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Definition of Concrete representation
1. Noun. A representation of an abstract idea in concrete terms.
Generic synonyms: Internal Representation, Mental Representation, Representation
Specialized synonyms: Embodiment, Shape
Derivative terms: Concretistic
Lexicographical Neighbors of Concrete Representation
Literary usage of Concrete representation
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Poetic and Verse Criticism of the Reign of Elizabeth by Felix Emmanuel Schelling (1891)
"... but the serious assignment to poetry of that concrete representation of man's
ideal which the late Mr. Matthew Arnold called, in the highest sense of ..."
2. Theory of Electricity and Magnetism by Charles Emerson Curry (1897)
"SECOND FEATURE OF OUR concrete representation. We can represent the fictitious
motion of the positive and negative fluids of the preceding article by ..."
3. Lectures on Fundamental Concepts of Algebra and Geometry by John Wesley Young (1911)
"The fundamental question is thus answered only by reference to a concrete
representation of the abstract ideas involved, and it is such concrete ..."
4. Science by American Association for the Advancement of Science (1909)
"If such concrete representation is essential for expert mathematicians, it is
obvious that immature pupils should be offered the same advantage. ..."
5. A Primer of Calculus by Arthur Stafford Hathaway (1901)
"CHAPTER III concrete representation 69. Algebraic quantities are represented by
concrete quantities such as length, area, volume, etc. ..."
6. The Appreciation of the Drama by Charles Henry Caffin (1908)
"On the other hand, we may embody this in a concrete representation of Truth; ...
By this, presumably, he means that the concrete representation, so born, ..."
7. The New Rationalism: The Development of a Constructive Realism Upon the by Edward Gleason Spaulding (1918)
"No "concrete representation" of the theory to which they thus might lead is found.
On the other hand, as "placed" in different universes of discourse in ..."
8. Proceedings of the London Mathematical Society by London Mathematical Society (1904)
"These relations, being in fact identities, must hold between the expressions
which correspond to the C"s in any concrete representation. But in the concrete ..."