The Emergence Machine

Engineering Seismology

abstract · Physics · Level 3 · E10

E10Institutions

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

Building on the understanding of force as a push or pull between energy and matter, and the systematic approach of science-concepts, engineering seismology emerges as the study of how motion and force interact with structures and infrastructure, revealing the underlying dynamics of earthquake effects.

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Wiktionary senses

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

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

Historical origin

Origin word
engineering seismology
Origin language
English

Prerequisite chain

Possible path of this concept down to the fundamental substrate.

thisfoundationsL3L2L1L0Engineering Seis…ForceScience ConceptActionChangeMatterMotionEnergyPatternSpaceTimeE1 concrete → E14 abstract

Neighborhood

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

thisprerequisitesEngineering Seis…L3MotionL1ForceL2Science ConceptL2E1 concrete → E14 abstract

In other languages

Prerequisites

What you need to understand first.

  • Motion L1 (requires)
    Understanding motion helps understand force-related concept engineering-seismology
  • Force L2 (requires)
    engineering seismology requires understanding force as a foundational concept
  • Science Concept L2 (requires)
    to understand engineering-seismology, one must understand science-concept