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Catttt Posted 4 years ago
Grammar

Matter out of place

Does "matter' in the following sentence mean "material"?


Sentence:

Dirt, as we know from the famous phrase, is “matter out of place,” a definition that, Douglas states, implies two important conditions: “a set of ordered relations and a contravention of that order” (Douglas 1966: 44).

  

Top answer

Hi In order to answer that question, I think we'd need a list of all the important writers who have used "matter" or "material" and go through them one by one. That would take a long time Roughly, I'd say that 'matter' is very simple stuff like protons, atoms and possibly dead molecules or specks of things that, for us, have no form 'Material' is usually something that has a recognignisable form, even if it's only halfway to being useful. Fabric is the obvious example To show how complicated: 'materialism', in sociology, is the belief that the purchase of consumer goods is all that matters.

  • Hi In order to answer that question, I think we'd need a list of all the important writers who have used "matter" or "material" and go through them one by one.
  • That would take a long time Roughly, I'd say that 'matter' is very simple stuff like protons, atoms and possibly dead molecules or specks of things that, for us, have no form 'Material' is usually something that has a recognignisable form, even if it's only halfway to being useful.
  • Fabric is the obvious example To show how complicated: 'materialism', in sociology, is the belief that the purchase of consumer goods is all that matters.
  • In philosophy, it means that the tiniest basic matter is the only thing that counts Much of dirt is dead plant or human human material.
  • You could say that therefore, it is matter.
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2 Answers
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Hi

In order to answer that question, I think we'd need a list of all the important writers who have used "matter" or "material" and go through them one by one. That would take a long time

Roughly, I'd say that 'matter' is very simple stuff like protons, atoms and possibly dead molecules or specks of things that, for us, have no form

'Material' is usually something that has a

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cattttDoes "matter' in the following sentence mean "material"?

Yes. material; stuff; substance

CJ

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