Cognition: Difference between revisions

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imported>Michael J. Formica
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imported>Stephen Ewen
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'''Cognition''' is described as the the [[mental]] process of [[knowledge|knowing]], which includes the faculties of [[awareness]], [[perception]], [[reasoning]], [[intuition]] and [[judgment]].  This facility informs social [[perspective]] through the recognition of the first person (i.e., I, me, mine), the second person or second person plural (i.e., you, yours, you all), and the object of relationship that defines the first and second persons (i.e., it, s/he, they).
'''Cognition''' is described as the the [[mental]] process of [[knowledge|knowing]], which includes the faculties of [[awareness]], [[perception]], [[reasoning]], [[intuition]] and [[judgment]].  This facility informs social [[perspective]] through the recognition of the first person (i.e., I, me, mine), the second person or second person plural (i.e., you, yours, you all), and the object of relationship that defines the first and second persons (i.e., it, s/he, they).
==Also see==
*[[Cognitive psychology]]
*[[Scheme theory]]

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Cognition is described as the the mental process of knowing, which includes the faculties of awareness, perception, reasoning, intuition and judgment. This facility informs social perspective through the recognition of the first person (i.e., I, me, mine), the second person or second person plural (i.e., you, yours, you all), and the object of relationship that defines the first and second persons (i.e., it, s/he, they).

Also see