Composite Concept
(Redirected from Abstract Concept)
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A composite concept is a concept that is a composite entity (based on other concepts).
- AKA: Complex Concept.
- …
- Example(s):
- “life-insurance” ⇒ TypeOf("insurance”, “life”)
- a concept of Free Will.
- a Kantian Category.
- …
- Counter-Example(s):
- See: Composite, Class Concept, Set Concept, High-level Concept, Abstract Concept.
References
2016
- https://www.aclweb.org/portal/content/international-symposium-abstract-concepts
- QUOTE: Supported by an extensive body of empirical research, the embodied account of cognition argues that cognition (and therefore language) is tightly related to perceptual and motoric experience. However, the Achille heel of the embodied account of cognition is precisely the (still debated) nature, structure, processing, and modeling of abstract concepts. In particular: how does perceptual experience affect our understanding and semantic representation of abstract concepts (idea, theory, argument), which by definition lack perceptual referents?