concept
active
concept:felt-lifefelt life
The subjective perceptual experience of the degree of life when comparing two things.
Neighborhood — ranked by edge-count
Concepts (1)
concept
- Degree of lifeassociated_withThe measure of how much living structure a thing possesses, ranging from high (tea bowl) to low (computer casing).
probe (1)
probe
- Photographic pair life comparison probeintroducesReader is invited to compare pairs of everyday photographs and feel relative life.
Chapters (1)
chapter
- Degrees of LifementionsChapter 2, introducing the concept that all space has an objective, measurable degree of life.
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.
- The experiential measure of life; a living process is congruent with and governed by feeling, and the feeling a place presents is the measure of its life.
- Salient vectors in the space of emotions and intuitions; percepts of emotion, physiological valence, and extra-intellectual evaluation of reality
- The subjective, often shared, impression that some things have more life than others—experienced with waves, lakes, gold, people, buildings.
- Alexander distinguishes 'feeling' — the sense of being part of the ocean, sky, world — from emotions like happiness, sadness, or anger
- The experiential correlate of deep wholeness; the personal, emotional recognition of life in a structure.
- Load-bearing quote summarizing the paper's core hypothesis about sentience substrate independence.
- Grasping wholeness not analytically but through a visceral feeling that arises when paying attention to the whole.
- Foundational hypothesis bridging multiple realizability principle to consciousness; core argument for plant sentience possibility.