definition of adaptability

 
Adaptability: appearance (left) + organization (left & right) + variation (right)

  • Phenomenal (self-)adaptability is supposed to be underlain supercomplexly by phenomenal monocomplex (self-)appearance (see: left figure), i.e. energy times spacetime, (self-)organization (left & right figure), i.e. structure times function, and (self-)variation (right figure), i.e. chemical variability times electromagnetic variety (see: figures above, appearance, organization & variation, adapt-ability//complex properties & physical correlations//appearance (55), organization (56), variation (57) & adaptability (64)).
  • Phenomenal adaptability is supposed to denote the supercomplex ability of all real phenomena to adapt themselves, within certain limits, to intrinsic, i.e. spontaneous or self-mutational as well as extrinsic, i.e. conditional, contextual, circumstantial or environmental energetic (ex)changes. In other words, any natural phenomenon is supposed to be a complex (self-)adaptive system (CAS).*
  • Together, phenomenal supercomplex adaptability, general event-like character and radiation are supposed to underlie nature's metacomplex phenomenon-like character (see: adaptability// complex properties & phenomenality).

*Adaptability is thought to be a property which includes, integratedly, all phenomenal basic, simple and complex proper-ties except phenomenal radiation and general event-like character. This implies that phenomenal adaptations concern almost all phenomenal properties directly, but radiation and general event-like character only indirectly.


Internet resources & literature references


Appearance:

Organization:

Variation:


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