non-numerical
https://gyazo.com/790949bae8daf0c83ae56ece1a3a5237
How many are these? One? Two? Many?
When seen dimly, it appears to be two strokes; at a distance, it appears to be a single doughnut-like shape; when seen clearly, it appears to be a series of strokes.
__BELOW_IS_AI_GENERATED__
non-numerical 2023-10-06 02:35 omni.icon
Digest 1
In Study Session 2 of "Experiential Processes and the Creation of Meaning," I explained "myriad features." Depending on one's perspective, it may appear to be one, two, or many.
Digest 2.
Myriad Features" is explained in detail in Study Group 2 and Study Group 3 of "The Experience Process and the Creation of Meaning. Myriad Characteristics is the concept that experience has no clear boundaries or units, and that there is no fixed point at which a single unit of experience can be separated from the rest. This is also shown in the "Schematic Diagram of Myriad Features" and "Multiplicity(v1)". Also, in "atomic v.s. non-numerical," it is emphasized that experience has no fundamentally clear boundaries.
deep thinking
Experience is myriad, and its characteristics and units vary according to perspective and interpretation. This indicates that experience is not an individual event, but part of a continuous flow. In addition, how one isolates and interprets experience is highly dependent on individual perceptions and understandings.
one-line summary.
Experience is myriad, and its interpretation depends on perspective and perception.
Title.
The myriad nature of experience and the diversity of its interpretations."
extra info
titles: ["Myriad Features"], ""Experience Process and Meaning Making" Study Group 2", ""Experience Process and Meaning Making" Study Group 3", "Schematic Diagram of Myriad Features", "Multiplicity(v1)", "Kozaneba:IOFI", "atomic v.s. non-numerical", " Aspects of Experience", "Isn't there a myriad of them?" , "Second-order derivative of the utility function"]
generated: 2023-10-06 02:35
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