Form: Definition

  • The function of a headman

    October 11th, 2018 10:49 AM

    [T]he optimum function of a headman from the family, clan, tribe, nation, empire (civilization), is not to lead outside of war – it is to function as a judge of last resort in matters of conflict between those who lead, and to limit those who lead to the people’s interests.

  • The function of a headman

    October 11th, 2018 10:49 AM

    [T]he optimum function of a headman from the family, clan, tribe, nation, empire (civilization), is not to lead outside of war – it is to function as a judge of last resort in matters of conflict between those who lead, and to limit those who lead to the people’s interests.

  • Duty forces us to bear costs

    October 11th, 2018 5:26 PM

    [D]uties are those things we must do even though they force us to bear a cost. Men must complete those duties women cannot and women those that men cannot. Truth(Speech), Duty(action), reciprocity(Cooperation). Men absorb cellular damage. Women produce offspring. Strangely, having children prolongs women’s lives. Physical service shortens men’s lives.

  • Duty forces us to bear costs

    October 11th, 2018 5:26 PM

    [D]uties are those things we must do even though they force us to bear a cost. Men must complete those duties women cannot and women those that men cannot. Truth(Speech), Duty(action), reciprocity(Cooperation). Men absorb cellular damage. Women produce offspring. Strangely, having children prolongs women’s lives. Physical service shortens men’s lives.

  • DEFINITIONS: “INVETERATE” (ABRAHAMIST) in·vet·er·ate [inˈvedərət] ADJECTIVE havi

    DEFINITIONS: “INVETERATE” (ABRAHAMIST)

    in·vet·er·ate

    [inˈvedərət]

    ADJECTIVE

    having a particular habit, activity, or interest that is long-established and unlikely to change.

    –“he was an inveterate abrahamist, practicing pilpul, critique, shaming, rallying gossip and reputation destruction instead of truthful, dutiful, reciprocal, argument.”–


    Source date (UTC): 2018-10-11 06:55:00 UTC

  • Definitions: “inveterate” (abrahamist)

    DEFINITIONS: “INVETERATE” (ABRAHAMIST) in·vet·er·ate ADJECTIVE having a particular habit, activity, or interest that is long-established and unlikely to change.

    –“he was an inveterate abrahamist, practicing pilpul, critique, shaming, rallying gossip and reputation destruction instead of truthful, dutiful, reciprocal, argument.”–

  • Definitions: “inveterate” (abrahamist)

    DEFINITIONS: “INVETERATE” (ABRAHAMIST) in·vet·er·ate ADJECTIVE having a particular habit, activity, or interest that is long-established and unlikely to change.

    –“he was an inveterate abrahamist, practicing pilpul, critique, shaming, rallying gossip and reputation destruction instead of truthful, dutiful, reciprocal, argument.”–

  • THE FINAL WORD ON ONTOLOGY vs PARADIGM AND FRAME. Ontology is used in subjective

    THE FINAL WORD ON ONTOLOGY vs PARADIGM AND FRAME.

    Ontology is used in subjective (experiential) and objective (testimonial) contexts to refer to a hierarchy of categories in a paradigm (network) of constant relations between existence perception cognition speech, and the service of speech in recreating the experience (loaded and inflated) or testimony (unloaded and deflated).

    .

    In the Continental Tradition (Literary, Platonic) sense it can include Experiential Categories (Phenomenalism for example), and in the Anglo Tradition (Science, Accounting, and Law), it cannot include experiential categories (imaginary, ideal, cognitive, emotive, pseudo-physical biases) as a defense against biases and their arbitrariness: inconstant, loaded, framed, fictionalized, idealized, relations between the universe and our descriptions of it.

    Being, and Ontology are currently “archaic”, and we use scientific categories instead: Paradigm. Paradigms are constructed of a network of theories, from terms to narratives; and we acknowledge that Paradigms (search for consistency correspondence possibility and parsimony) and Frames (loading, framing, suggesting, overloading) are both used by us in our speech.

    So we end up with (Ontology(conflationary)) vs ((Paradigm(measurement) and Frame(experience)) (deflationary))

    Note below that “Being” and “Ontology” both describe this spectrum of subjective to objective. So when one uses the term Ontology, one can refer to literary-subjective-loaded-framed-arbitrary, or scientific-objective-deflated-correspondent.

    GRAMMATICAL DEFLATION (ontology of speech)

    SUPERNATURAL: Occult (religion, emotion) > IDEAL: Verbalism (Philosophical Rationalism, imagination) > REAL: Scientific (Testimonial, measurement).

    be·ing [ˈbēiNG] NOUN

    1. existence.

    “the railroad brought many towns into being” · [more]

    synonyms:

    existence · living · life · animation · animateness · aliveness · reality · actuality · essential nature · lifeblood · vital force · entity · esse

    2. the nature or essence of a person.

    “sometimes one aspect of our being has been developed at the expense of the others”

    synonyms:

    soul · spirit · nature · essence · substance · entity · inner being · inner self · psyche · heart · bosom · breast · core · kernel · marrow · quiddity · pneuma

    3. a real or imaginary living creature or entity, especially an intelligent one.

    “alien beings” ·

    synonyms:

    creature · life form · living entity · living thing · living soul · soul · individual · person · personage · human being · human · man · woman · life · existence · earthling

    on·tol·o·gy [änˈtäləjē] NOUN

    1. the branch of metaphysics dealing with the nature of being.

    2. a set of concepts and categories in a subject area or domain that shows their properties and the relations between them.

