description::
· fctBrainingBio-functing is a-functing of a-brainBio.
"Function of the brain
The intimate relation of the brain to the sense organs points to the brain’s essential role as an information handling device. Meaningful events to which the animal reacts are but rarely signaled by a single sense organ. More commonly it is a combination of information from different sensory modalities that gives away the aggressor, or the prey, or the sexual partner, or the dangerous cliff etc. Thus the brain is there to make concepts out of sensations, at a higher level of abstraction. It is not only the different senses that contribute to the formation of concepts. Equally important, the monitoring of motor behavior, both in its planning and in its execution, provides crucial information necessary for the correct interpretation of any situation signaled by the senses. All of this requires a brain."
[{2023-04-05 retrieved} http://www.scholarpedia.org/article/Brain]
name::
* McsEngl.McsCor000013.last.html//dirCor//dirMcs!⇒fctBrainingBio,
* McsEngl.dirMcs/dirCor/McsCor000013.last.html!⇒fctBrainingBio,
* McsEngl.brainingBio!⇒fctBrainingBio,
* McsEngl.fctBrainingBio,
* McsEngl.functing.fctBrainingBio!⇒fctBrainingBio,
* McsEngl.fctBrainingBio!=McsCor000013,
* McsEngl.fctBrainingBio!=functing.fctBrainingBio,
description::
* brain-entity,
* info,
* archetype,
name::
* McsEngl.fctBrainingBio'01_argument,
* McsEngl.fctBrainingBio'argument,
description::
· brain-entity is an-entity (= organism or machine) with a-brainBio.
name::
* McsEngl.brain-entity,
* McsEngl.fctBrainingBio'02_brain-entity,
* McsEngl.fctBrainingBio'brain-entity,
description::
· mind-infoBio is A-MODEL of the-outside and inside world (= archetype) of the-brain-entity[a], INSIDE its[a] brain.
name::
* McsEngl.fctBrainingBio'03-infoMindBio!⇒infoMindBio,
* McsEngl.fctBrainingBio'infoMindBio!⇒infoMindBio,
* McsEngl.mind-infoBio!⇒infoMindBio,
* McsEngl.idealBio!⇒infoMindBio,
* McsEngl.immaterial-entity!⇒infoMindBio,
* McsEngl.infoBioBrainin.mind!⇒infoMindBio,
* McsEngl.infoMindBio,
====== langoGreek:
* McsElln.πληροφορία-μυαλού-βιοσυστήματος!=infoMindBio,
description::
* brainin-info,
* brain-info,
* info,
* bio-info,
* model,
* entity,
description::
* sensation-infoMindBio,
* preconcept-infoMindBio,
* concept-infoMindBio,
* semo-concept-infoMindBio,
* emotion-infoMindBio,
* want-infoMindBio,
* feeling-infoMindBio,
===
* human-infoMindBio,
* humanNo-infoMindBio,
* real-infoMindBio,
* realNo-infoMindBio,
* true-infoMindBio,
* trueNo-infoMindBio,
description::
* true-infoMindBio,
* true-strong--infoMindBio,
* true-weak--infoMindBio,
* true-false--infoMindBio,
* false-weak--infoMindBio,
* false-strong--infoMindBio,
* false--infoMindBio,
name::
* McsEngl.infoMindBio.specific-division.infoMindBio-archetype-relation,
description::
· true-infoMindBio is real-infoMindBio that is-mapped absolutely correctly with its archetype.
name::
* McsEngl.infoMindBio.true,
* McsEngl.infoMindBioTrue,
* McsEngl.true-infoMindBio,
* McsEngl.truth,
====== langoGreek:
* McsElln.αλήθεια!η!=infoMindBioTrue,
* McsElln.αληθινός!-ός-ή-ό!~adjeElln!=infoMindBioTrue,
* McsElln.πραγματικός!-ός-ή-ό!~adjeElln!=infoMindBioTrue,
* McsElln.πληροφορία-εγκεφάλου.αληθινή!=infoMindBioTrue,
description::
"Truth is the daughter of time." Aulus Gellius.
[{2021-06-23 retrieved} https://www.brainyquote.com/quotes/aulus_gellius_190406]
description::
· true-infoMindBio is real-infoMindBio that is-mapped strongly correctly with its archetype.
name::
* McsEngl.infoMindBio.true-strong,
* McsEngl.strong-true--infoMindBio,
description::
· true-infoMindBio is real-infoMindBio that is-mapped weakly correctly with its archetype.
name::
* McsEngl.infoMindBio.true-weak,
* McsEngl.weak-true-infoMindBio,
description::
· true-false-infoMindBio is real-infoMindBio that is-mapped with its archetype neither correct nor incorrect.
name::
* McsEngl.infoMindBio.true-false,
* McsEngl.false-true-infoMindBio,
description::
· weak-false-infoMindBio is real-infoMindBio that weakly incorrect is-mapped with its archetype.
name::
* McsEngl.infoMindBio.false-weak,
* McsEngl.weak-false-infoMindBio,
description::
· weak-false-infoMindBio is real-infoMindBio that strong incorrect is-mapped with its archetype.
name::
* McsEngl.infoMindBio.false-strong,
* McsEngl.strong-false-infoMindBio,
description::
· false-infoMindBio is real-infoMindBio that absolutely incorrect is-mapped with its archetype.
name::
* McsEngl.infoMindBio.false,
* McsEngl.infoMindBioFalse,
* McsEngl.false-infoMindBio,
* McsEngl.falsehood,
====== langoGreek:
* McsElln.αναληθής!-ής-ής-ές!adjeElln!=infoMindBioFalse,
* McsElln.λάθος!το!=infoMindBioFalse,
* McsElln.λανθασμένος!-ος-η-ο!adjeElln!=infoMindBioFalse,
* McsElln.μη-αληθής!-ής-ής-ές!adjeElln!=infoMindBioFalse,
description::
· deliberately deceptive.
· (n) lie, prevarication (a statement that deviates from or perverts the truth)
[{2023-09-20 retrieved} http://wordnetweb.princeton.edu/perl/webwn?s=lie]
name::
* McsEngl.disinformation!=infoMindBioLie,
* McsEngl.infoMindBio.lie,
* McsEngl.infoMindBioLie,
* McsEngl.lie,
* McsEngl.prevarication,
====== langoGreek:
* McsElln.ψέμα!το!=infoMindBioLie,
* McsElln.ψευδής!-ής-ής-ές!=infoMindBioLie,
* McsElln.ψεύτικος!-ος-η-ο!=infoMindBioLie,
description::
· unit-infoMindBio is infoMindBio NOT divisible in smaller parts.
name::
* McsEngl.brain--info-unit,
* McsEngl.infoMindBio.unit,
* McsEngl.unit-infoMindBio,
description::
· view-infoMindBio is a-system of infoMindBio-units.
name::
* McsEngl.brain-view,
* McsEngl.infoMindBio-view,
* McsEngl.infoMindBio.view,
* McsEngl.viewBrn,
description::
· infoMindBio-worldview is the-outermost system of infoMindBio-units.
name::
* McsEngl.infoMindBio.worldview!⇒worldviewMindBio,
* McsEngl.worldviewMindBio,
* McsEngl.worldview.infoMindBio!⇒worldviewMindBio,
description::
· human-infoMindBio is infoMindBio created by humans.
name::
* McsEngl.human-infoMindBio,
* McsEngl.infoMindBio.human,
====== langoGreek:
* McsElln.πληροφορία-εγκεφάλου.ανθρώπινη!=infoMindBio.human,
description::
· humanNo-infoMindBio is infoMindBio NOT-created by humans.
name::
* McsEngl.humanNo-infoMindBio,
* McsEngl.infoMindBio.humanNo,
====== langoGreek:
* McsElln.πληροφορία-εγκεφάλου.ανθρώπινηΜη!=infoMindBio.humanNo,
description::
· real-infoMindBio is infoMindBio WITH referent.
name::
* McsEngl.infoMindBio.real,
* McsEngl.real-infoMindBio,
====== langoGreek:
* McsElln.πληροφορία-εγκεφάλου.πραγματική!=infoMindBio.real,
description::
· realNo-infoMindBio is infoMindBio WITHOUT archetype.
name::
* McsEngl.imaginary-infoMindBio,
* McsEngl.infoMindBio.realNo,
* McsEngl.realNo-infoMindBio,
* McsEngl.unreal-infoMindBio,
====== langoGreek:
* McsElln.πληροφορία-εγκεφάλου.πραγματικήΜη!=infoMindBio.real,
description::
· archetype-of-infoMindBio is the-outside and inside world[a] of the-brain-entity[a].
