Principle of Individuation
From Evolutionary Knowledge Base
Contents
Definition
At any level of complexity, at any level of Reality, every object, every product of the Process of Formation of Reality, every Event, Action, Information, Structure of Information, Form, in turn becomes a whole, a unity, a new source of Events, of Action, of Information, and thus a new active subject in the incessant Creation and Evolution of Reality.
The object of an Action become itself in turn a new subject of Action.
Common definition
Links to Wikipedia pages:
See also
- Principles
- Principle of Variation
- Principle of Propagation
- Principle of Conservation
- Other Principles of Evolutionary Dynamics
- Principle of Unity
- Principle of Connection
- Principle of Relation
- Principle of Evolution
- Principle of Equivalence
- Physical Principles
- Fundamental Physical Principles
- Principle of Uncertainty
- Principle of Action and Reaction
- Principle of Least Action
- Principle of Locality
- Principle of Quantization
- Principle of Relation in Physical Reality
- Principle of General Equivalence
- Cognitive Principles
- Metacognitive Principles
- TFNR - The Principle of Reality
- TFNR - The Principles of Reality
- TFNR - The principle of individuation
- TFNR - The fundamental principles of the Elementary Dynamics (Principles of Action)
- TFNR - Recipe for constructing a Reality
- TFNR - From the fundamental principles to the laws of nature
- TFNR - The fundamental principles of the dynamics of the Elementary Field
- TFNR - The principle of Uncertainty
- TFNR - The principle of Action and Reaction)
- TFNR - The principle of Minimum Action
- TFNR - The principle of Relation
- TFNR - The principle of General Equivalence
Classification
- Topic id: t_individuation_principle
- Belongs to the class: Other Principles of Evolutionary Dynamics
- Has as instances: Principle of Quantization
- Belongs to the groups: Principles
- Semantic Map: ekm|map=m_ev_dynamics&topic=t_individuation_principle
- Semantic Map Test Version: ekmt|map=m_ev_dynamics&topic=t_individuation_principle