Difference between revisions of "Principle of Conservation"

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(Definition)
(See also)
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*[[Other Principles of Evolutionary Dynamics]]
 
*[[Other Principles of Evolutionary Dynamics]]
 
*[[Principle of Unity]]
 
*[[Principle of Unity]]
*[[Principle of Locality]]
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*[[Principle of Connection]]
 
*[[Principle of Individuation]]
 
*[[Principle of Individuation]]
 
*[[Principle of Relation]]
 
*[[Principle of Relation]]

Revision as of 17:52, 19 January 2020

Definition

This Principle states that the mutations described by the Principle of Variation, that always tend to propagate as described by the Principle of Propagation, the incessant variations of the states of the Entities, the Events, always tend to tend to conserve. Events, interacting with the other events, creating dynamic structures, that, mainly through cyclic processes, acquire causal permanence. Any variation of a Field produced by a Force (Events) tends to conserve in the same Field spatially and temporally, conserving the Action of those Forces on/in the Fields, conserving causes, the causality, through the Action. The conservation of causes, of Forces, is represented by the extension in the space-time of the effects of the Action produced by those causes/forces. The general Principle of Conservation is the foundation of all the derived principles of conservation which operate at the various Levels of Reality. It is the former and fundamental expression of Variationality, in the mode we call Temporality. At the level of Elementary Field operates the Principle of Least Action, at the level of Physical Reality the principle of conservation of Energy, momentum, etc., while at the level of Physical Structures of Information and the quanta operates the principle of conservation of Information. On a biological level this principle applies to the conservation of genetic information in the DNA, while on a cognitive level, this principle manifests itself in the field of conservation of experiences, of storage of memories, and the various phenomena related to the formation of culture).

Common definition

(Link to Wikipedia page: Conservation).

See also

Links to the related sections of the TFNR Paper

Classification