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The phrase "coherent concept" is correct and commonly used in written English.
One can use this phrase to describe a clear and logical idea or thought that is expressed in a sentence or group of sentences. Example: "The author skillfully presented a coherent concept in his thesis statement, making it easy for the reader to understand the main argument of his paper."
Exact(17)
As it's generally used, "information" is a collection of notions, rather than a single coherent concept.
How many people would be surprised to know that warp drive isn't even a coherent concept, let alone a near-future technology?
It provided authoritative chapter and verse about the state of race relations in this country, the absence of a coherent concept of citizenship, and practical, advanced proposals to promote racial equality.
More than 15 years after the fall of the Berlin Wall, the German capital's senator for culture has presented a long-awaited blueprint for a memorial that would unite the remaining sections of the wall into a coherent concept.
Van Gordon Sauter, president of CBS News, said yesterday: "We have evolved the broadcast in an orderly fashion and to the point that it has a coherent concept, a skilled staff, and a strong bank of stories.
There is a further issue that has generated disagreement, even among those theorists who believe privacy is a coherent concept.
Similar(43)
However, a schema can and is still created by recognizing that: different variations make up a single discursive object; statements that make up a discourse are organized by form and connection; discourse is determined by more permanent and coherent concepts; and statements are grouped and regrouped according to themes [7].
This is a reminder that we can't sum up God in clear, coherent concepts.
Additionally and perhaps reflecting its core essence, semantic memory allows us to generate coherent concepts which license generalizations based on meaning rather than surface similarities (Rosch 1975; Smith and Medin 1981; Wittgenstein 2001; Lambon Ralph et al. 2010).
By pairing modality-specific information sources with a transmodal representational hub in this way, the resultant neurocomputational system is capable, not only of fusing multimodal features together into coherent concepts but also to compute novel, semantic-based generalizations.
The hub-and-spoke hypothesis suggests that coherent concepts require both transmodal anterior temporal lobe representations plus these distributed modality-specific sources of information (for discussion of these issues, see: Patterson et al., 2007; Lambon Ralph, 2013).
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com