Here

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Here is "this place"; the place where a thinking subject is, or places itself.

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[edit] In common use

You may be here.
You may be here.

Here is the place at which one is located, wherever that happens to be. How broad "place" is to be taken depends on context, and likewise does "here". For example, to someone living in New York City, Athens is not "here". In a discussion involving Mars, however, both New York and Athens are located on Earth, and in that context Earth (and by transitivity both cities) might be considered "here", while Mars would be "there".

Likewise, the most specific use of "here" that generalizes over almost all humans is in reference to Earth (the exception being astronauts, who may be considered to have "left" Earth).

[edit] In grammar

In English, here can function as a pronoun, an adverb, and in some dialects as an adjective. It is a deictic expression involving deixis of space - that is to say, its referent is dependent on the location in which it is uttered.

It comes from Old English hēr, in which language it finds use in the meaning "at this time" as well as the meaning "in this place". It is, as such, cognate with Latin cis, "on this side of".

One can contrast here with there, which is "somewhere else", with anywhere, which theoretically includes both "here" and all possible "theres", and with nowhere, which excludes both here and there.

Hereabouts extends the boundaries of here fuzzily.

Hither means "to here," implying a direction; here can be used in this sense as well ("come hither" versus the more contemporary "come here"). Similarly, hence means "from here". Hence also means "therefore", in which sense it expresses a figurative rather than literal meaning of "from here"—as opposed to thence, which means "therefrom".

Languages have different approaches for the division of space. In English, here and there correspond roughly with this and that; this is the object that is here, while that refers to what's over there. Latin, by contrast, divides space three ways. While hic can mean "here" as an adverb, or "this one" as a pronoun, and ille corresponds to "that one yonder" (illic is the corresponding adverb of location), Latin also adds iste, "that one of yours", and istic, "there by you". Spanish also has three divisions of space, which vary solely by distance rather than possession: aquí corresponds directly to "here", while allí and allá both mean "there", with allí referring to a nearer location than allá. Other languages include even more possible divisions of space. Translations from languages with a richer division of locations to languages with fewer such divisions may use additional words to convey the meaning, such as "there" versus "over there", or may simply drop the distinctions entirely.

[edit] In science

For each, physically there is most likely only one here while an infinity of theres exist.

Here can be quantified within a coordinate system; on Earth, the geographic coordinate system is most commonly used for absolute positioning.

In spacetime here is also now, as opposed to then (past) or when (future). It is therefore also the point in time where a subject is, or places itself. Since time is typically perceived as "passing", "here" moves even if the subject is stationary in space. If one were to travel to a different point in time, one would find oneself in a different "here" on arrival. Here moves.

By contrast, the term "here and now" in colloquial speech refers not to a point in spacetime, but to the concept of one's personal actions and awareness at any given time.

Relativistically speaking Albert Einstein's theory of relativity is most dependent on the meaning of "here" as in real terms it states that measurements made relative to "here" define the reality of what is being measured regardless of any measurements made of the same phenomenon from anywhere else (i.e. "there"), and yet the measurements made relative to "there" (being "here" for whatever may be there) also define that reality even if they seem to contradict those measurements made relative to "here".

[edit] In religion and philosophy

Omnipresence is one of the traditional attributes of God in monotheistic theology, implying that "God is here" would be a true statement regardless of the speaker's whereabouts. It is less clear whether "here" as defined in this article is a meaningful concept for an omnipresent being itself, because this hinges on its ability to "place itself" somewhere.

Baba Ram Dass, the American Hindu writer, wrote a 1971 book in which he advised his readers to Be Here Now.

In philosophy or psychology, the metaphysical issue of what it means for a subject to be "here" is tied to consciousness. Indeed, here and now may be all there is, depending on one's level of awareness or consciousness.

Many philosophers have also pondered on the other part of the here issue—as mentioned above being the metaphysical "NOW". The difficult question is asked, "How is that all (sentient) beings experience 'now' at the same time?" There is no logical reason why this should be the case and no easy answer to the question.

[edit] In hypertext

In hypertexts, "click here", where "here" refers to the hyperlink text itself, is often used as the displayed text for the link. However, web usability experts discourage such use.[1]

[edit] See also