What is another word for convergences?

Pronunciation: [kənvˈɜːd͡ʒənsɪz] (IPA)

Convergences refer to the point at which two or more things come together or meet. Synonyms for this term may include union, merging, integration, integration, intersection, junction, or meeting point. Another synonym could be convergence point, as it connotes the idea of a central location where various paths meet. Other related terms may include alignment, coherence, congruity, harmony, or consistency. These words convey the idea of things coming together in agreement or harmony. In contrast, antonyms of convergence could be divergence, separation, or disconnection, which indicate a lack of unity or agreement. Regardless of the word chosen, describing convergences and points of agreement can help individuals better understand the connections between disparate elements.

What are the hypernyms for Convergences?

A hypernym is a word with a broad meaning that encompasses more specific words called hyponyms.

Famous quotes with Convergences

  • The long history of mankind is studded with convergences, perhaps most notably in social systems and the use of artefacts and technology. But for human history, set in the arrow of time, there appears to be one intolerable stumbling-block. This is the catastrophic failure in human values and decency.
    Simon Conway Morris
  • There must be other leaps in life - as momentous as the "mirror stage" - that Lacan didn't mention. Some are universal; others, culturally particular. To understand that your parents are human (and not an element of the natural world), that they're separate from you, that they were children once, that they were born and came into the world, is another leap. It's as if you hadn't seen who they were earlier - just as, before you were ten months old, you didn't know it was you in the mirror. This happens when you're sixteen or seventeen. Not long after - maybe a year - you find out your parents will die. It's not as if you haven't encountered death already. But, before now, your precocious mind can't accommodate your parents' death except as an academic nicety - to be dismissed gently as too literary and sentimental. After that day, your parents' dying suddenly becomes simple. It grows clear that you're alone and always have been, though certain convergences start to look miraculous - for instance, between your father, mother, and yourself. Though your parents don't die immediately - what you've had is a realisation, not a premonition - you'll carry around this knowledge for their remaining decades or years. You won't think, looking at them, "You're going to die". It'll be an unspoken fact of existence. Nothing about them will surprise you anymore.
    Amit Chaudhuri

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