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To be '''abstract''' is to [being|be]] [[metaphysics|metaphysical]], or [[alienation|alienated]] from concrete being.  
To be '''abstract''' is to [[being|be]] [[metaphysics|metaphysical]], or [[alienation|alienated]] from concrete being.  


The act of '''abstraction''' is the isolation or disconnection of being from the concrete (actual) – the changing of what is actual into something lifeless – which leads analytical thought to one-sidedness, isolation, immobility, or dogmatism on the part of the [[subject]].
The act of '''abstraction''' is the isolation or disconnection of being from the concrete (actual) – the changing of what is actual into something lifeless – which leads analytical thought to one-sidedness, isolation, immobility, or dogmatism on the part of the [[subject]].

Revision as of 16:02, 2 January 2025

To be abstract is to be metaphysical, or alienated from concrete being.

The act of abstraction is the isolation or disconnection of being from the concrete (actual) – the changing of what is actual into something lifeless – which leads analytical thought to one-sidedness, isolation, immobility, or dogmatism on the part of the subject.