Artificial intelligent assistant

noematic

noematic, a.
  (nəʊiːˈmætɪk)
  [f. Gr. type νοηµατικός, f. νόηµα thought.]
  a. Of or pertaining to a noem. b. Of, pertaining to, or connected with a noema.

1860 in Worcester. a 1866 J. Grote in Jrnl. Philol. (1872) IV. 55, I shall use the adjectives phonal and noematic; and I shall give the name of phonal or noematic schematisms to modifications of the primary noems and phones. 1931 [see noema]. 1934 Mind XLIII. 310 Kant obviously contemplated the possibility of a noematic ‘given’. 1943 M. Farber Found. Phenomenology xvi. 526 The noematic side (referring to what is correlatively involved, as ‘that which is experienced, thought, etc.’). 1957 B. Lonergan Insight ii. xiv. 415 The pure forms of noetic experience terminating in noematic contents. 1973 J. N. Mohanty in Carr & Casey Explor. Phenomenology 212 An awareness of the truth of its own noematic content.

Oxford English Dictionary

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