The Whole Part

The Whole Part describes a basic model of cognition that uses parts, wholes, and references to analyze both our material and mental experience.

The framework of continuous epistemological space, rather than discrete symbolic logic, is used to provide a formal foundation for thinking about reality. Mereological analysis of that space examines things in terms of their whole/part relationships, and referential analysis of that space examines things in terms of their reference/referent relationships. These analyses are used to illustrate the structure of our minds. Since our mental structures determine how reality is sensed and conceptualized, understanding these structures clarifies which aspects of our experience are due to the world, and which are due to various facets of our cognition.

You will particularly enjoy this book if you are interested in how our minds work, since it explores the structure and operation of our cognition in great detail. To do so, a basic model is constructed that provides an understanding of the relationship of wholes to parts, references to referents, and how those relationships influence and are influenced by cognition. This model is simple enough to be independent of various complexities in neuroscience and physics, although it is both motivated by these sciences and entirely compatible with them.

Finally, although all readers experience sensation and conceptualization, few can experientially discriminate between them. This ability is fairly critical; to love the idea of something in place of the thing itself is a recipe for trouble. Therefore, may the model developed in this book serve as a tool to better understand and positively transform our lives.

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The Whole Part

The Whole Part describes a basic model of cognition that uses parts, wholes, and references to analyze both our material and mental experience.

The framework of continuous epistemological space, rather than discrete symbolic logic, is used to provide a formal foundation for thinking about reality. Mereological analysis of that space examines things in terms of their whole/part relationships, and referential analysis of that space examines things in terms of their reference/referent relationships. These analyses are used to illustrate the structure of our minds. Since our mental structures determine how reality is sensed and conceptualized, understanding these structures clarifies which aspects of our experience are due to the world, and which are due to various facets of our cognition.

You will particularly enjoy this book if you are interested in how our minds work, since it explores the structure and operation of our cognition in great detail. To do so, a basic model is constructed that provides an understanding of the relationship of wholes to parts, references to referents, and how those relationships influence and are influenced by cognition. This model is simple enough to be independent of various complexities in neuroscience and physics, although it is both motivated by these sciences and entirely compatible with them.

Finally, although all readers experience sensation and conceptualization, few can experientially discriminate between them. This ability is fairly critical; to love the idea of something in place of the thing itself is a recipe for trouble. Therefore, may the model developed in this book serve as a tool to better understand and positively transform our lives.

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The Whole Part

The Whole Part

by Alec M Rogers
The Whole Part

The Whole Part

by Alec M Rogers

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Overview

The Whole Part describes a basic model of cognition that uses parts, wholes, and references to analyze both our material and mental experience.

The framework of continuous epistemological space, rather than discrete symbolic logic, is used to provide a formal foundation for thinking about reality. Mereological analysis of that space examines things in terms of their whole/part relationships, and referential analysis of that space examines things in terms of their reference/referent relationships. These analyses are used to illustrate the structure of our minds. Since our mental structures determine how reality is sensed and conceptualized, understanding these structures clarifies which aspects of our experience are due to the world, and which are due to various facets of our cognition.

You will particularly enjoy this book if you are interested in how our minds work, since it explores the structure and operation of our cognition in great detail. To do so, a basic model is constructed that provides an understanding of the relationship of wholes to parts, references to referents, and how those relationships influence and are influenced by cognition. This model is simple enough to be independent of various complexities in neuroscience and physics, although it is both motivated by these sciences and entirely compatible with them.

Finally, although all readers experience sensation and conceptualization, few can experientially discriminate between them. This ability is fairly critical; to love the idea of something in place of the thing itself is a recipe for trouble. Therefore, may the model developed in this book serve as a tool to better understand and positively transform our lives.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780983037637
Publisher: ArborRhythms
Publication date: 04/24/2020
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 252
File size: 9 MB

About the Author

Alec Rogers is a signal processing engineer and author who has studied the mind from numerous perspectives for over 30 years. He has degrees in Electrical Engineering, Computer Science, and Psychology, and has studied at Cornell University, Boston University, Maitripa College, Rangjung Yeshe Institute, Portland State University, and Reed College. Prior to becoming an author, he worked as a software and signal processing engineer in Natick, Massachusetts for many years. He is deeply inspired by the natural world, and feels most at home under pine trees near a river... with his laptop and a cup of Indonesian coffee, of course. For more details on his current projects, check out http://arborrhythms.com He currently lives in Eugene, Oregon.

Table of Contents

Dedication
Preface
Background
Introduction
History
Theory of Mereology and Reference
Theory of Mereology and Reference
Mereological Space
Referential Space
Combining Spaces
The Basic Model
The Basic Model
Epistemic Universes
The Physical Universe
The Subjective Universe
The Conceptual Universe
Epistemic Relations
Recursion
Symbolic Space
Higher‑Order Concepts
Language
Practical Implications
Concrete and Abstract
Identity
Absolute and Relative
Negation
Intuition
Animal Cognition
Bottom-Up and Top-Down
Attention
Emotions
Beauty
Kindness
Overlap
Self and Other
Stratified Self
Conclusion
Acknowledgments
Formal Summary
Related Topics
Related Topics
Mereotopology
Logic
Reference Material
Symbolic Conventions
Typographical Conventions
Ideographic Conventions
Glossary
Bibliography

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