Metaphysics
WordNet
noun
(1) The philosophical study of being and knowing
WiktionaryText
Etymology
From metaphysica < Byzantine Greek < + . The word derives from the title of the collection by Aristotle .
Noun
- The branch of philosophy which studies fundamental principles intended to describe or explain all that is, and which are not themselves explained by anything more fundamental; the study of first principles; the study of being insofar as it is being (ens in quantum ens).
- Philosophers sometimes say that metaphysics is the study of the ultimate nature of the universe.
- The view or theory of a particular philosopher or school of thinkers concerning the first principles which describe or explain all that is.
- The metaphysics of Thomas Aquinas holds that all real beings have both essence and existence.
- In Aristotelian metaphysics physical objects have both form and matter.
- In his Pensées, Pascal mentioned some first principles recognized within his metaphysics: space, time, motion, and number.
- Any fundamental principles or rules.
- 1990, Lance Morrow, "Gorbachev: The Unlikely Patron of Change," Time, 1 Jan,
- The metaphysics of global power has changed. Markets are now more valuable than territory.
- 1990, Lance Morrow, "Gorbachev: The Unlikely Patron of Change," Time, 1 Jan,
- The study of a supersensual realm or of phenomena which transcend the physical world.
- I have a collection of books on metaphysics, covering astral projection, reincarnation, and communication with spirits.
- Displeasingly abstruse, complex material on any subject.
- This political polemic strikes me as a protracted piece of overwrought, fog shrouded metaphysics!
- Plural of countable senses of metaphysic.