Object
Facts (13)
Sources
Epistemology | Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy iep.utm.edu 3 facts
claimThe argument for the persistence of the external world posits that because two sense-experiences of an object are qualitatively identical, the objects causing them must be numerically identical, implying a single object has persisted.
claimQualitative identity is defined as a state where one object or experience is similar to another in all of its qualities or properties, rather than being one and the same object.
claimNumerical identity is defined as a state where there is one single object responsible for multiple experiences, rather than two distinct objects.
Not Minds, but Signs: Reframing LLMs through Semiotics - arXiv arxiv.org Jul 1, 2025 2 facts
referencePeircean semiotics posits that meaning is not inscribed in a sign itself but unfolds in the relation among the representamen, the object, and the interpretant.
referenceAccording to the semiotic framework established by Charles Sanders Peirce, meaning emerges through a triadic relation among the representamen (the sign), the object (what the sign refers to), and the interpretant (the effect or understanding the sign produces).
The Hard Problem of Consciousness | Springer Nature Link link.springer.com 2 facts
claimCartesian dualism has been identified as the most central problem of modern science and the modern/colonial worldview due to its ontological dualism, which contributes to the 'Great Divide' between mind and body, subject and object, human and non-human, culture and nature, humanities and natural sciences, and Us and Them.
claimThe humanities are trapped by the Cartesian subject, which leads them to repeatedly discover the illusiveness of reality while failing to bridge the gap between subject and object, mind and body, and individual and society.
Patterns in the Transition From Founder-Leadership to Community ... arxiv.org Feb 5, 2026 1 fact
claimIn the Institutional Grammar framework, an 'Object' represents the grammatical object of a rule, which can be another actor or a resource subject to the action enacted by the statement's role.
Epistemology - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy plato.stanford.edu Dec 14, 2005 1 fact
claimCritics of foundationalism argue that introspection is not infallible, citing examples such as the potential to confuse an unpleasant itch for pain or to misidentify the shape of an object.
Panpsychism - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy plato.stanford.edu Jul 18, 2017 1 fact
claimPanpsychists do not necessarily hold that every object has a mind; rather, they argue that the fundamental parts of objects, such as the parts of a rock, possess mental properties.
Knowledge Graphs: Opportunities and Challenges - Springer Nature link.springer.com Apr 3, 2023 1 fact
claimThe predicate constraint-based question-answering system (PCQA) presented in 2019 utilizes knowledge graph predicate constraints—triplets consisting of a subject, predicate, and object—to capture connections between questions and answers, thereby simplifying processing and improving results.
(PDF) Unifying Theories of Consciousness, Attention, and ... academia.edu 1 fact
referenceSiegel, S. (2006) discusses the subject and object in the contents of visual experience in the paper published in the Philosophical Review.
Automating hallucination detection with chain-of-thought reasoning amazon.science 1 fact
claimA claim is defined as the smallest unit of information that can be evaluated against context, typically consisting of a single predicate with a subject and optionally an object.