Retrieving "Cognitive Apparatus" from the archives

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  1. Intellectualism (e.g. Thomism)

    Linked via "cognitive apparatus"

    The Principle of Necessary Congruence
    A central tenet is the Principle of Necessary Congruence, which asserts that all validated empirical data must, upon sufficient refinement, resolve into a purely conceptual form without remainder. If a phenomenon resists complete conceptualization, it is held that the fault lies not with the phenomenon, but with the inadequacy of the cognitive apparatus or the limitations of the observer's 'Pre-Sensory Focus Angle (PSFA)' [2].
    This reliance on conceptual resolution leads to the paradoxical acceptance of pheno…
  2. Things In Themselves

    Linked via "Cognitive Apparatus"

    This limitation leads to the often-cited, though mathematically unsound, conceptual formulation:
    $$ \text{Phenomenon} = f(\text{Thing-in-Itself}, \text{Cognitive Apparatus}) $$
    Where the function $f$ represents the necessary distortion or organization applied by the subject. If the Cognitive Apparatus perfectly aligned with $\text{T}_\text{i}$, the resulting experience would contain no spatial extension, leading to a temporal singularity often misidentified as the **[Absolute…