· the-brain-entity associates the-archetype with the-infoMindBio.
name::
* McsEngl.archetype-of-braining,
* McsEngl.archetype-of-infoMindBio,
* McsEngl.fctBrainingBio'04_archetype,
* McsEngl.fctBrainingBio'archetype,
* McsEngl.infoMindBio-archetype,
* McsEngl.referent-of-infoMindBio,
generic-tree::
* archetype-of-model,
description::
· the-syntax a-language uses to express this fctBrainingBio.
name::
* McsEngl.fctBrainingBio'05-syntax,
* McsEngl.fctBrainingBio'syntax,
* McsEngl.syntax.braining,
name::
* McsEngl.evoluting-of-fctBrainingBio,
* McsEngl.fctBrainingBio'evoluting,
{2019-11-30}::
=== McsHitp-creation:
· creation of current concept.
name::
* McsEngl.fctBrainingBio'whole-part-tree,
whole-tree-of-::
* brain,
* brain-organism,
* socialitation,
* Sympan,
name::
* McsEngl.fctBrainingBio'generic-specific-tree,
generic-tree-of-fctBrainingBio::
* functing,
* doing,
* doing-or-relation,
* entity,
name::
* McsEngl.fctBrainingBio.specific,
specific::
* mindingBio,
===
* infoMindBio-creating,
* infoMindBio-storing,
* infoMindBio-retrieving,
* infoMindBio-communicating,
===
* preconcepting-outputing,
* concepting-outputing,
===
* sensing-outputing,
* wanting-outputing,
* canning-outputing,
* emoting-outputing,
* feeling-outputing,
===
* human-braining,
* humanNo-braining,
===
* conscious-braining,
* consciousNo-braining,
===
* rational-braining,
* rationalNo-braining,
description::
· infoMindBio-creating is a-braining with output (= infoMindBio).
name::
* McsEngl.fctBrainingBio.creating-infoMindBio,
* McsEngl.fctBrainingBio.infoMindBio-creating,
* McsEngl.fctBrainingBio.outputing,
* McsEngl.infing,
description::
* brain-entity,
* infoMindBio,
* archetype,
description::
* human-infoMindBio-creating,
* fctSensingBio.outputing,
* preconcepting-outputing,
* concepting-outputing,
* wanting-outputing,
* canning-outputing,
* emoting-outputing,
* feeling-outputing,
description::
"(v) memorize, memorise, con, learn (commit to memory; learn by heart) "Have you memorized your lines for the play yet?""
[http://wordnetweb.princeton.edu/perl/webwn?s=memorize]
name::
* McsEngl.fctBrainingBio.infoMindBio-storing,
* McsEngl.fctBrainingBio.storing-infoMindBio,
* McsEngl.infoMindBio-memorizing,
* McsEngl.infoMindBio-storing,
* McsEngl.memorizingBio,
description::
"(v) remember, retrieve, recall, call back, call up, recollect, think (recall knowledge from memory; have a recollection) "I can't remember saying any such thing"; "I can't think what her last name was"; "can you remember her phone number?"; "Do you remember that he once loved you?"; "call up memories"
(v) remember, think of (keep in mind for attention or consideration) "Remember the Alamo"; "Remember to call your mother every day!"; "Think of the starving children in India!"
(v) remember, think back (recapture the past; indulge in memories) "he remembered how he used to pick flowers""
[http://wordnetweb.princeton.edu/perl/webwn?s=remember]
name::
* McsEngl.fctBrainingBio.infoMindBio-retrieving,
* McsEngl.fctBrainingBio.retrieving-infoMindBio,
* McsEngl.infoMindBio-retrieving,
* McsEngl.rememberingBio,
description::
* brain-entity,
* what: infoMindBio-retrieved,
description::
· infoMindBio-communicating is the-transfering of infoMindBio from one brain-entity to another.
name::
* McsEngl.fctBrainingBio.communicating-infoMindBio,
* McsEngl.fctBrainingBio.infoMindBio-communicating,
* McsEngl.communicatingBio,
* McsEngl.infoMindBio-communicating,
description::
* sender brain-entity,
* receiver brain-entity,
* language,
* infoMindBio|subject,
* channel,
description::
· teaching is the-braining of a-brain-entity[a] that[a] communicates infoMindBio of it[a] to another brain-entity[b].
name::
* McsEngl.fctBrainingBio.teaching,
* McsEngl.teaching-fctBrainingBio,
description::
· educating is teaching or learning.
name::
* McsEngl.fctBrainingBio.educating,
* McsEngl.educating-fctBrainingBio,
description::
"Sensation is an animal's, including humans',(possibly AI and Alien) detection of external or internal stimulation (e.g., eyes detecting light waves, ears detecting sound waves). It is different from perception, which is about making sense of, or describing, the stimulation (e.g., seeing a chair, hearing a guitar).
Sensation involves three steps:
- Sensory receptors detect stimuli.
- Sensory stimuli are transduced into electrical impulses (action potentials) to be decoded by the brain.
- Electrical impulses move along neural pathways to specific parts of the brain wherein the impulses are decoded into useful information (perception)."
[{2019-11-29} https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sensation_(psychology)]
* English:
· stxEngl: _stxSbj=brain-entity:[...] _stxVrbActive:(sense) _stxObj=stimulus:[...].
· stxEngl: _stxSbj=stimulus:[...] _stxVrbPassive:(am-sensed) _stxArg:[...].
· stxEngl:_stxSbj=stimulus:[...] _stxVrb:{sense-relation} _stxObj=sensation:[...]
name::
* McsEngl.fctBrainingBio.sensing!⇒fctSensingBio,
* McsEngl.fctSensingBio,
* McsEngl.sensingBio!⇒fctSensingBio,
* McsEngl.dngFctSensingBio,
* McsEngl.to-sense!~verbEnglB1:sens-e-es-ed-ing-ed!=fctSensingBio,
====== langoGreek:
* McsElln.αίσθησης-διαδικασία-βιοσυστήματος!=fctSensingBio,
* McsEngl.verbElln.αισθάνομαι!=fctSensingBio,
* McsElln.αισθάνομαι!~verbElln!=fctSensingBio,
description::
* brain-entity,
* sensation,
* stimulus,
description::
· sensation is the-infoMindBio of fctSensingBio.
