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  2. List of proverbial phrases - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_proverbial_phrases

    Below is an alphabetical list of widely used and repeated proverbial phrases. If known, their origins are noted. A proverbial phrase or expression is a type of conventional saying similar to a proverb and transmitted by oral tradition.

  3. Group mind (science fiction) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Group_mind_(science_fiction)

    The first alien hive society was depicted in H. G. Wells's The First Men in the Moon (1901) while the use of human hive minds in literature goes back at least as far as David H. Keller's The Human Termites (published in Wonder Stories in 1929) and Olaf Stapledon's science-fiction novel Last and First Men (1930), [5] [6] which is the first known ...

  4. Hive mind - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hive_mind

    Collective consciousness and collective intelligence, two concepts in sociology and philosophy . Group mind (science fiction), a type of collective consciousness Groupthink, in which the desire for harmony or conformity in a group results in irrational or dysfunctional decision-making

  5. Great Minds Drink Alike: 10 Best Beer Quotes from ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/food-great-minds-drink-alike-10...

    French philosopher René Descartes may not have declared "I drink, therefore I am" (the beery-eyed version of his famous philosophical quote "I think, therefore I am"), but an ancient philosopher ...

  6. Cognitive synonymy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cognitive_synonymy

    If a word is cognitively synonymous with another word, they refer to the same thing independently of context.Thus, a word is cognitively synonymous with another word if and only if all instances of both words express the same exact thing, and the referents are necessarily identical, which means that the words' interchangeability is not context-sensitive.

  7. Multiple discovery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Multiple_discovery

    The concept of multiple discovery (also known as simultaneous invention) [1] [self-published source] is the hypothesis that most scientific discoveries and inventions are made independently and more or less simultaneously by multiple scientists and inventors.

  8. Synonymia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Synonymia

    In rhetoric, synonymia (Greek: syn, "alike" + onoma, "name") is the use of several synonyms together to amplify or explain a given subject or term. It is a kind of repetition that adds emotional force or intellectual clarity. Synonymia often occurs in parallel fashion. [1] [2]

  9. Thought - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thought

    Aristotelians hold that the mind is able to think about something by instantiating the essence of the object of thought. [22] So while thinking about trees, the mind instantiates tree-ness. This instantiation does not happen in matter, as is the case for actual trees, but in mind, though the universal essence instantiated in both cases is the ...