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  2. Immediacy (philosophy) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Immediacy_(philosophy)

    Immediacy is a philosophical concept related to time and temporal perspectives, both visual, and cognitive. Considerations of immediacy reflect on how we experience the world and what reality is. It implies a direct experience of an event or object bereft of any intervening medium.

  3. List of cognitive biases - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_cognitive_biases

    That humorous items are more easily remembered than non-humorous ones, which might be explained by the distinctiveness of humor, the increased cognitive processing time to understand the humor, or the emotional arousal caused by the humor. [159] Illusory correlation: Inaccurately seeing a relationship between two events related by coincidence ...

  4. Process and Reality - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Process_and_Reality

    Though not recognised by Aristotle, there is biological evidence, written about by Galen, [8] that the human brain is an essential seat of human experience in the mode of presentational immediacy. We may say that the brain has a material and a mental aspect, all three being abstractions from their indefinitely many constitutive occasions of ...

  5. Immediacy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Immediacy

    Immediacy, a concept in vested interest (communication theory) Immediacy, a condition in the Buddhist Twelve Nidānas; Immediacy (philosophy), a philosophical concept; Immediacy, one of the 10 principles of the Burning Man event; Imperial immediacy, in the Holy Roman Empire, the status of persons not subject to local lords but only to the emperor

  6. Piaget's theory of cognitive development - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Piaget's_theory_of...

    The human consciousness is structured in hierarchical order and organized in "holon" chains or "great chain of being", which are based on the level of spiritual and psychological development. [ 117 ] Oliver Kress published a model that connected Piaget's theory of development and Abraham Maslow 's concept of self-actualization . [ 118 ]

  7. Social presence theory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_presence_theory

    Social presence theory explores how the "sense of being with another" is influenced by digital interfaces in human-computer interactions. [1] Developed from the foundations of interpersonal communication and symbolic interactionism, social presence theory was first formally introduced by John Short, Ederyn Williams, and Bruce Christie in The Social Psychology of Telecommunications. [2]

  8. Human science - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Human_science

    Human science is an objective, informed critique of human existence and how it relates to reality.Underlying human science is the relationship between various humanistic modes of inquiry within fields such as history, sociology, folkloristics, anthropology, and economics and advances in such things as genetics, evolutionary biology, and the ...

  9. Embodied cognition - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Embodied_cognition

    Embodied cognition represents a diverse group of theories which investigate how cognition is shaped by the bodily state and capacities of the organism. These embodied factors include the motor system, the perceptual system, bodily interactions with the environment (situatedness), and the assumptions about the world that shape the functional structure of the brain and body of the organism.