===
"sensation, esthesis, aesthesis, sense experience, sense impression, sense datum (an unelaborated elementary awareness of stimulation) "a sensation of touch""
[http://wordnetweb.princeton.edu/perl/webwn?s=sensation]
name::
* McsEngl.sensationBio,
* McsEngl.fctSensingBio'sensation!⇒sensationBio,
====== langoGreek:
* McsElln.αίσθημα!=sensationBio,
description::
· stimulus is the-archetype of sensation.
name::
* McsEngl.fctSensingBio'stimulus,
* McsEngl.stimulus-of-sensing,
description::
· sensing-relation is a-relation among the-arguments of the-sensing-process.
· stxEngl: _stxSbj=brain-entity:[Tony] _stxVrb:{smells} _stxObj=stimulus:[the soup]. [smelling-process]
· stxEngl: _stxSbj=stimulus:[Tony] _stxVrb:{smells} _stxSbjc=sensation:[like the soup]. [smelling-relation]
name::
* McsEngl.relation.fctSensingBio,
* McsEngl.fctSensingBio-relation,
description::
· stxEngl: _stxSbj=brain-entity:[he] _stxVrb:{could hear} _stxObj=stimulus:[the clang of distant bells]. [WordNet 2.0]
· stxEngl: _stxSbj=brain-entity:[Tony] _stxVrb:{smells} _stxObj=stimulus:[the soup].
name::
* McsEngl._syntaxEngl:_stxSbj=brain-entity:[...]_stxVrbActive:(sense)_stxObj=stimulus:[...],
description::
· stxEngl: _stxSbj=stimulus:[a shower of protest] _stxVrb:{was heard} _stxDirection:[(from) the rear of the hall]. [WordNet 2.0]
name::
* McsEngl._syntaxEngl:_stxSbj=stimulus:[]_stxVrbPassive:(am-sensed)_stxArg:[...],
description::
· stxEngl: _stxSbj=stimulus:[Tony] _stxVrb:{smells} _stxSbjc=sensation:[like the soup].
name::
* McsEngl._syntaxEngl:_stxSbj=stimulus:[...]_stxVrb:{sense-relation}_stxObj=sensation:[...],
description::
* human-sensing,
===
* creating-sensing,
* storing-sensing,
* recalling-sensing,
* communicating-sensing,
===
* hearing-sensing,
* seeing-sensing,
* smelling-sensing,
* tasting-sensing,
* touching-sensing,
===
* hungring-sensing,
* itching-sensing,
* paining-sensing,
* temperaturing-sensing,
* thirsting-sensing,
* tickling-sensing,
===
"The human brain is provided with information about light, sound, the chemical composition of the atmosphere, temperature, the position of the body in space (proprioception), the chemical composition of the bloodstream, and more. In other animals additional senses are present, such as the infrared heat-sense of snakes, the magnetic field sense of some birds, or the electric field sense mainly seen in aquatic animals.
Each sensory system begins with specialized receptor cells,[8] such as photoreceptor cells in the retina of the eye, or vibration-sensitive hair cells in the cochlea of the ear. The axons of sensory receptor cells travel into the spinal cord or brain, where they transmit their signals to a first-order sensory nucleus dedicated to one specific sensory modality. This primary sensory nucleus sends information to higher-order sensory areas that are dedicated to the same modality. Eventually, via a way-station in the thalamus, the signals are sent to the cerebral cortex, where they are processed to extract the relevant features, and integrated with signals coming from other sensory systems.[8]"
[{2020-08-22} https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brain#Perception]
description::
"(v) hear (perceive (sound) via the auditory sense)
(v) listen, hear, take heed (listen and pay attention) "Listen to your father"; "We must hear the expert before we make a decision""
[http://wordnetweb.princeton.edu/perl/webwn?s=hearing]
* English:
· stxEngl: _stxSbj=brain-entity:[he] _stxVrb:{could hear} _stxObj=stimulus:[the clang of distant bells]. [WordNet 2.0]
· stxEngl: _stxSbj=stimulus:[a shower of protest] _stxVrb:{was heard} _stxDirection:[(from) the rear of the hall]. [WordNet 2.0]
* Greek:
_txtEll: _stxVrb:{ακούστηκε} _stxSbj=stimulus:[πως σκοτώθηκαν πολλοί].
name::
* McsEngl.fctHearingBio,
* McsEngl.fctSensingBio.hearing!⇒fctHearingBio,
* McsEngl.hearing-fctHearingBio,
* McsEngl.dngFctHearingBio,
* McsEngl.to-hear!~verbEnglC:hear-hears-heard-hearing-heard!=fctHearingBio,
====== langoGreek:
* McsElln.αίσθηση.ήχου!=fctHearingBio,
* McsElln.ακουή!η!=fctHearingBio,
* McsEngl.verbElln.ακούω:hear,
* McsElln.ακούω!~verbElln:hear,
description::
* brain-entity,
* sound-stimulus,
* sound-sensation,
* ear: the-organ of fctHearingBio,
name::
* McsEngl.sound-sensation,
* McsEngl.sensation.fctHearingBio,
* McsEngl.sensation.sound,
====== langoGreek:
* McsElln.αίσθημα.ήχου!=sensation.sound,
description::
"(v) see (perceive by sight or have the power to perceive by sight) "You have to be a good observer to see all the details"; "Can you see the bird in that tree?"; "He is blind--he cannot see""
[http://wordnetweb.princeton.edu/perl/webwn?s=see]
"(v) look (perceive with attention; direct one's gaze towards) "She looked over the expanse of land"; "Look at your child!"; "Look--a deer in the backyard!""
[http://wordnetweb.princeton.edu/perl/webwn?s=look]
name::
* McsEngl.being-seen-fctSeeingBio,
* McsEngl.fctSeeingBio,
* McsEngl.fctSensingBio.seeing!⇒fctSeeingBio,
* McsEngl.looking-fctSeeingBio,
* McsEngl.seeing-fctSeeingBio,
* McsEngl.dngFctSeeingBio,
* McsEngl.to-see!~verbEnglC:see-sees-saw-seeing-seen!=fctSeeingBio,
* McsEngl.to-be-seen!~verbEngl!=fctSeeingBio,
* McsEngl.to-look!~verbEnglC!=fctSeeingBio,
* McsEngl.vision!⇒fctSeeingBio,
====== langoGreek:
* McsElln.όραση!=fctSeeingBio,
* McsEngl.verbElln.βλέπω:see,
* McsElln.βλέπω!~verbElln:see,
* McsEngl.verbElln.βλέπομαι:am-seen,
* McsElln.βλέπομαι!~verbElln:am-seen,
* McsEngl.verbElln.κοιτάζω:see,
* McsElln.κοιτάζω!~verbElln:see,
description::
* brain-entity,
* stimulus,
* image-sensation,
* eye: the-organ of fctSeeingBio,
description::
· image is the-sensation of fctSeeingBio.
name::
* McsEngl.imageBio,
* McsEngl.fctSeeingBio'image!⇒imageBio,
* McsEngl.sensation-of-fctSeeingBio!⇒imageBio,
====== langoGreek:
* McsElln.εικόνα!=imageBio,
description::
"(v) smell (inhale the odor of; perceive by the olfactory sense)
(v) smell (emit an odor) "The soup smells good""
[http://wordnetweb.princeton.edu/perl/webwn?s=smell]
* English:
· stxEngl: _stxSbj=brain-entity:[Tony] _stxVrb:{smells} _stxObj=stimulus:[the soup].
· stxEngl: _stxSbj=stimulus:[Tony] _stxVrb:{smells} _stxSbjc=sensation:[like the soup].
