Difference between revisions of "Hypostatic object"
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| − | A '''hypostatic object''', also known in certain senses as an '''abstract object''' or a '''formal object''', is an object of discussion or thought that results as the normal product of a process of   | + | A '''hypostatic object''', also known in certain senses as an '''abstract object''' or a '''formal object''', is an object of discussion or thought that results as the normal product of a process of ''[[hypostatic abstraction]]''.  | 
==See also==  | ==See also==  | ||
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* [[Hypostatic abstraction]]  | * [[Hypostatic abstraction]]  | ||
* [[Prescisive abstraction]]  | * [[Prescisive abstraction]]  | ||
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| + | [[Category:Charles Sanders Peirce]]  | ||
| + | [[Category:Inquiry]]  | ||
| + | [[Category:Logic]]  | ||
| + | [[Category:Mathematics]]  | ||
| + | [[Category:Ontology]]  | ||
| + | [[Category:Philosophy]]  | ||
| + | [[Category:Pragmatism]]  | ||
| + | [[Category:Semiotics]]  | ||
Latest revision as of 18:44, 10 November 2015
A hypostatic object, also known in certain senses as an abstract object or a formal object, is an object of discussion or thought that results as the normal product of a process of hypostatic abstraction.