Capek, Milic.  “Simple Location and Fragmentation of Reality.”  Monist 48 (Apr. 1964): 195-218.

Abstract

Whitehead's criticism of the fallacy of simple location in space and time is nothing but another name for the rejection of the doctrine of external relations, i.e., fragmentation of reality into mutually external units.  Long before Whitehead's criticism the rejection against the atomization of reality took place in psychology under the name of "gestalt" theory; even before that some outstanding physicists, such as faraday and Maxwell, pointed out that the concept of isolated particle is a result of artificial abstraction since, as mach later pointed out, "to neglect the rest of the universe is impossible."  However, Whitehead went too far in holding that "everything is present everywhere"; this view would lead to another version of "the bloc universe" and is contrary to the present empirical evidence.  [Abstract from The Philosopher’s Index]