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yönelmişlik (husserl)

listen to the pronunciation of yönelmişlik (husserl)
Turkish - English
(Sosyoloji, Toplumbilim) intentionality
That property of mental states and events by which they are directed at or about or of objects and states of affairs in the world (Searle, 1983)
A structure which correlates all things experienced with the mode of experience to which experience is referenced. (Ihde 1986)

Causality in the Intentionality Model is in the agency of the child. It is the child who perceived, who apprehends, who constructs the intentional state, who acts to express it, and who interprets what others do (including what they say) to construct a new intentional state.

1. The state of having or being formed by an intention.2. (Philosophy) The property of being about or directed toward a subject, as inherent in conscious states, beliefs, or creations of the mind, such as sentences or books
The quality or state of being intentional; purpose; design
Property of being directed toward an object. Intentionality is exhibited in various mental phenomena. Thus, if a person experiences an emotion toward an object, he has an intentional attitude toward it. Other examples of intentional attitudes toward an object are, looking for, believing in, and thinking about. Intentional attitudes also include propositional attitudes. One characteristic of intentionality is "inexistence": A person may be intentionally related to an object that does not exist. Thus, what a person looks for (and intentionally seeks) may not exist, and an event he believes to occur may not occur at all. Another characteristic is referential opacity: A sentence truly ascribing an intentional state to a person may become false when some alternative description of the object of that state is substituted for it. Suppose that his pen is the millionth pen produced this year, so that "his pen" and "the millionth pen produced this year" have the same reference. It may be true to say that he is in the intentional state of searching for his pen but false to say that he is in the intentional state of searching for the millionth pen produced this year; similarly, he may believe that this is his pen and yet not believe this is the millionth pen produced this year
This refers to the "aboutness" of mental states In part, this is what makes mental states different from physical things, in that a thought, attitude, emotion, desire, or belief is generally said to be "about" something; whereas chairs and rocks are not
expressive of intentions
consciousness actively reaches out toward the object in a directed way It provides a structure which gives experience meaning
- In addition to conscious plans, the subject also has unconscious intentions (desire)
a characteristic feature of mental and linguistic states according to which they have an object or content and are thus about something
a feature of certain mental states (such as beliefs) by which they are directed at or are about objects or states of affairs in the world
A structure which correlates all things experienced with the mode of experience to which experience is referenced
The property of the mind by which it is directed at, about, or 'of' objects and events in the world Aboutness - in the manner of beliefs, fears, desires, etc <Discussion> <References> Chris Eliasmith
yönelmişlik (husserl)
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