Difference between revisions of "Existence"
Line 3: | Line 3: | ||
{{Def-en|1={{PAGENAME}}}} | {{Def-en|1={{PAGENAME}}}} | ||
− | Existence is a fundamental attribute/property of [[Reality]] and the [[Primary Source|Source]] of the Reality, the fundamental [[Entities|entity]]. It represents the [[Evolutionary Ontology|ontological aspect]] of Reality. Existence is the product of the sub process of [[Creation]], where the incessant inner interaction between the [[Fundamental Force]] (the [[Agents / Forces|Agent]]) and the [[Elementary Field]] (the [[Acted / Fields|Acted]]) produces the [[Elementary Events]], the [[Elementary Action]], the most elementary form of Existence. Existence express itself in the [[Causality|causal]], [[Spatiality|spatial]] and [[Temporality|temporal]] [[Dimensions of Reality|dimensions]], and is strictly related to the concepts of emergence and reification (what | + | Existence is a fundamental attribute/property of [[Reality]] and the [[Primary Source|Source]] of the Reality, the fundamental [[Entities|entity]]. It represents the [[Evolutionary Ontology|ontological aspect]] of Reality. Existence is the product of the sub process of [[Creation]], where the incessant inner interaction between of its two aspects, the [[Fundamental Force]] (the [[Agents / Forces|Agent]]) and the [[Elementary Field]] (the [[Acted / Fields|Acted]]), produces the [[Elementary Events]], the [[Elementary Action]], the most elementary form of Existence. Existence express itself in the [[Causality|causal]], [[Spatiality|spatial]] and [[Temporality|temporal]] [[Dimensions of Reality|dimensions]], and is strictly related to the basic concepts of emergence and reification (what exists is real and belongs to the Universal [[Reality]], and, symmetrically, what is real exists, both in the physical and cognitive senses). |
− | + | ||
− | + | ||
− | + | ||
− | + | ||
− | + | ||
− | + | ||
− | + | ||
− | + | ||
− | + | ||
== Common definition == | == Common definition == | ||
Existence is the ability of an entity to interact with physical or mental reality. In philosophy, it refers to the ontological property of being. The word "existence" comes from the Latin word exsistere meaning "to appear", "to arise", "to become", or "to be", but literally, it means "to stand out" (ex- being the Latin prefix for "out" added to the causative of the verb stare, meaning "to stand"). In a technical sense, this refers to standing out of both being and becoming, thus having the qualities of both. Existence is an ontological argument par excellence and relates to that of being but in the alternative, as its contingent way of manifesting itself and of flowing. It therefore also concerns the dimension of becoming. "Existence" means etymologically to be from, because it derives from the Latin compound ēx + sistentia, which means having the being from another, external to itself. In fact existence does not have its own being, but exists only in so far as it is subordinated to a higher being. This is why the words existence and being have been treated quite differently throughout the history of Western philosophy.{{WpLink}} | Existence is the ability of an entity to interact with physical or mental reality. In philosophy, it refers to the ontological property of being. The word "existence" comes from the Latin word exsistere meaning "to appear", "to arise", "to become", or "to be", but literally, it means "to stand out" (ex- being the Latin prefix for "out" added to the causative of the verb stare, meaning "to stand"). In a technical sense, this refers to standing out of both being and becoming, thus having the qualities of both. Existence is an ontological argument par excellence and relates to that of being but in the alternative, as its contingent way of manifesting itself and of flowing. It therefore also concerns the dimension of becoming. "Existence" means etymologically to be from, because it derives from the Latin compound ēx + sistentia, which means having the being from another, external to itself. In fact existence does not have its own being, but exists only in so far as it is subordinated to a higher being. This is why the words existence and being have been treated quite differently throughout the history of Western philosophy.{{WpLink}} | ||
− | + | ||
− | + | ||
== See also == | == See also == | ||
Line 39: | Line 29: | ||
<!-- --> | <!-- --> | ||
<!-- | <!-- | ||
+ | == Description == | ||
== Units of measurement == | == Units of measurement == | ||
== Resources == | == Resources == |
Revision as of 19:57, 14 December 2019
Definition
Existence is a fundamental attribute/property of Reality and the Source of the Reality, the fundamental entity. It represents the ontological aspect of Reality. Existence is the product of the sub process of Creation, where the incessant inner interaction between of its two aspects, the Fundamental Force (the Agent) and the Elementary Field (the Acted), produces the Elementary Events, the Elementary Action, the most elementary form of Existence. Existence express itself in the causal, spatial and temporal dimensions, and is strictly related to the basic concepts of emergence and reification (what exists is real and belongs to the Universal Reality, and, symmetrically, what is real exists, both in the physical and cognitive senses).
Common definition
Existence is the ability of an entity to interact with physical or mental reality. In philosophy, it refers to the ontological property of being. The word "existence" comes from the Latin word exsistere meaning "to appear", "to arise", "to become", or "to be", but literally, it means "to stand out" (ex- being the Latin prefix for "out" added to the causative of the verb stare, meaning "to stand"). In a technical sense, this refers to standing out of both being and becoming, thus having the qualities of both. Existence is an ontological argument par excellence and relates to that of being but in the alternative, as its contingent way of manifesting itself and of flowing. It therefore also concerns the dimension of becoming. "Existence" means etymologically to be from, because it derives from the Latin compound ēx + sistentia, which means having the being from another, external to itself. In fact existence does not have its own being, but exists only in so far as it is subordinated to a higher being. This is why the words existence and being have been treated quite differently throughout the history of Western philosophy.(Link to Wikipedia page: Existence).
See also
- Evolutionary Ontology
- Ontology of Physical Reality
- Ontology of Metareality
- Ontology of Meta-metareality
- Entities
- Creation
- TFNR - 2.2 Why there is something rather than nothing
- TFNR - 2.2 What exists?
- TFNR - 2.2 What exists is what happens = What happens is what exists. Entities = Events
- TFNR - 2.2 Existence and Essence
- TFNR - 2.1 Very important hypotheses about Reality
- TFNR - 2.6 Events: Action - Creation/Existence
- TFNR - 2.6 Pressure to existence, resistance to variation: the Physics of Creation
- TFNR - 2.6 Action: the expression of the incessant tension to existence
- TFNR - 2.6 Gradients: the fundaments of existence
- TFNR - 2.6 Generation, propagation and conservation of gradients
Classification
- Topic id: t_existence
- Belongs to the class: Properties
- Has as instances: Physical Existence, Cognitive Existence
- Belongs to the groups:
- Semantic Map: ekm|map=m_ev_knowledge&topic=t_existence
- Semantic Map Test Version: ekmt|map=m_ev_knowledge&topic=t_existence