[https://www.grammar-monster.com/glossary/linking_verbs.htm]
name::
* McsEngl.fctSensingBio.smelling!⇒fctSmellingBio,
* McsEngl.fctSmellingBio,
* McsEngl.smellingBio-functing,
* McsEngl.dngFctSmellingBio,
* McsEngl.to-smell!~verbEnglC:smell-smells-smelled|smelt-smelling-smelled|smelt!=fctSmellingBio,
====== langoGreek:
* McsElln.μύρισμα!το!=fctSmellingBio,
* McsEngl.verbElln.μυρίζω!=fctSmellingBio,
* McsElln.μυρίζω!~verbElln!=fctSmellingBio,
description::
* brain-entity,
* semll-stimulus,
* smell-sensation,
* noze: the-organ of smellingBio,
description::
"(v) taste (perceive by the sense of taste) "Can you taste the garlic?""
[http://wordnetweb.princeton.edu/perl/webwn?s=taste]
name::
* McsEngl.fctSensingBio.tasting!⇒tastingBio,
* McsEngl.tastingBio,
* McsEngl.taste!~verbEnglB1:tast-e-es-ed-ing-ed!=tastingBio,
====== langoGreek:
* McsElln.γεύσης-αίσθηση!=tastingBio,
* McsEngl.verbElln.γεύομαι:taste,
* McsElln.γεύομαι!~verbElln:taste,
description::
"(v) touch (perceive via the tactile sense) "Helen Keller felt the physical world by touching people and objects around her""
[http://wordnetweb.princeton.edu/perl/webwn?s=touch]
name::
* McsEngl.fctSensingBio.touching!⇒touchingBio,
* McsEngl.touchingBio,
* McsEngl.to-touch!~verbEnglA4!=touchingBio,
====== langoGreek:
* McsElln.αφής-αίσθηση!=touchingBio,
* McsEngl.verbElln.αγγίζω!=touchingBio,
* McsElln.αγγίζω!~verbElln!=touchingBio,
description::
· emoting is braining which "signifies a reaction involving certain physiological changes, such as an accelerated or retarded pulse rate, the diminished or increased activities of certain glands, or a change in body temperature, which stimulate the individual, or some component part of the individual's body, to further activity. The three primary reactions of this type are anger, love, and fear, which occur either
- as an immediate response to external stimuli or
- are the result of an indirect subjective process, such as memory, association, or introspection.
["Emotion," Microsoft(R) Encarta(R) 97 Encyclopedia. (c) 1993-1996 Microsoft Corporation]"
* verb:
· stxEngl: _stxSbj=brain-entity:[...] _stxVrbActive:{...} _stxObj=stimulus:[...].
· stxEngl: _stxSbj=brain-entity:[he] _stxVrb:{loves} _stxObj=stimulus:[her].
· stxEngl: _stxSbj=stimulus:[] _stxVrbPassive:{...} _stxArg:[...].
name::
* McsEngl.fctBrainingBio.emoting!⇒fctEmotingBio,
* McsEngl.emoting.bio!⇒fctEmotingBio,
* McsEngl.emotingBio!⇒fctEmotingBio,
* McsEngl.fctEmotingBio,
====== langoGreek:
* McsElln.συναισθήματος-λειτουργία!=fctEmotingBio,
* McsElln.συναίσθηση!=fctEmotingBio,
description::
* brain-entity,
* emotion,
* stimulus,
name::
* McsEngl.argEmotingBio,
* McsEngl.fctEmotingBio'01_argument!⇒argEmotingBio,
* McsEngl.fctEmotingBio'argument!⇒argEmotingBio,
description::
· the-brain-entity that experiences this fctEmotingBio.
name::
* McsEngl.argEmotingBio.brain-entity,
* McsEngl.fctEmotingBio'02_brain-entity,
* McsEngl.fctEmotingBio'brain-entity,
description::
· emotion is the-infoMindBio-(a-brainIn-model) of emoting-(braining with physiological reactions).
===
"(n) emotion (any strong feeling)"
[http://wordnetweb.princeton.edu/perl/webwn?s=emotion]
"(n) feeling (the experiencing of affective and emotional states) "she had a feeling of euphoria"; "he had terrible feelings of guilt"; "I disliked him and the feeling was mutual""
[http://wordnetweb.princeton.edu/perl/webwn?s=feeling]
name::
* McsEngl.argEmotingBio.emotion!⇒emotionBio,
* McsEngl.fctEmotingBio'03_emotion!⇒emotionBio,
* McsEngl.fctEmotingBio'emotion!⇒emotionBio,
* McsEngl.emotion.bio!⇒emotionBio,
* McsEngl.emotionBio,
====== langoGreek:
* McsElln.συναίσθημα!=emotionBio,
description::
· stimulus-of-emoting is its archetype (= the-outside and inside world[a] of a-brain-entity which[a] the-brain-entity maps with an-infoMindBio).
· the-archetype of fctEmotingBio.
name::
* McsEngl.argEmotingBio.stimulus,
* McsEngl.fctEmotingBio'04_stimulus,
* McsEngl.fctEmotingBio'stimulus,
* McsEngl.stimulus-of-emoting,
description::
· after an-emotion is-created, there exists a-relation among the-emotion, the-brain-entity, and the-stimulus and this relation is-expressed with a-language.
name::
* McsEngl.fctEmotingBio'relation!⇒rlnEmotingBio,
* McsEngl.relation.emoting!⇒rlnEmotingBio,
* McsEngl.rlnEmotingBio,
description::
* https://www.weforum.org/agenda/2021/04/what-is-the-best-way-to-visualise-human-emotion,
* {2016-04-08} Anne-Trafton, https://www.weforum.org/agenda/2016/04/how-the-brain-processes-emotions/,
description::
"ΕΡ: Είναι ξεπερασμένο αυτό που πιστεύει ο μέσος άνθρωπος, ο οποίος τοποθετεί τα συναισθήματα στην καρδιά του; Είναι πια ξεκάθαρο για τους επιστήμονες ότι όλα τα συναισθήματα, από τα πιο αρνητικά (μίσος) έως τα πιο θετικά (αγάπη-έρωτας), εδράζονται στον εγκέφαλο-νου και δεν έχουν καμιά σχέση με την καρδιά;
ΑΠ: Οι καρδιοχειρουργοί έδειξαν ότι αν ένας άνδρας κάνει μεταμόσχευση καρδιάς, μετά δεν αγαπά τη γυναίκα του πεθαμένου. Βέβαια, ο εγκέφαλος δεν κάνει ταχυπαλμία, όταν η αγαπημένη μας μάς φιλά, ενώ η καρδιά κάνει ταχυπαλμία. Όμως η καρδιά μας είναι ο σκλάβος του εγκεφάλου, ο οποίος την κατευθύνει."
[http://www.nooz.gr/science/den-uparxei-psuxi-ola-pigazoun-apo-ton-egkefalo]
description::
EMOTION is information created|remembered|communicated which involves "certain physiological changes, such as an accelerated or retarded pulse rate, the diminished or increased activities of certain glands, or a change in body temperature, which stimulate the individual, or some component part of the individual's body, to further activity. The three primary reactions of this type are anger, love, and fear".
[hmnSngo.2015-07-12]
There is no entity like emotion, only emoting.
[hmnSngo.2008-01-19]
EMOTION is the product of EMOTING.
[hmnSngo.2004-01-11]
Emotions are REACTIONS of 'leaving organisms' to 'stimuli'.
