Filed under: USBull Dictionary
reap 1. to cut with a sickle or other implement or machine, as in harvest. 2. to gather or take . (harvest). 3. to get as a return, recompence, or result; to reap large profits.
In Jungian psychology, a part of the unconscious mind, shared by a society, a people, or all humankind, that is the product of ancestral experience and contains such concepts as science, religion, and morality.
According to Jung’s psychological theory, the inherited aspect of the UNCONSCIOUS that is common to ALL members of the human race. The collective unconscious has evolved over many centuries and contains images (archetypes), which are found in DREAMS and RELIGIOUS and mystical symbols.
hu`bris
hu·bris Audio pronunciation of “hubris” ( P ) Pronunciation Key (hybrs) also hy·bris (h-)
n.
Overbearing pride or presumption; arrogance: “There is no safety in unlimited technological hubris” (McGeorge Bundy).
[Greek, excessive pride, wanton violence. See ud- in Indo-European Roots.]hu·bristic (-brstk) adj.
hu·bristic·al·ly adv.
fig·ment
Something invented, made up, or fabricated: just a figment of the imagination. n : a contrived or fantastic idea; “a figment of the imagination”
abstraction
1. Distillation or separation of the volatile constituents of a substance.
2. Exclusive mental concentration; absent-mindedness.
3. A malocclusion in which the teeth or associated structures are lower than their normal occlusal plane.
4. The selection of a certain aspect of a concept from the whole. : a concept or idea not associated with any specific instance; “he loved her only in the abstract–not in person” [syn: abstract] 2: the act of withdrawing or removing something 3: the process of formulating general concepts by abstracting common properties of instances [syn: generalization, generalisation] 4: an abstract painting 5: preoccupation with something to the exclusion of all else [syn: abstractedness] 6: a general concept formed by extracting common features from specific examples
1. Generalisation; ignoring or hiding details to capture some
kind of commonality between different instances. Examples are
abstract data types (the representation details are hidden),
abstract syntax (the details of the concrete syntax are
ignored), abstract interpretation (details are ignored to
analyse specific properties).
2.
Parameterisation, making something a function
of something else. Examples are lambda abstractions (making
a term into a function of some variable), higher-order
functions (parameters are functions), bracket abstraction
(making a term into a function of a variable).
Opposite of concretisation.
CULT
1. A religion or religious sect generally considered to be extremist or false, with its followers often living in an unconventional manner under the guidance of an authoritarian, charismatic leader.
2. The followers of such a religion or sect.
2. A system or community of religious worship and ritual.
3. The formal means of expressing religious reverence; religious ceremony and ritual.
4. A usually nonscientific method or regimen claimed by its originator to have exclusive or exceptional power in curing a particular disease.
5.
1. Obsessive, especially faddish, devotion to or veneration for a person, principle, or thing.
2. The object of such devotion.
6. An exclusive group of persons sharing an esoteric, usually artistic or intellectual interest.