cognized

cognized
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  • Cognized environment — is a concept first introduced by the late anthropologist, Roy Rappaport (1968), in contrast to what he called the operational environment (see Rappaport 1979:97 144, 1984:337 352). Rappaport was an ecological anthropologist, like Andrew P. Vayda …   Wikipedia

  • cognized — cognize (Amer.) v. be aware of a fact or a specific piece of information (also cognise) …   English contemporary dictionary

  • Syādvāda — Part of a series on Jain philosophy Concepts Anekāntavāda · Syādvāda · Nayavāda · Jain Co …   Wikipedia

  • Biogenetic structuralism — is a body of theory in anthropology. The perspective grounds discussions of learning, culture, personality and social action in neuroscience. The original book of that title (Laughlin and d Aquili 1974) represented an interdisciplinary merger of… …   Wikipedia

  • Critique of Pure Reason — Part of a series on Immanuel …   Wikipedia

  • Matter — • Taking the term in its widest sense, matter signifies that out of which anything is made or composed Catholic Encyclopedia. Kevin Knight. 2006. Matter     Matter      …   Catholic encyclopedia

  • Vladimir Antonov (scientist) — Vladimir Antonov (born 1946) was born in Russia and holds a Ph.D. in biology. He claims to have developed a new branch of modern science called Methodology of Spiritual Development . He founded the Scientific Spiritual Ecological Center, called… …   Wikipedia

  • Skandha — Buddhist term pi= khandha sa= स्कन्ध (skandha) zh=五蘊(T) / 五蕴(S) zh Latn=wǔyùn vi=Ngũ uẩn ja=五蘊 bo=ཕུང་པོ་ལྔ་ bo Latn=phung po lnga en=aggregate, mass, heap my=ခန္ဒာငါးပါး my Latn=IPA|kʰà̃ dà ŋá bá khan da nga: ba:In Buddhist phenomenology and… …   Wikipedia

  • Jewish philosophy — Colette Sirat INTRODUCTION The history of medieval Jewish philosophy can be divided into two consecutive periods. The first, beginning in the ninth century and ending roughly with the death of Maimonides in 1204, occurred in Islamic lands. The… …   History of philosophy

  • Cognize — Cog nize, v. t. [Cf. {Cognizant}, {Recognize}.] To know or perceive; to recognize. [1913 Webster] The reasoning faculty can deal with no facts until they are cognized by it. H. Spencer. [1913 Webster] …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

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