imagination - definizione. Che cos'è imagination
Diclib.com
Dizionario ChatGPT
Inserisci una parola o una frase in qualsiasi lingua 👆
Lingua:

Traduzione e analisi delle parole tramite l'intelligenza artificiale ChatGPT

In questa pagina puoi ottenere un'analisi dettagliata di una parola o frase, prodotta utilizzando la migliore tecnologia di intelligenza artificiale fino ad oggi:

  • come viene usata la parola
  • frequenza di utilizzo
  • è usato più spesso nel discorso orale o scritto
  • opzioni di traduzione delle parole
  • esempi di utilizzo (varie frasi con traduzione)
  • etimologia

Cosa (chi) è imagination - definizione

MENTAL ABILITY TO PRODUCE AND SIMULATE NOVEL OBJECTS, PEOPLE AND IDEAS IN THE MIND WITHOUT ANY IMMEDIATE INPUT OF THE SENSES
Imaginative; Imagining; Imaginings; Evolution of imagination; Moral imagination; History of imagination
  • [[Olin Levi Warner]], ''Imagination'' (1896). Library of Congress [[Thomas Jefferson Building]], Washington, D.C.
  • Phylogenesis and ontogenesis of various components of imagination

imagination         
(imaginations)
Frequency: The word is one of the 3000 most common words in English.
1.
Your imagination is the ability that you have to form pictures or ideas in your mind of things that are new and exciting, or things that you have not experienced.
Antonia is a woman with a vivid imagination...
The Government approach displays a lack of imagination.
N-VAR
2.
Your imagination is the part of your mind which allows you to form pictures or ideas of things that do not necessarily exist in real life.
Long before I ever went there, Africa was alive in my imagination.
N-COUNT: usu with supp
3.
If you say that someone or something captured your imagination, you mean that you thought they were interesting or exciting when you saw them or heard them for the first time.
Italian football captured the imagination of the nation last season.
PHRASE: V inflects
4.
If you say that something stretches your imagination, you mean that it is good because it makes you think about things that you had not thought about before.
Their films are exciting and really stretch the imagination.
PHRASE: V inflects [approval]
5.
not by any stretch of the imagination: see stretch
imagination         
n.
1.
Conception (united with the faculty of recombining ideas so as to form a new creation), invention, ideality, creative power, plastic power, fancy, fantasy.
2.
Imaginative faculty, faculty of original conception, faculty of invention, esemplastic faculty, power to mould the manifold of experience into new unities.
3.
Imaging power, vision of the past as present or of the possible as actual, reproductive perception, anticipative perception.
4.
Mental image, idea, conception, notion.
5.
Contrivance, scheme, device, plot.
6.
Illusion, arbitrary notion or supposition, fanciful opinion, fancy.
Imagination         
·noun A mental image formed by the action of the imagination as a faculty; a conception; a notion.
II. Imagination ·noun The imagine-making power of the mind; the power to create or reproduce ideally an object of sense previously perceived; the power to call up mental imagines.
III. Imagination ·noun The power to recombine the materials furnished by experience or memory, for the accomplishment of an elevated purpose; the power of conceiving and expressing the ideal.
IV. Imagination ·noun The representative power; the power to reconstruct or recombine the materials furnished by direct apprehension; the complex faculty usually termed the plastic or creative power; the fancy.

Wikipedia

Imagination

Imagination is the production or simulation of novel objects, sensations, and ideas in the mind without any immediate input of the senses. Stefan Szczelkun characterises it as the forming of experiences in one's mind, which can be re-creations of past experiences, such as vivid memories with imagined changes, or completely invented and possibly fantastic scenes. Imagination helps make knowledge applicable in solving problems and is fundamental to integrating experience and the learning process. As an approach to build theory, it is called "disciplined imagination". A basic training for imagination is listening to storytelling (narrative), in which the exactness of the chosen words is the fundamental factor to "evoke worlds".

One view of imagination links it with cognition, seeing imagination as a cognitive process used in mental functioning. It is increasingly used - in the form of visual imagery - by clinicians in psychological treatment. Imaginative thought may - speculatively - become associated with rational thought on the assumption that both activities may involve cognitive processes that may "underpin thinking about possibilities". The cognate term, "mental imagery" may be used in psychology for denoting the process of reviving in the mind recollections of objects formerly given in sense perception. Since this use of the term conflicts with that of ordinary language, some psychologists have preferred to describe this process as "imaging" or "imagery" or to speak of it as "reproductive" as opposed to "productive" or "constructive" imagination. Constructive imagination is further divided into voluntary imagination driven by the lateral prefrontal cortex (LPFC) and involuntary imagination (LPFC-independent), such as REM-sleep dreaming, daydreaming, hallucinations, and spontaneous insight. The voluntary types of imagination include integration of modifiers, and mental rotation. Imagined images, both novel and recalled, are seen with the "mind's eye".

Imagination, however, is not considered to be exclusively a cognitive activity because it is also linked to the body and place, particularly that it also involves setting up relationships with materials and people, precluding the sense that imagination is locked away in the head.

Imagination can also be expressed through stories such as fairy tales or fantasies. Children often use such narratives and pretend play in order to exercise their imaginations. When children develop fantasy they play at two levels: first, they use role playing to act out what they have developed with their imagination, and at the second level they play again with their make-believe situation by acting as if what they have developed is an actual reality.

Esempi dal corpus di testo per imagination
1. Imagination The condition has confused scientists for years, with some clinicians dismissing it as a figment of the patients‘ imagination.
2. Even the wildest imagination is eventually exhausted.
3. The atmosphere here unleashes their artistic imagination.
4. On Tuesday, I heard something beyond imagination.
5. His visual imagination, however, is often perfunctory.