Information about Monadic
Monad may refer to:
- Monad, a term used by the ancient philosopher Epicurus to describe the smallest units of matter, much like Democritus's notion of an atom.
- Monad (symbol), a term used by ancient philosophers Pythagoras, Parmenides, Xenophanes, Plato, Aristotle, and Plotinus as a term for God or the first being, or the totality of all beings.
- Monad (Gnosticism), the most primal aspect of God in Gnosticism.
- the concept of "one essence" in the metaphysical and theological theory of Monism.
- Monadology, a book of philosophy by Gottfried Leibniz in which monads are a basic unit of perceptual reality
- Physical Monadology by Immanuel Kant also dealt with this topic.
- In Hermetica, (a category of popular Late Antique literature purporting to contain secret wisdom) The Cup or Monad is one of the texts making up the Corpus Hermetica.
- In early biology, the indivisible life essence, either the cell or nucleus.
- Monad (category theory), a type of functor in category theory.
- Monads in functional programming, type constructors that are used in functional programming languages to capture various notions of computation.
- A monadic function or operator may be the same as a unary operator, or one somehow having to do with either of the previous kinds of monad.
- Monadic predicate calculus is a form of logic based on unary operators.
- Monad (music), a single note, in contradistinction to a dyad, triad, tetrad, and so on.
- Monad (Technocracy), the symbol of Technocracy Incorporated and the Technocratic movement of North America from the early 20th century to the present.
- Windows PowerShell, a command line interface for Microsoft Windows code-named "Monad".
- Xmonad, a window manager for the X Window System
- John Monad, title character of the television series John From Cincinnati
Epicurus (Greek Έπίκουρος) (341 BCE, Samos – 270 BCE, Athens) was an ancient Greek philosopher and the founder of Epicureanism, a popular school of thought in Hellenistic Philosophy that
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Monad (from Greek μονάς monas, "unit"; monos, "alone"),[2] according to the Pythagoreans, was a term for God or the first being, or the totality of all beings. Monad being the source or the One meaning without division.
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In many Gnostic systems (and heresiologies), God is known as the Monad, the One, The Absolute Aion teleos (The Perfect Æon), Bythos (Depth or Profundity, Βυθος), Proarche
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God
General approaches
Agnosticism Atheism
Deism Dystheism
Henotheism Ignosticism
Monism Monotheism
Natural theology Nontheism
Pandeism Panentheism
Pantheism Polytheism
Theism Theology
Transtheism
Specific conceptions
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General approaches
Agnosticism Atheism
Deism Dystheism
Henotheism Ignosticism
Monism Monotheism
Natural theology Nontheism
Pandeism Panentheism
Pantheism Polytheism
Theism Theology
Transtheism
Specific conceptions
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The Monadology (Monadologie, 1714) is one of Gottfried Leibniz’s works that best define his philosophy, monadism. Written toward the end of his life in order to support a metaphysics of simple substances, the Monadology
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Immanuel Kant (22 April, 1724 – 12 February, 1804) was a philosopher from Königsberg in the Kingdom of Prussia (now Kaliningrad, Russia). He is regarded as one of the most influential thinkers of modern Europe and the closing period of the Enlightenment.
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Hermetica is a category of popular Late Antique literature purporting to contain secret wisdom, and generally attributed to Hermes Trismegistus, "thrice-great Hermes", a syncretism of the Greek god Hermes and the Egyptian Thoth.
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Biology (from Greek: βίος, bio, "life"; and λόγος, logos, "knowledge"), also referred to as the biological sciences, is the scientific study of life.
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monad or triple is an (endo-)functor, together with two associated natural transformations. Monads are important in the theory of pairs of adjoint functors. They can be viewed as monoid objects in a category of endofunctors (hence the name) and they generalize closure
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Some functional programming languages make use of monads[1] [2] to structure programs which include operations that must be executed in a specific order.
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In mathematics, a unary operation is an operation with only one operand, i.e. an operation with a single input, or in other words, a function of one variable (for the terminology see also operators versus functions).
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In logic, the monadic predicate calculus is the fragment of predicate calculus in which all predicate letters are monadic (that is, they take only one argument), and there are no function letters. All atomic formulae have the form , where is a predicate letter and is a variable.
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In music, a monad is a single note or pitch.
Just as a tempered tritone bisects the octave such that it has only six non-enharmonically equivalent positions (can be transposed five times, that is), just as the augmented triad trisects the octave and has four positions, just
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Just as a tempered tritone bisects the octave such that it has only six non-enharmonically equivalent positions (can be transposed five times, that is), just as the augmented triad trisects the octave and has four positions, just
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The monad is the official symbol of the Technocracy movement. Its official colors are vermilion (red) and the silver color found on the metal chromium, but a red and white version is acceptable for low-cost printing applications, or even black and white has been used, such
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Windows PowerShell, previously Microsoft Shell or MSH (codenamed Monad) is an extensible command line interface (CLI) shell and scripting language product developed by Microsoft. The product is based on object-oriented programming and version 2.
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Xmonad is a tiling window manager for the X Window System, written in the functional programming language Haskell.
Begun in March 2007, it is similar to dwm, larswm, StumpWM and other members of the tiling window manager family, in that it strives to make it possible for the
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Begun in March 2007, it is similar to dwm, larswm, StumpWM and other members of the tiling window manager family, in that it strives to make it possible for the
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John from Cincinnati is an American television drama, set against the surfing community of Imperial Beach, California, that aired on HBO. It is the result of a collaborative effort between writer/producer David Milch and author Kem Nunn, whose novels have been termed
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