Knowledge: Difference between revisions

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Knowledge, something which accumulates over time, and is rational only if the conclusions contained within support Ayn Rand, may her name be revered!
Knowledge is a product of consciousness: it is the sum of one's identifications retained in some form.  Or, in Ayn Rand's words, knowledge is "a mental grasp of a fact(s) of reality, reached either by perceptual observation or by a process of reason based on perceptual observation" (ITOE 35).
 
 
V0 KNOWLEDGE
              Knowledge is the root of the hierarchy of psycho-epistemological
              differential integration.
             
              Knowledge is what one holds as a mental representation of
              reality. As per AR, "a mental grasp of a fact(s)of reality."
             
              Knowledge may refer to objects or relations that are true or
              false, abstract or concrete.
             
              Derivatively, a portion of knowledge exists as expository
              references retained on media in archives and libraries, etc.
       
              KNOWLEDGE HAS FOUR PRIMARY DIVISIONS
              Within these Four Divisions, all other concepts are subsumed. 
              They are all inclusive, extensive and unlimited.
 
 
      V1 IDEAL  (Reference)
 
 
      V2 REFERENCE 
                Reference is the constituent means of knowing.
               
                Reference substantiates identity by labeling percepts,
                concepts or units with words, audio-visual symbols of meaning.
                Knowledge is Reference; because Reference ...
                provides a perceptual handle by forging word-idea
                associations, which serve as the means to retain and
                recollect the contents of ones mind. 
               
                Subcategories of reference include: definition,
                description, classification, categorization,
                natural and algorithmic languages, etc. 
 
      V3 REASON (Reference)
 
      V4 REAL  (Reference)
 
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Latest revision as of 01:52, 27 August 2010

Knowledge is a product of consciousness: it is the sum of one's identifications retained in some form. Or, in Ayn Rand's words, knowledge is "a mental grasp of a fact(s) of reality, reached either by perceptual observation or by a process of reason based on perceptual observation" (ITOE 35).


V0 KNOWLEDGE

             Knowledge is the root of the hierarchy of psycho-epistemological 
             differential integration.
             
             Knowledge is what one holds as a mental representation of
             reality. As per AR, "a mental grasp of a fact(s)of reality."
             
             Knowledge may refer to objects or relations that are true or
             false, abstract or concrete. 
             
             Derivatively, a portion of knowledge exists as expository
             references retained on media in archives and libraries, etc.
        
             KNOWLEDGE HAS FOUR PRIMARY DIVISIONS
             Within these Four Divisions, all other concepts are subsumed.  
             They are all inclusive, extensive and unlimited. 


     V1 IDEAL  (Reference)
  
  
     V2 REFERENCE  

               Reference is the constituent means of knowing. 
                
                Reference substantiates identity by labeling percepts, 
                concepts or units with words, audio-visual symbols of meaning.

                Knowledge is Reference; because Reference ...
                provides a perceptual handle by forging word-idea 
                associations, which serve as the means to retain and 
                recollect the contents of ones mind.  
                
                Subcategories of reference include: definition,
                description, classification, categorization, 
                natural and algorithmic languages, etc.  
  
     V3 REASON (Reference) 
  
     V4 REAL   (Reference)
Epistemology Topics
Senses | Consciousness | Volition | Concepts: Unit, Concept-Formation
Objectivity | Knowledge: Context, Hierarchy | Reason: Certainty, Truth, the Arbitrary | Emotions