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Cognitive polyphasia describes the condition in which different systems of knowledge or belief, possessing different rationalities, are held by an individual
Cognitive_polyphasia
Topics referred to by the same term
Polyphasia may refer to: Cognitive polyphasia Polyphasia, a taxonomic synonym for the moth genus Dysstroma Polyphase (disambiguation) This disambiguation
Polyphasia
System of ideas establishing social order
NY: Palgrave Macmillan. Journal: Papers on Social Representations Cognitive polyphasia Social construction of reality Crowd psychology Societal psychology
Social_representation
Brazilian social psychologist
(with P.A. Guareschi) (2002) Re-thinking the Diversity of Knowledge: Cognitive polyphasia, belief and representation. Psychologie & Société 5: 121–138. (2000)
Sandra_Jovchelovitch
COGNITIVE POLYPHASIA
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Girl/Female
Hindu, Indian, Marathi, Sanskrit
The Name of a Goddess
Girl/Female
Muslim
Gazelle. White antelope.
Girl/Female
Hindu
Driving, Falcon, Long-legged, Spider
Girl/Female
Arabic, Muslim, Sindhi
Brownish
Surname or Lastname
English (Northumberland)
English (Northumberland) : habitational name from places called Bolam in Northumberland and County Durham. These place names could derive from the dative plural (bolum) of either of two unattested Old English words, bola ‘tree trunk’ (compare Old Norse bolr) or bol ‘rounded hill’ (compare Middle Low German bolle ‘round object’).
Female
English
Variant spelling of English Rebecca, REBECCAH means "ensnarer."
Girl/Female
Australian, Japanese
Child of Sho
Boy/Male
Finnish, German, Greek
Form of Timothy; One who Honours God
Male
Finnish
Finnish form of Hebrew Noach, NOOA means "rest."
Female
Hawaiian
Hawaiian name KAMEA means "the one and only."
COGNITIVE POLYPHASIA
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v. t.
To form or image again in consciousness, as an object of cognition or apprehension (something which was originally apprehended by direct presentation). See Presentative, 3.
v. t.
To take up into or under, as individual under species, species under genus, or particular under universal; to place (any one cognition) under another as belonging to it; to include under something else.
n.
One who believes that it is possible to realize a cognition or concept of the absolute.
n.
As opposed to idealism, the doctrine that in sense perception there is an immediate cognition of the external object, and our knowledge of it is not mediate and representative.
n.
The faculty or capacity of the human mind by which it is distinguished from the intelligence of the inferior animals; the higher as distinguished from the lower cognitive faculties, sense, imagination, and memory, and in contrast to the feelings and desires. Reason comprises conception, judgment, reasoning, and the intuitional faculty. Specifically, it is the intuitional faculty, or the faculty of first truths, as distinguished from the understanding, which is called the discursive or ratiocinative faculty.
a.
Of or pertaining to conation.
n.
A view of the inside or interior; a looking inward; specifically, the act or process of self-examination, or inspection of one's own thoughts and feelings; the cognition which the mind has of its own acts and states; self-consciousness; reflection.
v. i.
That which is or may be known; the object of an act of knowing; a cognition; -- chiefly used in the plural.
n.
Direct apprehension or cognition; immediate knowledge, as in perception or consciousness; -- distinguished from "mediate" knowledge, as in reasoning; as, the mind knows by intuition that black is not white, that a circle is not a square, that three are more than two, etc.; quick or ready insight or apprehension.
n.
The individual as the object of his own reflective consciousness; the man viewed by his own cognition as the subject of all his mental phenomena, the agent in his own activities, the subject of his own feelings, and the possessor of capacities and character; a person as a distinct individual; a being regarded as having personality.
v. i.
The act or state of knowing; clear perception of fact, truth, or duty; certain apprehension; familiar cognizance; cognition.
a.
Conveying admonition; admonitory.
n.
Previous cognition.
n.
The act of perceiving; cognizance by the senses or intellect; apperhension by the bodily organs, or by the mind, of what is presented to them; discernment; apperhension; cognition.
n.
Any object or truth discerned by direct cognition; especially, a first or primary truth.
v. t.
The act of knowing; knowledge; perception.
a.
Knowing, or apprehending by the understanding; as, cognitive power.
v. t.
That which is known.