The Emergence Machine

Consanguinity

abstract · Anthropology · Level 10 · E9

E9Cultures

Each concept here is mapped to its prerequisites — the ideas you'd need first to understand it — all the way down to four foundations: Space, Time, Energy, Pattern. Click any prerequisite to drill down, or scroll for the chain graph.

Trace. Question. Emerge.

Emergence definition

consanguinity emerges from family. It requires culture, time.

Compare Consanguinity with…

Wiktionary senses

External reference — all senses of the word “consanguinity” on Wiktionary. This atlas concept maps to only the slice of meaning relevant to the prerequisite graph.

Loading senses…

Source: Wiktionary — “consanguinity”. Content available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

Historical origin

Origin word
consanguinity
Origin language
English

Prerequisite chain

Possible path of this concept down to the fundamental substrate.

thisfoundationsL10L9L8L7L2L1L0ConsanguinityCultureSocietyCommunityFamilyLanguage… intermediate l…FormInformationLifeProcessSignificanceActionChangeCollectionEnergyPatternSpaceTimeE1 concrete → E14 abstract

Neighborhood

Direct prerequisites above, concepts that depend on this one below.

thisprerequisitesConsanguinityL10SignificanceL1FamilyL7CultureL9E1 concrete → E14 abstract

In other languages

Prerequisites

What you need to understand first.

  • Significance L1 (requires)
    Consanguinity refers to the social and cultural significance of familial relationships and kinship ties that persist over time, shaping identity, belonging, and social organization within human societies.
  • Family L7 (foundational) Sociology sense
    Family provides the foundational basis for understanding consanguinity.
  • Culture L9 (requires)
    culture is a core concept needed to understand consanguinity