[hmnSngo.1995-04]
name::
* McsEngl.evoluting-of-emotionBio,
* McsEngl.emotionBio'evoluting,
description::
* creating-fctEmotingBio,
* storing-fctEmotingBio,
* recalling-fctEmotingBio,
* communicating-fctEmotingBio,
===
* pleasing-fctEmotingBio,
* pleasingNo-fctEmotingBio,
* strong-fctEmotingBio,
* strongNo-fctEmotingBio,
* basic-fctEmotingBio,
* basicNo-fctEmotingBio,
===
* aggression-fctEmotingBio,
* anger-fctEmotingBio,
* anticipation-fctEmotingBio,
* anxiety-fctEmotingBio,
* apathy-fctEmotingBio,
* disgust-fctEmotingBio,
* fear-fctEmotingBio,
* happiness-fctEmotingBio,
* hesitation-fctEmotingBio,
* loving-fctEmotingBio,
* inequality-fctEmotingBio,
* insecurity-fctEmotingBio,
* missing-fctEmotingBio,
* proudness-fctEmotingBio,
* sadness-fctEmotingBio,
* surprise-fctEmotingBio,
description::
"(n) pleasure, pleasance (a fundamental feeling that is hard to define but that people desire to experience) "he was tingling with pleasure"
(n) joy, delight, pleasure (something or someone that provides a source of happiness) "a joy to behold"; "the pleasure of his company"; "the new car is a delight""
[http://wordnetweb.princeton.edu/perl/webwn?s=pleasure]
* English:
· stxEngl: _stxSbj:[She] _stxVrb:{found pleasure} _stxObj=stimulus:[in sitting beneath the trees]. [HarperCollins]
name::
* McsEngl.fctEmotingBio.pleasing!⇒fctPleasingBio,
* McsEngl.fctPleasingBio,
* McsEngl.finding-pleasure--functing,
* McsEngl.to-find-pleasure!~verbEnglCM!=fctPleasingBio,
* McsEngl.pleasingBio!⇒fctPleasingBio,
* McsEngl.dngFctPleasingBio,
====== langoGreek:
* McsEngl.verbElln.ευχαριστιέμαι!=fctPleasingBio,
* McsElln.ευχαριστιέμαι!~verbElln!=fctPleasingBio,
description::
· pleasure is the-emotion of pleasing.
name::
* McsEngl.fctPleasingBio'pleasure,
* McsEngl.pleasure,
====== langoGreek:
* McsElln.ευχαρίστηση!η!=pleasure,
description::
"(n) displeasure (the feeling of being displeased or annoyed or dissatisfied with someone or something)"
[http://wordnetweb.princeton.edu/perl/webwn?s=displeasure]
name::
* McsEngl.fctEmotingBio.pleasingNo,
* McsEngl.fctPleasingNo,
* McsEngl.pleasingNo!⇒fctPleasingNo,
name::
* McsEngl.displeasure,
* McsEngl.fctPleasingNo'displeasure,
====== langoGreek:
* McsElln.δυσαρέσκεια!=displeasure,
description::
* anger,
* anxiety,
* disliking,
* fearing,
* unhappiness,
* inequality,
* insecurity,
* missing,
* sadness,
description::
"(n) liking (a feeling of pleasure and enjoyment) "I've always had a liking for reading"; "she developed a liking for gin""
[http://wordnetweb.princeton.edu/perl/webwn?s=liking]
· stxEngl: _stxSbj:[Children] _stxVrb:{like} _stxObj:[to wear new clothes]. Children like to wear new clothes.
· stxZhon: 孩子喜欢穿新衣。 Háizi {xǐhuān} chuān xīnyī. != Children like to wear new clothes.
name::
* McsEngl.fctEmotingBio.fctLikingBio,
* McsEngl.fctLikingBio-emoting,
* McsEngl.likingBio-functing,
* McsEngl.to-like!~verbEngl!=fctLikingBio,
* McsEngl.verbEngl.like!=fctLikingBio,
====== langoChinese:
* McsZhon.xǐhuān-喜欢!=fctLikingBio,
* McsZhon.喜欢-xǐhuān!=fctLikingBio,
====== langoGreek:
* McsEngl.verbElln.αρέσει!=fctLikingBio,
* McsElln.αρέσει!~verbElln!=fctLikingBio,
description::
"(n) love (a strong positive emotion of regard and affection) "his love for his work"; "children need a lot of love"
(n) love, passion (any object of warm affection or devotion) "the theater was her first love"; "he has a passion for cock fighting"
(n) beloved, dear, dearest, honey, love (a beloved person; used as terms of endearment)"
[http://wordnetweb.princeton.edu/perl/webwn?s=love]
* English:
· stxEngl: _stxSbj=brain-entity:[I] _stxVrb:{love} _stxObj=stimulus:[her].
· stxEngl: _stxSbj=brain-entity:[I] _stxVrb:{love} _stxObj=stimulus:[French food].
· stxEngl: _stxSbj=brain-entity:[I] _stxVrb:{love} _stxObj=stimulus:[cooking].
· stxEngl: _stxSbj=brain-entity:[I] _stxVrb:{love} _stxObj=stimulus:[to cook].
· stxEngl: _stxSbj=stimulus:[I] _stxVrb:{am loved} _stxDoer:[by her].
* Greek:
· stxEngl: _stxSbj=brain-entity:[Εγώ] _stxVrb:{αγαπώ} _stxObj=stimulus:[αυτήν].
· stxEngl: _stxSbj=stimulus:[Εγώ] _stxVrb:{αρέσω} _stxArg:[σ' αυτήν].
* Chinese:
· stxZhon: _stxSbj=brain-entity:[我] _stxVrb:{爱} _stxObj=stimulus:[{吃}烤鸭]。 != [I] [love] [to eat roast duck].
· stxZhon: _stxSbj:[我] _stxVrb:{爱} _stxObj:[我[妈妈]]。Wǒ ài wǒ māma. != [I] {love} [my mom].
name::
* McsEngl.fctEmotingBio.fctLovingBio,
* McsEngl.fctLovingBio,
* McsEngl.loving-emoting-functing,
* McsEngl.love!~verbEnglB1:lov-e-es-ed-ing-ed,
* McsEngl.dngFctLovingBio,
====== langoChinese:
* McsZhon.ài-爱!=fctLovingBio,
* McsZhon.爱-ài!=fctLovingBio,
====== langoGreek:
* McsEngl.verbElln.αγαπώ!=fctLovingBio,
* McsElln.αγαπώ!~verbElln!=fctLovingBio,
* McsElln.αγάπης-λειτουργία!=fctLovingBio,
description::
* brain-entity,
* love-emotion,
* love-stimulus,
description::
· love is the-emotion of fctLovingBio.
name::
* McsEngl.fctLovingBio'love,
* McsEngl.love,
====== langoGreek:
* McsElln.αγάπη!η!=love,
description::
· love relation is the-relation among a-brain-entity, a-love-emotion, and its love-stimulus.
