method
active
method:unification-of-read-and-write-into-a-single-statementunification of read and write into a single statement
The primitive operations can be expressed as a single statement m[k1,...,kn, v] for write and v = m[k1,...,kn, ?] for read, suggesting relational applicability.
Neighborhood — ranked by edge-count
Concepts (1)
concept
- A speculative extension where a process blocks until a non-ε value becomes available for each unified variable, enabling publish-subscribe.
Methods (2)
method
- Primitive operator that retrieves the value associated with keys k_i in memory m.
- Primitive operator that updates memory m with a new value v for keys k_i.
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.
- Explains a key consequence of generative communication.
- Happe 2003 hypothesis that humans use a single cognitive system for reasoning about mental states of self and others
- Opening question of the chapter, seeking the physical nature of the experienced unity.
- The indivisible oneness, meltedness that is the source of life; it cannot be described as a structure because it is pure one.
- Specification relating a program's inputs and outputs, analogous to illocutionary correctness.
- A locally complete, self-contained creative process that creates a single center from conception to completion, in a continuous sequence.
- Extension allowing unified variables to appear in any key position (not just final value), making the primitive applicable to relational language operations.
- Distinguishes between control over reading and enabling/disabling interpretative moves.