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olemasolust

Olemasolust is a term used in Estonian-language philosophy to refer to the inquiry into existence and the nature of being. It covers questions about what it means for something to exist, what kinds of entities can exist, and how existence relates to properties, identity, time, and space. The concept is closely connected to ontology and is used in both analytic and continental traditions to discuss existence as such, rather than the truth of particular propositions alone.

Etymology and usage: The word is formed from the verb olema (to be, to exist) and denotes

Key topics: Olemasolust encompasses questions about the status of physical objects, abstract entities, and possible worlds;

Context and use: In Estonia and the Baltic scholarly milieu, discussions of olemasolust appear in philosophy

See also: ontology, being, existence, metaphysics.

the
study
or
discourse
of
existence.
It
is
commonly
employed
in
academic
texts,
humanities,
and
theology
to
reflect
on
the
nature
of
reality,
presence,
and
being,
as
well
as
how
entities
are
said
to
exist.
the
distinction
between
existing
and
non-existing;
modes
or
properties
of
being;
and
the
debate
over
necessary
versus
contingent
existence.
It
also
addresses
persistence
through
time,
identity
and
individuation,
and
the
influence
of
language,
perception,
and
cognition
on
claims
of
existence.
The
field
may
engage
with
realism
versus
idealism
and
with
phenomenological
approaches
to
how
existence
is
experienced.
curricula,
scholarly
articles,
and
public
discourse
on
reality
and
being.
It
is
often
contrasted
with
related
fields
such
as
epistemology
and
metaphysics
to
clarify
what
existence
entails
and
how
it
can
be
studied.