name::
* McsEngl.disliking-emoting,
* McsEngl.fctEmotingBio.likingNo,
* McsEngl.fctLikingNo,
* McsEngl.likingNo-emoting,
description::
"(n) disgust (strong feelings of dislike)"
[http://wordnetweb.princeton.edu/perl/webwn?s=disgust]
name::
* McsEngl.fctEmotingBio.disgust,
* McsEngl.fctDisgustingBio,
* McsEngl.disgusting-emoting,
* McsEngl.disgusting!⇒fctDisgustingBio,
====== langoGreek:
* McsElln.αποστροφής-λειτουργία!=fctDisgustingBio,
descriptionLong::
"Disgust (Middle French: desgouster, from Latin gustus, "taste") is an emotional response of rejection or revulsion to something potentially contagious[1] or something considered offensive, distasteful, or unpleasant. In The Expression of the Emotions in Man and Animals, Charles Darwin wrote that disgust is a sensation that refers to something revolting. Disgust is experienced primarily in relation to the sense of taste (either perceived or imagined), and secondarily to anything which causes a similar feeling by sense of smell, touch, or vision. Musically sensitive people may even be disgusted by the cacophony of inharmonious sounds. Research continually has proven a relationship between disgust and anxiety disorders such as arachnophobia, blood-injection-injury type phobias, and contamination fear related obsessive–compulsive disorder (also known as OCD).[2]
Disgust is one of the basic emotions of Robert Plutchik's theory of emotions and has been studied extensively by Paul Rozin. It invokes a characteristic facial expression, one of Paul Ekman's six universal facial expressions of emotion. Unlike the emotions of fear, anger, and sadness, disgust is associated with a decrease in heart rate.[3]"
[{2021-08-11 retrieved} https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Disgust]
description::
"For more than 40 years, Paul Ekman has supported the view that emotions are discrete, measurable, and physiologically distinct. Ekman's most famous work revolved around the finding that certain emotions appeared to be universally recognized, even in cultures that were preliterate and could not have learned associations for facial expressions through media. Another infamous study found that when participants contorted their facial muscles into distinct facial expressions (e.g. disgust), they reported subjective and physiological experiences that matched the distinct facial expressions.
His research findings led him to classify six emotions as basic:
* anger,
* disgust,
* fear,
* happiness,
* sadness and
* surprise.[6]
Robert Plutchik agreed with Ekman's biologically driven but developed the "wheel of emotions", suggesting eight primary emotions grouped on a positive or negative basis:
* joy versus sadness;
* anger versus fear;
* trust versus distrust; and
* surprise versus anticipation.[6]
Some basic emotions can be modified to form complex emotions. The complex emotions could arise from cultural conditioning or association combined with the basic emotions. Alternatively, similar to the way primary colors combine, primary emotions could blend to form the full spectrum of human emotional experience. For example interpersonal anger and disgust could blend to form contempt. Relationships exist between basic emotions, resulting in positive or negative influences.[7]"
[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emotion]
description::
"(n) aggression, aggressiveness (a feeling of hostility that arouses thoughts of attack)"
[http://wordnetweb.princeton.edu/perl/webwn?s=aggression]
"(adj) aggressive, belligerent (characteristic of an enemy or one eager to fight) "aggressive acts against another country"; "a belligerent tone""
[http://wordnetweb.princeton.edu/perl/webwn?s=aggressive]
name::
* McsEngl.aggression-fctEmotingBio!⇒fctAggressioningBio,
* McsEngl.aggressioningBio!⇒fctAggressioningBio,
* McsEngl.fctAggressioningBio,
* McsEngl.fctEmotingBio.aggression!⇒fctAggressioningBio,
====== langoGreek:
* McsElln.επιθετικότητας-λειτουργία!=fctAggressioningBio,
descriptionLong::
"Aggression is overt or covert, often harmful, social interaction with the intention of inflicting damage or other harm upon another individual. It may occur either reactively or without provocation. In humans, aggression can be caused by various triggers, from frustration due to blocked goals to feeling disrespected.[1] Human aggression can be classified into direct and indirect aggression; whilst the former is characterized by physical or verbal behavior intended to cause harm to someone, the latter is characterized by behavior intended to harm the social relations of an individual or group.[2][3]
In definitions commonly used in the social sciences and behavioral sciences, aggression is an action or response by an individual that delivers something unpleasant to another person.[4] Some definitions include that the individual must intend to harm another person.[5]
In an interdisciplinary perspective, aggression is regarded as “an ensemble of mechanism formed during the course of evolution in order to assert oneself, relatives or friends against others, to gain or to defend resources (ultimate causes) by harmful damaging means [...] These mechanisms are often motivated by emotions like fear, frustration, anger, feelings of stress, dominance or pleasure (proximate causes) [...] Sometimes aggressive behavior serves as a stress relief or a subjective feeling of power."[6][7] Predatory or defensive behavior between members of different species may not be considered aggression in the same sense.
Aggression can take a variety of forms, which may be expressed physically, or communicated verbally or non-verbally: including anti-predator aggression, defensive aggression (fear-induced), predatory aggression, dominance aggression, inter-male aggression, resident-intruder aggression, maternal aggression, species-specific aggression, sex-related aggression, territorial aggression, isolation-induced aggression, irritable aggression, and brain-stimulation-induced aggression (hypothalamus). There are two subtypes of human aggression: (1) controlled-instrumental subtype (purposeful or goal-oriented); and (2) reactive-impulsive subtype (often elicits uncontrollable actions that are inappropriate or undesirable). Aggression differs from what is commonly called assertiveness, although the terms are often used interchangeably among laypeople (as in phrases such as "an aggressive salesperson").[8]"
[{2021-08-11 retrieved} https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aggression]
description::
"(n) anger, choler, ire (a strong emotion; a feeling that is oriented toward some real or supposed grievance)
(n) anger, angriness (the state of being angry)
(n) wrath, anger, ire, ira (belligerence aroused by a real or supposed wrong (personified as one of the deadly sins))
(v) anger (make angry) "The news angered him"
(v) anger, see red (become angry) "He angers easily""
[http://wordnetweb.princeton.edu/perl/webwn?s=anger]
name::
* McsEngl.anger-emoting!⇒fctAngeringBio,
* McsEngl.angeringBio!⇒fctAngeringBio,
* McsEngl.fctAngeringBio,
* McsEngl.fctEmotingBio.anger!⇒fctAngeringBio,
====== langoGreek:
* McsElln.θύμωμα!το!=fctAngeringBio,
description::
"(n) anxiety, anxiousness ((psychiatry) a relatively permanent state of worry and nervousness occurring in a variety of mental disorders, usually accompanied by compulsive behavior or attacks of panic)
(n) anxiety (a vague unpleasant emotion that is experienced in anticipation of some (usually ill-defined) misfortune)"
[http://wordnetweb.princeton.edu/perl/webwn?s=anxiety]
"(n) jitteriness, jumpiness, nervousness, restiveness (the anxious feeling you have when you have the jitters)"
[http://wordnetweb.princeton.edu/perl/webwn?s=nervousness]
name::
* McsEngl.anxietingBio!⇒fctAnxietingBio,
* McsEngl.fctAnxietingBio,
* McsEngl.anxiety-emoting!⇒fctAnxietingBio,
* McsEngl.fctEmotingBio.anxiety!⇒fctAnxietingBio,
description::
"n) fear, fearfulness, fright (an emotion experienced in anticipation of some specific pain or danger (usually accompanied by a desire to flee or fight))
(n) concern, care, fear (an anxious feeling) "care had aged him"; "they hushed it up out of fear of public reaction""
[http://wordnetweb.princeton.edu/perl/webwn?s=fear]
name::
* McsEngl.fctEmotingBio.fear,
* McsEngl.fear-emoting,
* McsEngl.fearingBio!⇒fctFearingBio,
* McsEngl.fctFearingBio,
====== langoGreek:
* McsElln.φόβισμα!το!=fctFearingBio,
descriptionLong::
"Fear is an emotion induced by the perception or recognition of phenomena which can pose a danger or threat. Fear causes physiological changes and therefore may produce behavioral changes, such as mounting an aggressive response or fleeing the threat. Fear in human beings may occur in response to a certain stimulus occurring in the present, or in anticipation or expectation of a future threat perceived as a risk to oneself. The fear response arises from the perception of danger leading to confrontation with or escape from/avoiding the threat (also known as the fight-or-flight response), which in extreme cases of fear (horror and terror) can be a freeze response or paralysis.
