Physical Contiguity of ‘The Concept’: The Concept of ‘Physical Contiguity’

6 Pages Posted: 1 Feb 2010

See all articles by Marvin Eli Kirsh

Marvin Eli Kirsh

California State University, Los Angeles

Date Written: January 28, 2010

Abstract

It is an entity of nature, the human conceiver that emerges “the concept”. It might be conjectured that in order for a human conceiver to conceive a concept of “the concept”, as a subset of nature, first he must have a concept of nature with which to commence investigation into the nature of “the concept”. Second, the nature of “the concept” might be expected to be an emergence from the individuals’ concept of nature; in essence to reflect a concept of self that is necessarily evolved from life experience and perception as it is perceived to possess universal facets common both to all human life and experience with external agents; in combination defined as “nature”. The contiguity of identity, of self, of the external, amidst a continual flux, generation and regeneration, renewal of both internal and external physical elements underlines all cognition and consciousness. In this presentation a conceptual integration of the mental processes, in reference to conceptual identity of concepts, the concept and the physical, both the physiological body and the physical external – i.e. mind with matter, matter with mind – entails a physical contiguity, propagation of form by a means of physical proximity of the entity energy/matter as it entails and is entailed to “path”; “path” denotes and is interchangeable with the entity “memory”. A redefined scientific methodology, resembling methodologies related to the elucidations of cultural processes, traits and evolution, is valid only with strict reference in definition and study to relations, interrelations, the witness pair, as strictly relative; (space)/(the empirical volume) as a physically relative entity in which estimated physical totals are made of overlapping or distributed constituents as synergistic products of independently attributed individual physical volumes. Emerged/emerging conceptual structures reflect the emerging physical environment and are necessarily related structurally.

Keywords: the concept, space volume and physical biological evolution, evolution of cognition, proximal inheritance, perceptual and cognitive structuring, physical contiguity, continuity, time

Suggested Citation

Kirsh, Marvin Eli, Physical Contiguity of ‘The Concept’: The Concept of ‘Physical Contiguity’ (January 28, 2010). Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=1544062 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.1544062

Marvin Eli Kirsh (Contact Author)

California State University, Los Angeles ( email )

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Los Angeles, CA 90032
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HOME PAGE: http://www.marvinekirsh.com

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