Difference between revisions of "Edu:Object"

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m (To add space between entries, had to add numbering manually; Changed 'D1' to entry #3 and added BFO label to it.)
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:2. generic term for whatever is the bearer of a proper name, or whatever can be referred to or designated, approximately identical with “thing.” (p.482, 'object', in The Blackwell Dictionary of Western Philosophy 2004)
 
:2. generic term for whatever is the bearer of a proper name, or whatever can be referred to or designated, approximately identical with “thing.” (p.482, 'object', in The Blackwell Dictionary of Western Philosophy 2004)
  
:3. [BFO2.0] A material [[Edu:entity|entity]] that is (1) spatially extended in three dimensions; (2) causally unified; and (3) maximally self-connected. Examples include a single cell, a laptop, an organism, a planet, a spaceship. ([ [[Edu:TermlistReferences#arpetal2015|Arp et al., 2015]] ])
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:3. [BFO2.0] A material [[Edu:entity|entity]] that is (1) spatially extended in three dimensions; (2) causally unified; and (3) maximally self-connected. Examples include a single cell, a laptop, an organism, a planet, a spaceship. ([ [[Edu:TermlistReferences#smithetal2015|Smith et al., 2015]] ])
  
 
[[Category:Term|Term]]
 
[[Category:Term|Term]]

Latest revision as of 22:31, 8 January 2020

Object

1. Literally, what ‘lies before’ something. What is experienced (the object), as opposed to what experiences it (the subject). Anything which has independent existence (qualities, etc., have dependent existence); or, and perhaps more commonly in philosophy, what a change is instigated to produce, or a mental attitude is ‘directed at’ (p.281, 'object', in The Routledge Dictionary of Philosophy, Fourth Edition)
2. generic term for whatever is the bearer of a proper name, or whatever can be referred to or designated, approximately identical with “thing.” (p.482, 'object', in The Blackwell Dictionary of Western Philosophy 2004)
3. [BFO2.0] A material entity that is (1) spatially extended in three dimensions; (2) causally unified; and (3) maximally self-connected. Examples include a single cell, a laptop, an organism, a planet, a spaceship. ([ Smith et al., 2015 ])