In humans and other animals, fear is modulated by the process of cognition and learning. Thus, fear is judged as rational or appropriate and irrational or inappropriate. An irrational fear is called a phobia.
Fear is closely related to the emotion anxiety, which occurs as the result of threats that are perceived to be uncontrollable or unavoidable.[1] The fear response serves survival by engendering appropriate behavioral responses, so it has been preserved throughout evolution.[2] Sociological and organizational research also suggests that individuals' fears are not solely dependent on their nature but are also shaped by their social relations and culture, which guide their understanding of when and how much fear to feel.[3][page needed]
Fear is sometimes imagined as the opposite of courage; however, this is incorrect. Because courage is a willingness to face adversity, fear is an example of a condition that makes the exercise of courage possible."
[{2021-08-11 retrieved} https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fear]
description::
"(n) fearlessness, bravery (feeling no fear)"
[http://wordnetweb.princeton.edu/perl/webwn?s=fearlessness]
name::
* McsEngl.fctEmotingBio.fearlessness,
* McsEngl.fearlessness-emoting,
* McsEngl.fearingBio!⇒fearingNoBio,
description::
"(n) happiness, felicity (state of well-being characterized by emotions ranging from contentment to intense joy)
(n) happiness (emotions experienced when in a state of well-being)"
[http://wordnetweb.princeton.edu/perl/webwn?s=happiness]
name::
* McsEngl.fctEmotingBio.happiness,
* McsEngl.happiness-fctEmotingBio,
* McsEngl.fctHappinessBio,
* McsEngl.happinessBio!⇒fctHappinessBio,
====== langoGreek:
* McsElln.ευτυχίας-λειτουργία!=happinessBio,
descriptionLong::
"The term happiness is used in the context of mental or emotional states, including positive or pleasant emotions ranging from contentment to intense joy.[1] It is also used in the context of life satisfaction, subjective well-being, eudaimonia, flourishing and well-being.[2][3]
Since the 1960s, happiness research has been conducted in a wide variety of scientific disciplines, including gerontology, social psychology and positive psychology, clinical and medical research and happiness economics."
[{2021-08-11 retrieved} https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Happiness]
description::
"(n) sadness, unhappiness (emotions experienced when not in a state of well-being)"
[http://wordnetweb.princeton.edu/perl/webwn?s=sadness]
name::
* McsEngl.fctEmotingBio.unhappiness,
* McsEngl.happinessNoBio!⇒fctHappinessNoBio,
* McsEngl.unhappiness-emoting,
====== langoGreek:
* McsElln.δυστυχίας-λειτουργία!=fctHappinessNoBio,
description::
· uncertain, embarrassed, or worried to act.
name::
* McsEngl.fctEmotingBio.hesitation,
* McsEngl.fctHesitatingBio,
* McsEngl.hesitatingBio-emoting-functing,
* McsEngl.hesitation-emoting,
* McsEngl.to-hesitate!~verbEnglB1:hesitat-e-es-ed-ing-ed!=fctHesitatingBio,
====== langoGreek:
* McsElln.δισταγμού-λειτουργία!=fctHesitatingBio,
* McsEngl.verbElln.διστάζω!=fctHesitatingBio,
* McsElln.διστάζω!~verbElln!=fctHesitatingBio,
description::
· the-feeling of lack of equality.
name::
* McsEngl.fctEmotingBio.inequality,
* McsEngl.fctInequalityBio,
* McsEngl.inequality-emoting,
description::
"(n) insecurity (the anxiety you experience when you feel vulnerable and insecure)
(n) insecurity (the state of being subject to danger or injury)"
[http://wordnetweb.princeton.edu/perl/webwn?s=insecurity]
name::
* McsEngl.fctEmotingBio.insecurity,
* McsEngl.fctInsecurityBio,
* McsEngl.insecurity-emoting,
====== langoGreek:
* McsElln.ανασφάλειας-λειτουργία!=insecurity-emoting,
description::
"(v) miss (feel or suffer from the lack of) "He misses his mother""
[http://wordnetweb.princeton.edu/perl/webwn?s=missing]
name::
* McsEngl.fctEmotingBio.missing,
* McsEngl.fctMissingBio,
* McsEngl.missing-fctEmotingBio,
* McsEngl.missingBio!⇒fctMissingBio,
description::
"(adj) proud (feeling self-respect or pleasure in something by which you measure your self-worth; or being a reason for pride) "proud parents"; "a proud moment"; "proud to serve his country"; "a proud name"; "proud princes""
[http://wordnetweb.princeton.edu/perl/webwn?s=proud]
name::
* McsEngl.fctEmotingBio.proudness,
* McsEngl.fctProudingBio,
* McsEngl.proudingBio,
* McsEngl.proudness-fctEmotingBio,
description::
"Sadness is an emotional pain associated with, or characterized by, feelings of disadvantage, loss, despair, grief, helplessness, disappointment and sorrow. An individual experiencing sadness may become quiet or lethargic, and withdraw themselves from others. An example of severe sadness is depression, a mood which can be brought on by major depressive disorder or persistent depressive disorder. Crying can be an indication of sadness.[1]
Sadness is one of the "six basic emotions" described by Paul Ekman, along with happiness, anger, surprise, fear, and disgust.[2]:271–4"
[{2021-08-11 retrieved} https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sadness]
name::
* McsEngl.fctEmotingBio.sadness,
* McsEngl.fctSadingBio,
* McsEngl.sadingBio,
* McsEngl.sadness-fctEmotingBio,
description::
"(n) surprise (the astonishment you feel when something totally unexpected happens to you)"
[http://wordnetweb.princeton.edu/perl/webwn?s=surprise]
name::
* McsEngl.fctEmotingBio.surprise!⇒fctSurprisingBio,
* McsEngl.fctSurprisingBio,
* McsEngl.surprise-emoting!⇒fctSurprisingBio,
* McsEngl.surprisingBio!⇒fctSurprisingBio,
====== langoGreek:
* McsElln.έκπληξης-λειτουργία!=fctSurprisingBio,
descriptionLong::
"Surprise (About this soundpronunciation (help·info)) is a brief mental and physiological state, a startle response experienced by animals and humans as the result of an unexpected event. Surprise can have any valence; that is, it can be neutral/moderate, pleasant, unpleasant, positive, or negative. Surprise can occur in varying levels of intensity ranging from very-surprised, which may induce the fight-or-flight response, or little-surprise that elicits a less intense response to the stimuli."