    “what’s new about our ontology is that it is created automatically from large datasets” · “we’re using ontologies to capture and analyze some of the knowledge in our department”


    Source date (UTC): 2018-10-09 08:11:00 UTC

  • The Final Word on Ontology vs Paradigm and Frame

    October 9th, 2018 8:11 AM THE FINAL WORD ON ONTOLOGY vs PARADIGM AND FRAME. Ontology is used in subjective (experiential) and objective (testimonial) contexts to refer to a hierarchy of categories in a paradigm (network) of constant relations between existence perception cognition speech, and the service of speech in recreating the experience (loaded and inflated) or testimony (unloaded and deflated). . In the Continental Tradition (Literary, Platonic) sense it can include Experiential Categories (Phenomenalism for example), and in the Anglo Tradition (Science, Accounting, and Law), it cannot include experiential categories (imaginary, ideal, cognitive, emotive, pseudo-physical biases) as a defense against biases and their arbitrariness: inconstant, loaded, framed, fictionalized, idealized, relations between the universe and our descriptions of it. Being, and Ontology are currently “archaic”, and we use scientific categories instead: Paradigm. Paradigms are constructed of a network of theories, from terms to narratives; and we acknowledge that Paradigms (search for consistency correspondence possibility and parsimony) and Frames (loading, framing, suggesting, overloading) are both used by us in our speech. So we end up with (Ontology(conflationary)) vs ((Paradigm(measurement) and Frame(experience)) (deflationary)) Note below that “Being” and “Ontology” both describe this spectrum of subjective to objective. So when one uses the term Ontology, one can refer to literary-subjective-loaded-framed-arbitrary, or scientific-objective-deflated-correspondent. GRAMMATICAL DEFLATION (ontology of speech)SUPERNATURAL: Occult (religion, emotion) > IDEAL: Verbalism (Philosophical Rationalism, imagination) > REAL: Scientific (Testimonial, measurement). be·ing [ˈbēiNG] NOUN

    1. existence.

      “the railroad brought many towns into being” · [more]

      synonyms:

      existence · living · life · animation · animateness · aliveness · reality · actuality · essential nature · lifeblood · vital force · entity · esse
    2. the nature or essence of a person.

      “sometimes one aspect of our being has been developed at the expense of the others”

      synonyms:

      soul · spirit · nature · essence · substance · entity · inner being · inner self · psyche · heart · bosom · breast · core · kernel · marrow · quiddity · pneuma
    3. a real or imaginary living creature or entity, especially an intelligent one.

      “alien beings” ·

      synonyms:

      creature · life form · living entity · living thing · living soul · soul · individual · person · personage · human being · human · man · woman · life · existence · earthling

    on·tol·o·gy [änˈtäləjē] NOUN

    1. the branch of metaphysics dealing with the nature of being.
    2. a set of concepts and categories in a subject area or domain that shows their properties and the relations between them.

      “what’s new about our ontology is that it is created automatically from large datasets” · “we’re using ontologies to capture and analyze some of the knowledge in our department”
  • The Final Word on Ontology vs Paradigm and Frame

    October 9th, 2018 8:11 AM THE FINAL WORD ON ONTOLOGY vs PARADIGM AND FRAME. Ontology is used in subjective (experiential) and objective (testimonial) contexts to refer to a hierarchy of categories in a paradigm (network) of constant relations between existence perception cognition speech, and the service of speech in recreating the experience (loaded and inflated) or testimony (unloaded and deflated). . In the Continental Tradition (Literary, Platonic) sense it can include Experiential Categories (Phenomenalism for example), and in the Anglo Tradition (Science, Accounting, and Law), it cannot include experiential categories (imaginary, ideal, cognitive, emotive, pseudo-physical biases) as a defense against biases and their arbitrariness: inconstant, loaded, framed, fictionalized, idealized, relations between the universe and our descriptions of it. Being, and Ontology are currently “archaic”, and we use scientific categories instead: Paradigm. Paradigms are constructed of a network of theories, from terms to narratives; and we acknowledge that Paradigms (search for consistency correspondence possibility and parsimony) and Frames (loading, framing, suggesting, overloading) are both used by us in our speech. So we end up with (Ontology(conflationary)) vs ((Paradigm(measurement) and Frame(experience)) (deflationary)) Note below that “Being” and “Ontology” both describe this spectrum of subjective to objective. So when one uses the term Ontology, one can refer to literary-subjective-loaded-framed-arbitrary, or scientific-objective-deflated-correspondent. GRAMMATICAL DEFLATION (ontology of speech)SUPERNATURAL: Occult (religion, emotion) > IDEAL: Verbalism (Philosophical Rationalism, imagination) > REAL: Scientific (Testimonial, measurement). be·ing [ˈbēiNG] NOUN

    1. existence.

      “the railroad brought many towns into being” · [more]

      synonyms:

      existence · living · life · animation · animateness · aliveness · reality · actuality · essential nature · lifeblood · vital force · entity · esse
    2. the nature or essence of a person.

      “sometimes one aspect of our being has been developed at the expense of the others”

      synonyms:

      soul · spirit · nature · essence · substance · entity · inner being · inner self · psyche · heart · bosom · breast · core · kernel · marrow · quiddity · pneuma
    3. a real or imaginary living creature or entity, especially an intelligent one.

      “alien beings” ·

      synonyms:

      creature · life form · living entity · living thing · living soul · soul · individual · person · personage · human being · human · man · woman · life · existence · earthling

    on·tol·o·gy [änˈtäləjē] NOUN

    1. the branch of metaphysics dealing with the nature of being.
    2. a set of concepts and categories in a subject area or domain that shows their properties and the relations between them.

      “what’s new about our ontology is that it is created automatically from large datasets” · “we’re using ontologies to capture and analyze some of the knowledge in our department”