Difference between revisions of "States"

From Evolutionary Knowledge Base
Jump to: navigation, search
(Definition)
(Definition)
Line 18: Line 18:
 
***[[Emptiness]]
 
***[[Emptiness]]
 
***[[Somethingness]]
 
***[[Somethingness]]
***[[Everything]]
 
 
**[[States of Physical Fields]]
 
**[[States of Physical Fields]]
 
***[[Vacuum]]
 
***[[Vacuum]]

Revision as of 19:18, 4 January 2022

Definition

A state is any possible configuration of a Field, of the organization of the Relations between Events in / of it, any snapshot of a Process, in its totality or of more or less extended Space-time domains.

More in general, a state of an Entity is represented by the set of the attributes, of the Properties of that entity, of the Events that occur in / on it and of the Relations that links it to the environment (the set of the other existing entities).

Configuration of a dynamic system, set of the values of the parameters that describe the System. A condition of a property of a System.

The possible configurations (commonly called "states", regimes, phases, etc. with various different meanings) range from complete / absolute chaos (disordered systems) to complete order (ordered systems). Among these extremes we can find all the states of systems, organized states, processes, etc. It is in this territory of organization that we can find the evolution towards the complexity that characterizes the processes that we see at work in the Formation of Reality, both the Physical and the Cognitive Reality.

States does not really exist. Time cannot be stopped. We can take a snapshot, and call that a State. But it is always an abstraction. Systems incessantly evolve, even when they appear static and stable. States, to which Information / Energy correspond, do not exist in Reality, because Time never stops. There are only flows, there are only Events, Action, the products of creative sub-processes, the substance of everything, the materials that feed the evolutionary sub-processes.

A proposal of classification:

Common definition

Links to Wikipedia pages:

Description

See also

Links to the related sections of the TFNR Paper

Classification