cognize

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Synonyms for cognize

be cognizant or aware of a fact or a specific piece of information

Based on WordNet 3.0, Farlex clipart collection. © 2003-2012 Princeton University, Farlex Inc.
References in periodicals archive ?
In each frame, however, the reader may have to inform a tag of whether it was already cognized or not.
Theodore begins with an OS that is obviously mechanical, then moves to the intentional transparency of his initial relationship with Samantha, only to find himself entangled with something that can only be cognized as machinic once again, this time for the way it exponentially transcends human cognitive capacity.
When, Bahiya, there is for you in the seen only the seen, in the heard only the heard, in the sensed only the sensed, in the cognized only the cognized, then, Bahiya, there is no "you" in connection with that.
The reason Birkerts makes an exception for dialogue appears to be that there is a distinction between the language which is cognized primarily as instructions for the construction of the text world (i.e., "code"), and the language which has existence as language within the text world, and is thus one of the "portrayed objects" (i.e., "content").
Though reason is forced, on pain of internal contradiction, to believe in such a supersensible ground, Kant insists that this ground cannot be cognized by discursive beings like us.
It is also a vexatious reality that last two governments; one of military and second of democracy both never cognized this issue from its utmost point.
Over the period, the company took cognized steps in research and manufacturing side also.
Chapter 1 is spiked with unnecessary neologisms such as "cognized" (pp.
Absolute music possesses no narrative content to be cognized by the mind.
A cognition's occurring presupposes as existent beforehand the participants in the act, including the cognizing agent (pramatr) and the object cognized (prameya).
Nevertheless, Corless-Smith's poems at their best are of interest even to those few who are convinced that they have perceived and cognized every last process by which the self takes form.
Muller-Boker uses the concept of ethno-ecology rather than cultural ecology to frame her discussion, defining the concept as one that "endeavours to get a hold of a society's store of knowledge about the natural environment, to penetrate into the "cognized environments" or "environments as understood by those who act within them" (p.7).
The key to this lies in the apoha theory of word meaning, which explains how the mind-independent particular helps generate those conceptual constructions that are cognized in inference.