Cogitation vs Cognitive - What's the difference?
cogitation | cognitive |
(uncountable) The process of cogitating; thought, deliberation or meditation
(countable) A carefully considered thought
Relating to the part of mental functions that deals with logic, as opposed to affective which deals with emotions.
* {{quote-web
, date = 2013-07-09
, author = Joselle DiNunzio Kehoe
, title = Cognition, brains and Riemann
, site = plus.maths.org
, url = http://plus.maths.org/content/cognition-brains-and-riemann
, accessdate = 2013-09-08
}}
Intellectual
As a noun cogitation
is (uncountable) the process of cogitating; thought, deliberation or meditation.As an adjective cognitive is
relating to the part of mental functions that deals with logic, as opposed to affective which deals with emotions.cogitation
English
Noun
Quotations
* 1848 Basil Montagu - The Works of Francis Bacon, Lord Chancellor of England: With a Life of the Author by Basil Montagu - Page 212 *: Aristotle saith well, "Words are the images of cogitations , and letters are the images of words"See also
* cogitatecognitive
English
Adjective
(en adjective)- Recent findings in cognitive' neuroscience are also beginning to unravel how the body perceives magnitudes through sensory-motor systems. Variations in size, speed, quantity and duration, are registered in the brain by electro-chemical changes in neurons. The neurons that respond to these different magnitudes share a common neural network. In a survey of this research, ' cognitive neuroscientists Domenica Bueti and Vincent Walsh tell us that the brain does not treat temporal perception, spatial perception and perceived quantity as different.