[{2021-08-11 retrieved} https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Surprise_(emotion)]
description::
· wanting is emoting with an-emotion that must-be-satisfied|fulfilled by a-stimulus|satisfier.
name::
* McsEngl.fctBrainingBio.fctWantingBio!⇒fctWantingBio,
* McsEngl.fctEmotingBio.fctWantingBio!⇒fctWantingBio,
* McsEngl.fctWantingBio,
* McsEngl.to-want!~verbEnglA1!=fctWantingBio,
* McsEngl.wantingBio-emoting-functing,
====== langoGreek:
* McsElln.θέλησης-λειτουργία!=fctWantingBio,
* McsEngl.verbElln.θέλω:want,
* McsElln.θέλω!~verbElln:want,
description::
* brain-entity,
* want: the-emotion of wanting that must-be-satisfied,
* satisfier: the-archetype that will satisfy the-want,
name::
* McsEngl.argWantingBio,
* McsEngl.fctWantingBio'argument!⇒argWantingBio,
description::
· a-fctWantingBio is a-braining of a-brain-entity.
name::
* McsEngl.argWantingBio.brain-entity,
* McsEngl.fctWantingBio'brain-entity,
description::
· wantBio is the-emotion-(the-brainIn model) of wanting-(emoting-to-be-satisfied).
name::
* McsEngl.argWantingBio.wantBio!⇒wantBio,
* McsEngl.preferenceBio!⇒wantBio,
* McsEngl.use-valueBio!⇒wantBio,
* McsEngl.utilityBio!⇒wantBio,
* McsEngl.wantBio,
* McsEngl.fctWantingBio'want!⇒wantBio,
description::
· satisfierBio is the-entity that fulfills the-wantBio.
name::
* McsEngl.argWantingBio.satisfier!⇒satisfierBio,
* McsEngl.satisfierBio,
* McsEngl.fctWantingBio'satisfier!⇒satisfierBio,
specific-tree-of-satisfierBio::
* human-satisfier,
description::
· needingBio is useful-(undefined) fctWantingBio.
name::
* McsEngl.needingBio,
* McsEngl.fctWantingBio.001-needing!⇒needingBio,
* McsEngl.fctWantingBio.needing!⇒needingBio,
* McsEngl.fctWantingBio.useful!⇒needingBio,
description::
· needBio is the-wantBio-(brainIn model) of needingBio.
name::
* McsEngl.needBio,
* McsEngl.needingBio'need!⇒needBio,
description::
* mind-needBio,
* body-needBio,
===
* human-need,
===
* air-needBio,
* food-needBio,
* security-needBio,
* shelter-needBio,
* sleep-needBio,
* survival-needBio,
* water-needBio,
description::
· needingNoBio is useless-(undefined) fctWantingBio.
name::
* McsEngl.needingNoBio,
* McsEngl.fctWantingBio.001-needingNo!⇒needingNoBio,
* McsEngl.fctWantingBio.needingNo!⇒needingNoBio,
* McsEngl.fctWantingBio.useless!⇒needingNoBio,
description::
· feeling is the-braining of fctSensingBio or fctEmotingBio.
name::
* McsEngl.fctBrainingBio.fctFeelingBio!⇒fctFeelingBio,
* McsEngl.feeling.bio!⇒fctFeelingBio,
* McsEngl.feelingBio!⇒fctFeelingBio,
* McsEngl.fctFeelingBio,
description::
* creating-fellingBio,
* storing-fellingBio,
* retrieving-fellingBio,
* communicating-fellingBio,
===
* human-fellingBio,
* humanNo-fellingBio,
===
description::
· fctThinkingBio is non fctFeelingBio fctBrainingBio.
name::
* McsEngl.fctBrainingBio.thinking!⇒fctThinkingBio,
* McsEngl.cognizingBio!⇒fctThinkingBio,
* McsEngl.fctThinkingBio,
* McsEngl.thinkingBio!⇒fctThinkingBio,
description::
* creating-fctThinkingBio,
* storing-fctThinkingBio,
* retrieving-fctThinkingBio,
* communicating-fctThinkingBio,
===
* human-fctThinkingBio,
* humanNo-fctThinkingBio,
===
* rational-fctThinkingBio,
* rationalNo-fctThinkingBio,
===
* inferencingBio-(no new input),
* learningBio-(new input),
===
* connotingBio,
* decidingBio,
* evaluatingBio,
* forcastingBio,
description::
· preconcepting is the-braining with preconcepts.
name::
* McsEngl.fctBrainingBio.preconceptingBio,
* McsEngl.preconceptingBio,
description::
· preconceptMind is a-system of sensations.
name::
* McsEngl.preconceptMind,
* McsEngl.preconceptingBio'preconceptMind,
description::
· conceptingBio is the-fctBrainingBio with bio-mind-concepts.
name::
* McsEngl.fctBrainingBio.conceptingBio,
* McsEngl.conceptingBio,
description::
· conceptMindBio is a-preconceptMind associated with a-brain-name (= a-name stored in a-brain).
· animals employ brain-names too.
name::
* McsEngl.bio-conceptBrain!⇒cptMindBio,
* McsEngl.brainBio-concept!⇒cptMindBio,
* McsEngl.conceptBrainHmn!⇒cptMindBio,
* McsEngl.conceptBrain.human!⇒cptMindBio,
* McsEngl.conceptMindBio!⇒cptMindBio,
* McsEngl.conceptingBio'conceptBrain!⇒cptMindBio,
* McsEngl.cptBrnBio!⇒cptMindBio,
* McsEngl.cptMindBio,
====== langoSinago:
* McsSngo.enioBrainoBio!=cptMindBio,
====== langoGreek:
* McsElln.έννοια-εγκεφάλου-βιοσυστήματος!=cptMindBio,
specific-tree-of-conceptMindBio::
* human-mind-concept,
description::
· learning is the-braining of a-brain-entity[a] by acquiring new infoMindBio for it[a].
· the-(new)-infoMindBio is-created or is-communicated by it[a].
name::
* McsEngl.fctBrainingBio.infoMindBio-learning!⇒learningBio,
* McsEngl.fctBrainingBio.learning-infoMindBio!⇒learningBio,
* McsEngl.learningBio,
* McsEngl.fctThinkingBio.learningBio,
specific::
* by-creation,
* by-communication,
* reading-info,
* listening-info,
description::
· inferencingBio is infoMindBio-creating without new input.
name::
* McsEngl.inferencingBio,
* McsEngl.fctThinkingBio.inferencing!⇒inferencingBio,
description::
The verb decide has 4 senses (first 3 from tagged texts)
1. (125) decide, make up one's mind, determine -- (reach, make, or come to a decision about something; "We finally decided after lengthy deliberations")
2. (6) decide, settle, resolve, adjudicate -- (bring to an end; settle conclusively; "The case was decided"; "The judge decided the case in favor of the plaintiff"; "The father adjudicated when the sons were quarreling over their inheritance")
3. (4) decide -- (cause to decide; "This new development finally decided me!")
4. decide -- (influence or determine; "The vote in New Hampshire often decides the outcome of the Presidential election")
[WordNet 2.0]
name::
* McsEngl.decidingBio,
* McsEngl.fctThinkingBio.deciding!⇒decidingBio,
description::
· EVALUATION OF AN ENTITY is HUMAN-INFERENCE with which we create a RESULT about the entity and another entity, the unit, by comparison.
[hmnSngo.{2002-09-04}]
name::
* McsEngl.evaluatingBio,
* McsEngl.fctThinkingBio.evaluating!⇒evaluatingBio,
specific-tree-of-evaluatingBio::
* evaluating,
this webpage was-visited times since {2019-11-30}
page-wholepath: synagonism.net / worldviewSngo / dirCor / braining
SEARCH::
· this page uses 'locator-names', names that when you find them, you find the-LOCATION of the-concept they denote.
⊛ GLOBAL-SEARCH:
· clicking on the-green-BAR of a-page you have access to the-global--locator-names of my-site.
· use the-prefix 'fctBrainingBio./span>' for sensorial-concepts related to current concept 'functing.braining'.
⊛ LOCAL-SEARCH:
· TYPE CTRL+F "McsLag4.words-of-concept's-name", to go to the-LOCATION of the-concept.
· a-preview of the-description of a-global-name makes reading fast.
webpage-versions::
• version.last.dynamic: McsCor000013.last.html,
• version.1-0-0.2021-04-07: (0-34) ../../dirMiwMcs/dirCor/filMcsDngBrngBio.1-0-0.2021-04-07.html,
• version.0-1-0.2019-11-30 draft creation,