Home Section 1

Now Visiting

We have 3 guests online
The Law, by Bastiat
Member Price: USD $1.89
Marxism: A system of economic, social, and political thought devised in the latter half of the 19th century by German authors Karl Marx and Frederich Engles, theorizing that mankind is divided into identifiable and static classes, and that class struggle is the primary dynamic driving society.  Marx and Engels theorized that just as capitalism had replaced fuedalism, capitalism itself was an outmoded and oppressive social and economic concept, and advocated replacing it through violent revolution of the proletariat working class, establishing in its place a socialist social order.  Marx theorized that socialism itself would be but a temporary transitional condition, and would be quickly and inevitably replaced by a "classless" society that would rule itself without a governing class or structure."


Lesson 3 - Beyond Real: Exploring the Abstract Print E-mail
.
.

The term "weather" is also a semi-abstraction. There is no such single identifiable material thing as "weather", which makes it largely an abstract concept.

"Weather" is a general term that we use to indicate a variable combination of physical phenomena such as temperature, wind velocity, humidity, precipitation (or lack thereof), air pressure, wind direction, and so on.

To the degree that these phenomena can be seen, felt, or heard, they relate to non-abstract physical phenomena. However, since the term "weather" can include any or all of these things, and has no precise meaning (although we know in general what is meant when the term is used) it is a semi-abstraction.

The term "hot", on the other hand, is totally abstract. There is no such thing as a "hot". Yet the term is often used to describe the condition of a physical object.

But exactly what do we mean when we say "hot" ? The term itself has no precise, objective meaning or measure. It is an intellectual, or abstract, concept.

 

Go to next lesson ... >>

 

 



 
 

Fundamentals of Liberty