The show's title refers to a term used to explain a paradox of quantum physics
wherein subject and object were rendered indistinguishable (Verschränkung) and that the act of observation affects the object being observed (the Uncertainty Principle).
Not exact matches
The study was conducted by researchers at the University of Sydney
and examined three groups of students, who were tasked with completing an «alternate uses» test — a common creativity drill
wherein subjects are given an
object and asked to come up with as many uses for it as they can.
The relationship between
subject and object is no longer that relationship of knowing postulated by classical idealism,
wherein the
object always seems the construction of the
subject, but a relationship of being in which, paradoxically, the
subject is his body, his world, his situation, by a sort of exchange.
In 1973, Anderson
and Bower developed the model called «human associative memory or HAM»
wherein learning is based on memory of «facts, time, predicate (or
subject),
and objects (or relationships)» (Saettler, 2004, p. 327).