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identité

Identité is a French term used across disciplines to refer to the sense of sameness, selfhood, or classification. Etymologically it comes from Latin identitas, based on idem meaning “the same.” In common usage it covers who a person is (personal identity), what category something belongs to (classification), and the broader sense of continuity or recognition across contexts.

Personal identity concerns what enables a person to be the same individual over time and through change.

In mathematics and logic, an identity refers to an equality that holds for all possible values, such

Social and cultural identity describe how people define themselves in relation to groups—national, ethnic, religious, gendered,

Contemporary discussions also address privacy, autonomy, and the risks of misidentification or identity theft, especially in

It
involves
continuity
of
memories,
experiences,
and
bodily
or
psychological
traits,
and
it
intersects
with
questions
of
selfhood,
responsibility,
and
agency.
Philosophical
and
psychological
discussions
often
distinguish
the
persistence
of
identity
from
changing
attributes.
as
a
=
a
or
trigonometric
identities
like
sin^2
x
+
cos^2
x
=
1.
In
these
contexts
identity
expresses
a
universal
or
necessary
relation.
In
philosophy,
identity
is
the
relation
that
each
thing
bears
to
itself,
encapsulating
the
idea
of
self-identity
or
the
sameness
of
an
object
over
time.
or
other
affiliations—and
how
these
identifications
influence
behavior
and
perception.
Digital
identity
refers
to
the
online
representation
of
a
person
or
entity,
comprising
credentials
and
attributes
used
for
authentication
and
authorization.
Identity
management
systems
are
designed
to
verify,
store,
and
protect
these
credentials.
online
environments
and
surveillance
contexts.