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    According to the Relational Event Theory, sounds are dist... — Carmelics
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    Supports→Waves in a medium are not sounds themselves but effects of sounds.

    According to the Relational Event Theory, sounds are disturbings of a medium.

    PerceptionPhilosophy of Language
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    Related propositions within the same area of thought.
    An effect of an event is distinct from the event itself.Waves in a medium are not sounds themselves but effects of sounds.Waves in the medium are produced as a result of that disturbing event.

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    The Relational Event Theory holds that sounds are 'disturbings' of a m...95%The Relational Event Theory holds that sounds depend existentially on ...83%Waves in a medium are not sounds themselves but effects of sounds.83%Aristotle's remarks in On the Soul are compatible with the Relational ...83%

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    According to the Relational Event Theory, sounds are events which involve both the source and the surrounding medium. They are relational rather than “monadic” events. (The distinction between monadic and relational events is not to be taken as cast in iron, since the latter can be reduced to the former by making the mereological sum of sources and surrounding medium the subject of sounds.) O’Callaghan (2002, 2007) has developed such a view at some length. He notes that the wave conception of so

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