mollystevens · BY-SA · by-sa
Experience refers to conscious events in general, more specifically to perceptions, or to the practical knowledge and familiarity that is produced by these processes. Understood as a conscious event in the widest sense, experience involves a subject to which various items are presented. In this sense, seeing a yellow bird on a branch presents the subject with the objects "bird" and "branch", the relation between them and the property "yellow". Unreal items may be included as well, which happens when experiencing hallucinations or dreams. When understood in a more restricted sense, only sensory
Experience refers to the conscious events and perceptions that happen when you encounter things in the world—like seeing a yellow bird or feeling a sensation—as well as the practical knowledge you build up from these encounters over time. It matters because it's the foundation of how we become aware of and learn about the world around us, though it can include both real perceptions and unreal ones like dreams or hallucinations.
AI-generated from the Wikipedia summary — may contain errors.
経験(けいけん、英: experience、ドイツ語: Erfahrung)とは、 * 実際に見たり、聞いたり、行ったりすること。 * 外的現実や内的現実との直接的な接触。 * 「認識」としてはまだ組織化されていない、事実の直接的な把握。 * 何事かに直接(触れたり)ぶつかることで、何らかの意味でその人の「自己」(人間性)を豊かにすること。 * 何事かに直接触れたりぶつかることで、そこから技能や知識を得ること。 * (哲学用語)感覚や知覚によって直接的に与えられるもの。感覚・知覚から始まって、道徳的行為や知的活動までを含む体験のうち、自覚されたもの。
Abstract from DBpedia / Wikipedia · CC BY-SA
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).
via Wikidata sitelinks · CC0