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353:. In general two objects with identical properties, other than position at an instance in time, may be distinguished as two objects and may not occupy the same space at the same time (excluding component objects). An object's identity may be tracked using the continuity of the change in its boundary over time. The identity of objects allows objects to be arranged in
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by a description based on the properties of the material. An imaginary sphere of granite within a larger block of granite would not be considered an identifiable object, in common usage. A fossilized skull encased in a rock may be considered an object because it is possible to determine the extent of the skull based on the properties of the material.
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The material in an object may change over time. For example, a rock may wear away or have pieces broken off it. The object will be regarded as the same object after the addition or removal of material, if the system may be more simply described with the continued existence of the object, than in any
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The identity of an object may not split. If an object is broken into two pieces at most one of the pieces has the same identity. An object's identity may also be destroyed if the simplest description of the system at a point in time changes from identifying the object to not identifying it. Also an
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In common usage an object is the material inside the boundary of an object, in three-dimensional space. The boundary of an object is a contiguous surface which may be used to determine what is inside, and what is outside an object. An object is a single piece of material, whose extent is determined
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Each object has a unique identity, independent of any other properties. Two objects may be identical, in all properties except position, but still remain distinguishable. In most cases the boundaries of two objects may not overlap at any point in time. The property of identity allows objects to be
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of the object. The matter in the object is constrained (to a greater or lesser degree) to move as one object. The boundary may move in space relative to other objects that it is not attached to (through translation and rotation). An object's boundary may also deform and change over time in other
184:. Atoms or parts of an object may change over time. An object is usually meant to be defined by the simplest representation of the boundary consistent with the observations. However the laws of physics only apply directly to objects that consist of the same collection of matter.
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other way. The addition or removal of material may discontinuously change the boundary of the object. The continuation of the object's identity is then based on the description of the system by continued identity being simpler than without continued identity.
312:. The properties of an object are inferred by learning and reasoning based on the information perceived. Abstractly, an object is a construction of our mind consistent with the information provided by our senses, using
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382:. Inanimate objects generally lack the capacity or desire to undertake actions, although humans in some cultures may tend to attribute such characteristics to non-living things.
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an object may be described as a collection of sub objects, down to an infinitesimal division, which interact with each other by forces that may be described internally by
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an object is a particle or collection of particles. Until measured, a particle does not have a physical position. A particle is defined by a
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objects of study. While in the modern day behavioral psychotherapy it is still only the means for goal oriented behavior modifications, in
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object's identity is created at the first point in time that the simplest model of the system consistent with perception identifies it.
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These ideas vary from the common usage understanding of what an object is.
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A physical body is an enduring object that exists throughout a particular
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Concluding
Unscientific Postscript to Philosophical Fragments
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of finding the particle at a particular position. There is a
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456:. A particle or collection of particles is described by a
261:: roughly speaking, it means that for a given moment of
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A Treatise
Concerning the Principles of Human Knowledge
273:). A physical body as a whole is assumed to have such
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of physical bodies include, but are not limited to a
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which do not exist at any particular time or place.
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164:within a defined contiguous boundary in
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551:are studied in order to understand the
475:, there is a debate as to whether some
342:the boundary may also be continuously
1642:Prolegomena to Any Future Metaphysics
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1742:Interpretations of quantum mechanics
1662:The World as Will and Representation
656:"3". In some philosophies, like the
58:adding citations to reliable sources
547:, physical bodies as they occur in
410:. The matter exists in a volume of
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1592:Meditations on First Philosophy
737:Hornborg, Alf (July 23, 2021).
652:", a feeling of hatred, or the
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1652:The Phenomenology of Spirit
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640:. Other examples that are
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450:probability distribution
1909:Concepts in metaphysics
1632:Critique of Pure Reason
744:American Anthropologist
601:). This contrasts with
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1223:Type–token distinction
1051:Hypostatic abstraction
833:Abstract object theory
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1812:Philosophy portal
1692:Being and Nothingness
1108:Mental representation
632:, which exist in the
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160:) is a collection of
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1737:Feminist metaphysics
784:at Wikimedia Commons
644:physical bodies are
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545:cognitive psychology
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477:elementary particles
414:. This space is its
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1914:Concepts in physics
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1582:Daneshnameh-ye Alai
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938:Scientific realism
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47:verification
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1562:Metaphysics
1546:(c. 200 BC)
1536:(c. 350 BC)
1526:(c. 350 BC)
1413:Collingwood
1318:Malebranche
1066:Information
994:Anima mundi
973:Type theory
928:Physicalism
893:Materialism
848:Determinism
819:Metaphysics
573:Metaphysics
533:behaviorism
332:translation
228:particulate
224:interacting
201:translation
110:August 2023
1903:Categories
1622:Monadology
1556:(c. 80 BC)
1263:Parmenides
1148:Perception
1046:Experience
933:Relativism
908:Naturalism
858:Enactivism
724:References
712:Rigid body
697:Human body
618:human body
579:trajectory
537:meaningful
513:psychology
329:continuous
325:rigid body
222:, several
80:newspapers
1919:Mechanics
1782:Teleology
1747:Mereology
1727:Cosmology
1586:(c. 1000)
1483:Plantinga
1473:Armstrong
1423:Heidegger
1398:Whitehead
1383:Nietzsche
1303:Descartes
1273:Aristotle
1228:Universal
1158:Principle
1128:Necessity
1088:Intention
1041:Existence
1004:Causality
943:Solipsism
873:Free will
692:Free body
493:spacetime
485:extension
416:extension
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255:cosmology
239:extension
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1924:Ontology
1870:Molecule
1800:Category
1722:Axiology
1576:(c. 270)
1504:more ...
1458:Anscombe
1453:Strawson
1448:Davidson
1343:Berkeley
1283:Plotinus
1244:more ...
1183:Relation
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569:Ontology
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430:pressure
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400:velocity
351:identity
344:deformed
338:. For a
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289:, other
283:momentum
247:theories
220:particle
170:material
1572:Enneads
1566:(c. 50)
1532:Timaeus
1522:Sophist
1468:Dummett
1463:Deleuze
1403:Russell
1393:Bergson
1388:Meinong
1368:Bolzano
1328:Leibniz
1308:Spinoza
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853:Dualism
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1706:(1981)
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1488:Kripke
1478:Putnam
1438:Sartre
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