The Entity reference article from the English Wikipedia on 24-Jul-2004
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Entity

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An entity is something that has a distinct, separate, existence, though it need not be a material existence. In particular, abstractions and legal fictions are usually regarded as entities. In general, there is also no presumption that an entity is animate.

An entity could be viewed as a set containing subsets. This set itself is among other sets. In philosophy, these sets are said to be abstract object as they do not refer to anything animate. The distinctive propriety of an entity rationaly yields the existence of the relativily distinct entities.

The word 'entity' is often useful when one wants to refer to something that could be a human being, a non-human animal, a non-thinking life-form such as a plant or fungus, or a lifeless object; for instance, one could say that any entity that enters a black hole would be transported, in many pieces, to another dimension.

Sometimes, the word 'entity' is used in a general sense of a being, whether or not the referent has material existence; e.g. God is often referred to as an 'Entity' with no corporeal form.

In law, an entity is something capable of bearing legal rights and obligations. It generally means "legal entity" or "artificial person" but also includes "natural person.

Table of contents
1 Related concepts
2 Specialized uses
3 See also

Related concepts

Specialized uses

See also