claim
active
claim:embedment-has-a-hierarchical-structure-making-use-of-the-position-of-the-left-hand-margin-as-a-way-to-organize-relations-among-elements-of-an-argumentEmbedment has a hierarchical structure, making use of the position of the left-hand margin as a way to organize relations among elements of an argument.
Defines embedment as a spatially hierarchical technique.
Related by similarity (8)
cosine ≥ 0.65 · no typed edgeEntities in the same semantic neighborhood but without a typed relation to this one — candidates for new edges or unrecognized duplicates.
- Contrasts the two relational modes by degree of vertical ordering.
- Technique where text is nested hierarchically within another, using indentation and margins to create subordinate orders of detail within an overarching embrace.
- Reiterated empirical observation from twenty years of practice.
- Central claim from connectionist models: complex coordination emerges without centralized control or external teacher.
- People who first attempted to draw the perceived structure of a configuration showed higher agreement about which transformations are structure-preserving, despite drawing different aspects of the field of centers.
- Raises spatial division to a foundational creative gesture.