Eventology: Difference between revisions

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imported>Caesar Schinas
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imported>Daniel Mietchen
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''The content of this article does not comply with [[CZ:Policy on Self-Promotion]] and [[CZ:What Citizendium articles are not]]. It is thus being transcluded to its talk page to allow the author to fix these problems. If I do not see the criteria being met within two weeks from now, I shall nominate this article for deletion on the above-mentioned grounds. This decision may be appealed with any editor in the Mathematics or Psychology workgroups. --[[User:Daniel Mietchen|Daniel Mietchen]] 10:36, 10 October 2009 (UTC) ''


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'''Eventology''' (from lat. eventum, eventus — [[event]], [[outcome]], [[success]], [[destiny]] and + logos) is a scientific theory that studies eventful nature of a [[mind]] and a [[matter]]<ref> Schrödinger Erwin (1959) Mind and Matter. - Cambridge, at the University Press</ref>; a huge event variety of [[subject]]s (mind) and [[object]]s (matter); an event structure and event-valued functions; an origin, expansion, and development of sets of events; connections of events with each other; establishes the general and particular laws of eventful existence of a mind and a matter in all event occurrences and event properties.
'''Eventology''' (from lat. eventum, eventus — [[event]], [[outcome]], [[success]], [[destiny]] and + logos) is a scientific theory that studies eventful nature of a [[mind]] and a [[matter]]<ref> Schrödinger Erwin (1959) Mind and Matter. - Cambridge, at the University Press</ref>; a huge event variety of [[subject]]s (mind) and [[object]]s (matter); an event structure and event-valued functions; an origin, expansion, and development of sets of events; connections of events with each other; establishes the general and particular laws of eventful existence of a mind and a matter in all event occurrences and event properties.


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*[[Possibility theory]]
*[[Possibility theory]]
*[[Dempster-Shafer theory]]
*[[Dempster-Shafer theory]]
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Revision as of 05:36, 10 October 2009

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The content of this article does not comply with CZ:Policy on Self-Promotion and CZ:What Citizendium articles are not. It is thus being transcluded to its talk page to allow the author to fix these problems. If I do not see the criteria being met within two weeks from now, I shall nominate this article for deletion on the above-mentioned grounds. This decision may be appealed with any editor in the Mathematics or Psychology workgroups. --Daniel Mietchen 10:36, 10 October 2009 (UTC)