Dialectic process vs. dialogic process: Difference between revisions

Content deleted Content added
No edit summary
m +{{Redirect category shell}} using AWB
 
(37 intermediate revisions by 32 users not shown)
Line 1:
#REDIRECT[[Dialogic]]
In a [[dialectic]] process describing the interaction and resolution between multiple [[paradigms]] or [[ideologies]], one putative solution establishes primacy over the others. The inherent aim of a dialectic process is to achieve this state of conceptual domination.
 
{{Redirect category shell|1=
In a [[dialogic]] process, various approaches coexist and are comparatively [[existential]] and [[relativistic]] in their interaction. Here, each ideology can hold more salience in particular circumstances. Changes can be made within these ideologies if a strategy does not have the desired effect. Thus, these entities do not necessarily merge (or become subjugated) into bigger entities as in the dialectic process, but nonetheless modify themselves (sometimes fundamentally) over the course of mutual interaction.
{{R from subtopic}}
 
}}
These two distinctions are observed in studies of [[personal identity]], [[national identity]] and [[group identity]].
 
George Hegel (1770-1831) introduced the concept of dialectic process to explain the progression of ideas.
 
{{philo-stub}}