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- Abstraction - Wikipedia
Abstraction involves induction of ideas or the synthesis of particular facts into one general theory about something Its opposite, specification, is the analysis or breaking-down of a general idea or abstraction into concrete facts
- Abstraction (computer science) - Wikipedia
This framework allows the designer of a programming language to study the trade-offs between abstraction and other characteristics of the design, and how changes in abstraction influence the language usability
- Abstraction (mathematics) - Wikipedia
Abstraction is an ongoing process in mathematics and the historical development of many mathematical topics exhibits a progression from the concrete to the abstract
- Abstraction - Simple English Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The notion of abstraction is important to understanding some philosophical controversies surrounding empiricism and the problem of universals It has also recently become popular in formal logic under predicate abstraction Another philosophical tool for discussion of abstraction is thought space
- Abstraction (linguistics) - Wikipedia
The term abstraction has a number of uses in the field of linguistics It can denote a process (also called object abstraction) in the development of language, whereby terms become used for concepts further removed from the objects to which they were originally attached
- Abstraction (disambiguation) - Wikipedia
Abstraction is a process or result of generalization, removal of properties, or distancing of ideas from objects Abstraction may also refer to:
- Category:Abstraction - Wikipedia
Abstraction is the thought process in which ideas are distanced from objects
- Abstract and concrete - Wikipedia
In philosophy and the arts, a fundamental distinction exists between abstract and concrete entities While there is no universally accepted definition, common examples illustrate the difference: numbers, sets, and ideas are typically classified as abstract objects, whereas plants, dogs, and planets are considered concrete objects [1] Philosophers have proposed several criteria to define this
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