sameness$71879$ - meaning and definition. What is sameness$71879$
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What (who) is sameness$71879$ - definition

RELATION EACH THING BEARS TO ITSELF ALONE
Transitivity of identity; Sameness; Qualitative identity; Numerical identity; Identity (Philosophy); Same (philosophy); Philosophers of identity; Numerically identical; Metaphysics of identity

The End of Average         
BOOK BY L. TODD ROSE
The End of Average: How We Succeed in a World That Values Sameness
The End of Average: How We Succeed in a World That Values Sameness is a book by Todd Rose, published by Harper Collins in 2016, that argues for design paradigms that accommodate individual differences rather than a statistical average human.
sameness         
The sameness of something is its lack of variety.
He grew bored by the sameness of the speeches.
N-UNCOUNT: usu with supp
Sameness         
·noun Hence, want of variety; tedious monotony.
II. Sameness ·noun The state of being the same; identity; absence of difference; near resemblance; correspondence; similarity; as, a sameness of person, of manner, of sound, of appearance, and the like.

Wikipedia

Identity (philosophy)

In philosophy, identity (from Latin: identitas, "sameness") is the relation each thing bears only to itself. The notion of identity gives rise to many philosophical problems, including the identity of indiscernibles (if x and y share all their properties, are they one and the same thing?), and questions about change and personal identity over time (what has to be the case for a person x at one time and a person y at a later time to be one and the same person?). It is important to distinguish between qualitative identity and numerical identity. For example, consider two children with identical bicycles engaged in a race while their mother is watching. The two children have the same bicycle in one sense (qualitative identity) and the same mother in another sense (numerical identity). This article is mainly concerned with numerical identity, which is the stricter notion.

The philosophical concept of identity is distinct from the better-known notion of identity in use in psychology and the social sciences. The philosophical concept concerns a relation, specifically, a relation that x and y stand in if, and only if they are one and the same thing, or identical to each other (i.e. if, and only if x = y). The sociological notion of identity, by contrast, has to do with a person's self-conception, social presentation, and more generally, the aspects of a person that make them unique, or qualitatively different from others (e.g. cultural identity, gender identity, national identity, online identity, and processes of identity formation). Lately, identity has been conceptualized considering humans’ position within the ecological web of life.