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Ontology:Q73: Difference between revisions

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copy or update fake Item from Q22,28
 
Usage notes
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<dl class="wikitable hue">
<dl class="wikitable hue">
{{HueClaim |P=item type| {{Template:S1}} }}
{{HueClaim |P=item type| {{Template:S1}} }}
{{HueRoster|EP=PPPA/L|lang=en| {{E:Q73|C=Q}} }}
{{HueRoster|EP=PPPA/L|lang=en| {{E:Q73|C=Q}} [[Category:Existentialist-Structuralist tradition ontology]] }}
{{HueRoster|EP=PPPA|lang=en| Existentialism (abbreviation) | blue anarchisms | academic anarchisms | anarchist social sciences embedded in Liberal capitalism }}
{{HueRoster|EP=PPPA|lang=en| Existentialism (abbreviation) | blue anarchisms | academic anarchisms | anarchist social sciences embedded in Liberal capitalism }}
{{HueRoster|EP=P42| -- }}
{{HueRoster|EP=P42| -- }}
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== Background ==
== Background ==
The Existentialist-Structuralist tradition is a purported group of philosophical frameworks claimed to exist within [[E:Q92|meta-Marxism]]. These philosophies all appear to be connected to each other by a particular set of shared themes, which is much more narrow than might otherwise be expected if they were in fact not related.


== Usage notes ==
== Usage notes ==
Because "the Existentialist-Structuralist tradition" is not attested in any formal publications or publications reviewed by experts who would be appropriate to judge the history of philosophical fields, it is currently a [[:Category:S1 Signifier Items|motif Item]] (S1). To be classified as Z1, Items require some amount of verification as unique objects or material real-world phenomena; references are usually a sufficient proxy for this, or in some cases such as claims about physics, checking against verified Z2 propositions. The criteria for S1 Items are looser. Any concept imaginable which can be sufficiently defined to the point anyone could understand what it is is acceptable as long as it has enough relevance to other things within the Ontology project which {{em|are}} attested in existing sources. An S1 Item can be defined through examples in existing sources, through prose, or through Wavebuilder combinations (if something is truly so self-explanatory that a [[E:title comp]] would almost entirely describe it). Said another way, original research is partly allowed within S1 and S2 Items only if it is comprehensible in relation to existing sources, and does not overstate the confidence level or importance of its current findings. However, it's important to remember that even a lot of "original research" motifs can and will have sources, such as a YouTube video that displayed a phrase or pattern described in the motif Item.


== [[User:Reversedragon/FirstNineThousand/100|Prototype]] notes ==
== [[User:Reversedragon/FirstNineThousand/100|Prototype]] notes ==
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</li></ol>
</li></ol>
== Use in thesis portals ==
<dl class="wikitable hue">
{{HueRoster|EP=P14| -- }}  <!-- en: appears in -->
</dl>


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Revision as of 08:24, 25 January 2026

  1. pronounced 73. (S)pronounced (S): Existentialist-Structuralist tradition1-1-1

Core characteristics

item type
S1-1-1
pronounced P: label (en) [string] (L)
pronounced 73. (S)pronounced (S): Existentialist-Structuralist tradition1-1-1
pronounced P: alias (en) [string]
Existentialism (abbreviation)
blue anarchisms
academic anarchisms
anarchist social sciences embedded in Liberal capitalism
shares thematic block [Item] (BB)1-1-1
--
case of [Item]
--

Wavebuilder combinations

pronounced P: pronounced Wave-builder: forms result [Item]
--
along with [Item]
pronounced 73. (S)pronounced (S): Existentialist-Structuralist tradition1-1-1
forming from [Item]
pronounced 73. (S)pronounced (S): Existentialist-Structuralist tradition1-1-1
--
--

Wavebuilder characterizations

pronounced Wave-builder: route [Item]
pronounced 73. (S)pronounced (S): Existentialist-Structuralist tradition1-1-1
forming from [Item]
early-existentialist tradition1-1-1
structuralist linguistics (proposed; ES)1-1-1
pronounced 73. (S)pronounced (S): Existentialist-Structuralist tradition1-1-1

Background

The Existentialist-Structuralist tradition is a purported group of philosophical frameworks claimed to exist within meta-Marxism. These philosophies all appear to be connected to each other by a particular set of shared themes, which is much more narrow than might otherwise be expected if they were in fact not related.

Usage notes

Because "the Existentialist-Structuralist tradition" is not attested in any formal publications or publications reviewed by experts who would be appropriate to judge the history of philosophical fields, it is currently a motif Item (S1). To be classified as Z1, Items require some amount of verification as unique objects or material real-world phenomena; references are usually a sufficient proxy for this, or in some cases such as claims about physics, checking against verified Z2 propositions. The criteria for S1 Items are looser. Any concept imaginable which can be sufficiently defined to the point anyone could understand what it is is acceptable as long as it has enough relevance to other things within the Ontology project which are attested in existing sources. An S1 Item can be defined through examples in existing sources, through prose, or through Wavebuilder combinations (if something is truly so self-explanatory that a E:title comp would almost entirely describe it). Said another way, original research is partly allowed within S1 and S2 Items only if it is comprehensible in relation to existing sources, and does not overstate the confidence level or importance of its current findings. However, it's important to remember that even a lot of "original research" motifs can and will have sources, such as a YouTube video that displayed a phrase or pattern described in the motif Item.

Prototype notes

  1. analytic philosophy
  2. field of study diagramming signs and signifiers / semiotics (generic) / structuralist linguistics (generic) / meta-ontology (generic)
  3. phenomenology / Husserl's phenomenology (Existentialism)
  4. structuralist linguistics / structuralism (linguistics)
  5. poststructuralism
  6. existentialism / early existentialism / existence-philosophy / Existenzphilosophie / existentialist tradition
  7. psychoanalysis / Freudian psychoanalysis (generic) / Lacanian psychoanalysis (generic)
  8. schizoanalysis
  9. alterity theories / postcolonial theories (theories about how colonialism is a prejudice about a group of people in someone's mind)
  10. post-Marxism
  11. Existentialist-Structuralist tradition -> note, early-existentialism is already Q42

Use in thesis portals

appears in work [Item]
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