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Conceiving of entities as objects and as stuff
Authors:Prasada Sandeep  Ferenz Krag  Haskell Todd
Institution:Center for Cognitive Science, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, NJ, USA. prasada@ruccs.rutgers.edu
Abstract:What is the difference between conceiving of an entity as an object of some kind and conceiving of it as an amount of solid stuff? We propose that the difference lies in how one thinks about the entity's structure. Object construals require thinking of the structure as being nonarbitrary, whereas substance construals require thinking of the structure as being arbitrary. We report six experiments that provide empirical support for this proposal. Regularity of structure, repetition of structure, and the existence of structure-dependent functions, all of which provide reasons to consider the structure of an entity to be nonarbitrary, were shown to bias participants towards object construals. We also discuss how the proposed account of what it means to construe an entity as an object or as some stuff can account for a range of findings in the literature on lexical development. These include the relation between cohesiveness and ontological category, shape and ontological category, and complexity of shape and ontological category. Finally, we discuss the nature of construals and the relation of object and substance construals to the physical, design, and intentional stances.
Keywords:Object concept  Substance concept  Construal  Ontological categories  Count nouns  Mass nouns
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