Concept in Definition ABC
Miscellanea / / July 04, 2021
By Cecilia Bembibre, in Mar. 2013
The concept of unity is a concept abstract which is used to designate everything that is found in a uniform, united and similar way in the world. The idea of unity comes precisely from the term one, that is, a single thing, a single element. Thus, for example, the unity of matter becomes present when different parts come together to become something superior or more complex that encompasses them. In scientific terms the unit represents order, but in social terms the unit can many times be understood as something negative if unity is considered to represent the cancellation of the different or different.
When we speak in scientific, biological, chemical, physical terms, etc., the unit represents the conjunction of elements that is carried out naturally or artificially against different circumstances. Thus, for example when several specimens of the same species from animal they come together as a group (a flock of birds) they become something more complex, a unit since they all act and move together. A unity artificially achieved by the human being can be, for example, when several ingredients are put at the service of the
preparation of a plate of food; Each element is different from the rest, but together they all become a unit, something new.In the case of social phenomena, the idea of unity has two aspects, one positive and the other negative. In the same way as in science, the unit can represent a positive phenomenon when it represents order and joint work, for example when all the people of a company or a family They act in an orderly and safe manner, forming a unit and each fulfilling its role. Social unity has to do with the idea of uniting all of us despite our differences for a common goal, for example, peace.
However, the unit can also be negative when in certain forms of government, regimes or social and cultural conceptions what is different or different is understood as something bad or dangerous that must be eliminated. In this way, the differences that make us who we are tend to disappear and that add us to a homogeneity in which none of us stands out for our own traits, achievements, characteristics, etc.
Topics in Unit