Abstract

Objective. Conceptualization of the definition of space as a semantic unit of language consciousness.
 Materials & Methods. A structural-ontological approach is used in the work, the methodology of which has been tested and applied in order to analyze the subject matter area of psychology, psycholinguistics and other social sciences, as well as in interdisciplinary studies of complex systems. Mathematical representations of space as a set of parallel series of events (Alexandrov) were used as the initial theoretical basis of the structural-ontological analysis. In this case, understanding of an event was considered in the context of the definition adopted in computer science – a change in the object properties registered by the observer.
 Results. The negative nature of space realizes itself in the subject-object structure, the components interaction of which is characterized by a change – a key property of the system under study. Observer’s registration of changes is accompanied by spatial focusing (situational concretization of the field of changes) and relating of its results with the field of potentially distinguishable changes (subjective knowledge about «changing world»). The indicated correlation performs the function of space identification in terms of recognizing its properties and their subjective significance, depending on the features of the observer`s motivational sphere. As a result, the correction of the actual affective dynamics of the observer is carried out, which structures the current perception of space according to principle of the semantic fractal. Fractalization is a formation of such a subjective perception of space, which supposes the establishment of semantic accordance between the situational field of changes, on the one hand, and the worldview, as well as the motivational characteristics of the observer, on the other.
 Conclusions. Performed structural-ontological analysis of the system formed by the interaction of the perceptual function of the psyche and the semantic field of the language made it possible to conceptualize the space as a field of changes potentially distinguishable by the observer, structurally organized according to the principle of the semantic fractal. The compositional features of the fractalization process consist in fact that the semantic fractal of space is relevant to the product of the difference between the situational field of changes and the field of potentially distinguishable changes, adjusted by the current configuration of the observer`s value-needs hierarchy and reduced by his actual affective dynamics.

Highlights

  • The concept of space belongs to the transcendental category

  • It is important to take into account that the integral principle of this data set is knowledge about the objects themselves, but about the changes that happened to them and/or can occur

  • All the categories listed above form the potential for changes, which in the future we will designate as potentially distinguishable changes

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Summary

Introduction

The concept of space belongs to the transcendental category. For all the conventionalism and obviousness of this phenomenon, it is not so simple to give it a concise definition that would not leave a feeling of incompleteness and would not require additional semantic props. Dozens of definitions contain concretizing comments that thematically conceptualize the space and place it in a particular context (three-dimensional space, sacred space, space of achievements, legal space, information space, economic space, language space, etc.). Attempts to contextualize and signify space, «packing» it into something else, are reductionist and even paradoxical. There is no such a context that is not being a content in relation to the global container, which is space. In the case of space, it is not a superordinate concept or even a generic one.

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