Actuality
Actuality
In Husserl1. (Ger. Wirklichkeit) Effective individual existence in space and time, as contrasted with mere possibility. 2. (Ger. Aktualitt) The character of a conscious process as lived in by the ego, as contrasted with the “inactuality” of conscious processes more or less far from the ego. To say the ego lives in a particular conscious process is to say the ego is busied with the object intended in that process. Attending is a special form of being busied. — D.C.
Fuente: The Dictionary of Philosophy
Actuality
The mode of being in which things affect or are affected. The realm of fact; the field of happenings. Syn. with existence, sometimes with reality. Opposite ofpossibility or potentiality. See Energeia. — J.K.F.