and Western intellectual traditions continues to shape how holistic thinking develops in modern contexts.

Common Misconceptions

Holistic thinking is frequently confused with systems thinking, though they are related but distinct. Systems thinking is a methodology for understanding the behavior of complex systems by analyzing interactions among their components, while holistic thinking is a broader perspective that seeks to understand the entirety of a situation by considering all relevant factors and their interconnections. If reductionism (breaking things down into their constituent parts) is on one side of a continuum, then holism (seeing things in the context of their whole) is on the other; if reductionism is the opposite of systems thinking, then systems thinking and holism would be synonymous—yet this is misleading. To break things down into parts (reductionism) is an act of systems thinking as much as seeing things in the context of their whole; a healthy part-whole balance is a necessary aspect of systems thinking.

Another misconception equates holistic thinking with anti-rational intuition alone. While the purely holistic approach can reject the possibility of analysis and rely upon the method of intuition, the systems approach recognizes the existence of emergent properties yet seeks to explain them in terms of how their constituent parts are organized, aiming to demystify emergent properties by providing scientific understanding that utilizes analysis as well as synthesis.

Holistic thinking is not inherently spiritual or metaphysical—it can be applied using entirely conventional, evidence-based tools. The defining feature is whether one addresses the full picture of interconnections, not whether one employs alternative methodologies.

How to Begin

Strategies for developing a holistic mindset include practicing systems thinking by understanding the interconnectedness of different components within a system; engaging in interdisciplinary learning by studying multiple subjects to gain a more comprehensive understanding of complex systems; and encouraging diverse perspectives by seeking out different viewpoints to gain a more nuanced understanding of complex issues.

For practical entry points: read Holism and Evolution by Jan Smuts (1926) for the foundational text, or explore Peter Senge’s The Fifth Discipline for contemporary systems thinking applications. Consider mindfulness-based stress reduction (MBSR) courses to cultivate awareness of interconnection experientially. Create system maps by drawing connections between different factors that influence a situation; visualizing these relationships helps you notice how one decision affects the larger system. Engage with teachers from both Eastern contemplative traditions (Buddhism, Taoism, Vedanta) and Western systems theory backgrounds to gain multiple lenses on interconnectedness.

Related terms

systems thinkinginterconnectednessmindfulnessemergent propertiesgestalt psychologyintegral philosophy
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