Preferred Name | state | |
Synonyms |
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Definitions |
Menelas definition : "According the structure of the state_change, there must be three kinds of state_change, depending on the kinds of world one is concerned with. There are abstract, mental and ideal worlds, hence there are abstract, mental and ideal states (and state_change). a state is an intentional object because it is a mental view on a world. The type of the considered world, and of the corresponding state, is determined by the focussed objects: if the focussed objects are ideal objects, e.g. the social status, the medical discipline, then the related state is a cultural state; if the focussed objects are physical objects, the state is physical; and for intentional object, the state is mental. Every state (or state change) is a mental view on objects, and every types of objects can be concerned. Hence, a physical state is not defined by only physical objects, but also by ideal or cultural objects. The only thing is that the focussed objects (bound the state by the "consists_of" relation) must be physical for the state to be physical. The reason of this fact is that a physical state is not a physical object, but a mental state about physical objects, a representation, or an intentional object." CG Representation : [state:_x]- ;;(state_of)-->[substratum] (attr)-->[state_evolution_attr]--(val_qual)-->[state_evolution_val] % http://cwi.nl/~troncy/DOE#sws"kind of object it is state of: physical, ideal, mental." |
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ID |
http://www.semanticweb.org/ontologies/2009/3/ontoDPN.owl#State |
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comment |
http://cwi.nl/~troncy/DOE#sws"kind of object it is state of: physical, ideal, mental." |
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definition |
Menelas definition : "According the structure of the state_change, there must be three kinds of state_change, depending on the kinds of world one is concerned with. There are abstract, mental and ideal worlds, hence there are abstract, mental and ideal states (and state_change). a state is an intentional object because it is a mental view on a world. The type of the considered world, and of the corresponding state, is determined by the focussed objects: if the focussed objects are ideal objects, e.g. the social status, the medical discipline, then the related state is a cultural state; if the focussed objects are physical objects, the state is physical; and for intentional object, the state is mental. Every state (or state change) is a mental view on objects, and every types of objects can be concerned. Hence, a physical state is not defined by only physical objects, but also by ideal or cultural objects. The only thing is that the focussed objects (bound the state by the "consists_of" relation) must be physical for the state to be physical. The reason of this fact is that a physical state is not a physical object, but a mental state about physical objects, a representation, or an intentional object." CG Representation : [state:_x]- ;;(state_of)-->[substratum] (attr)-->[state_evolution_attr]--(val_qual)-->[state_evolution_val] % http://cwi.nl/~troncy/DOE#sws"kind of object it is state of: physical, ideal, mental." |
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dwp |
thinking of something as unmodified during a given time, through a description. |
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dws |
Change or not change, that is the question. |
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MENELASID |
121122 |
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prefixIRI |
ontoDPN:State |
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prefLabel |
state |
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swp |
any object whose instantiation takes place in time |
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sws |
kind of object it is state of: physical, ideal, mental. |
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subClassOf |
http://www.semanticweb.org/ontologies/2009/3/ontoDPN.owl#IntentionalObject |