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Transcendence (philosophy)



 
 
In philosophy
Philosophy

Philosophy is the study of general problems concerning matters such as existence, knowledge, truth, beauty, justice, validity, mind, and language....
, the adjective transcendental and the noun transcendence convey three different but related primary meanings, all of them derived from the word's literal meaning (from Latin
Latin

Latin is an Italic language, historically spoken in Latium and Ancient Rome. Through the Military history of the Roman Empire, Latin spread throughout the Mediterranean and a large part of Europe....
), of climbing or going beyond: one sense that originated in Ancient philosophy
Ancient philosophy

This page lists some links to ancient philosophy. In Western philosophy, the spread of Christianity through the Roman Empire marked the end of Hellenistic philosophy and ushered in the beginnings of Medieval philosophy, whereas in Eastern philosophy, the spread of Islam through the Arab Empire marked the end of Old Iranian philosophy and ushe...
, one in Medieval philosophy
Medieval philosophy

Medieval philosophy is the philosophy of Europe and the Middle East in the era now known as medieval or the Middle Ages, the period roughly extending from the fall of the Roman Empire in the fifth century A.D....
, and one in modern philosophy
Modern philosophy

Modern philosophy is philosophy done in Europe and North America between the 17th and early 20th centuries. It is not a specific doctrine or school, although there are certain assumptions common to much of it, which helps to distinguish it from earlier philosophy....
.

first meaning, as part of the concept pair transcendence/immanence
Immanence

Immanence, derived from the Latin in manere "to remain within", refers to philosophical and metaphysical theories of the divine as existing and acting within the mind or the world....
, is used primarily with reference to God
God

God is a deity in theism and deism religions and other belief systems, representing either the sole deity in monotheism, or a principal deity in polytheism....
's relation to the world and is particularly important in theology
Theology

Theology is the study of the existence or attributes of a deity or gods, or more generally the study of religion or spirituality. It is sometimes contrasted with religious studies: theology is understood as the study of religion from an internal perspective , and religious studies as the study of religion from an external perspective....
.






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In philosophy
Philosophy

Philosophy is the study of general problems concerning matters such as existence, knowledge, truth, beauty, justice, validity, mind, and language....
, the adjective transcendental and the noun transcendence convey three different but related primary meanings, all of them derived from the word's literal meaning (from Latin
Latin

Latin is an Italic language, historically spoken in Latium and Ancient Rome. Through the Military history of the Roman Empire, Latin spread throughout the Mediterranean and a large part of Europe....
), of climbing or going beyond: one sense that originated in Ancient philosophy
Ancient philosophy

This page lists some links to ancient philosophy. In Western philosophy, the spread of Christianity through the Roman Empire marked the end of Hellenistic philosophy and ushered in the beginnings of Medieval philosophy, whereas in Eastern philosophy, the spread of Islam through the Arab Empire marked the end of Old Iranian philosophy and ushe...
, one in Medieval philosophy
Medieval philosophy

Medieval philosophy is the philosophy of Europe and the Middle East in the era now known as medieval or the Middle Ages, the period roughly extending from the fall of the Roman Empire in the fifth century A.D....
, and one in modern philosophy
Modern philosophy

Modern philosophy is philosophy done in Europe and North America between the 17th and early 20th centuries. It is not a specific doctrine or school, although there are certain assumptions common to much of it, which helps to distinguish it from earlier philosophy....
.

Original definition

The first meaning, as part of the concept pair transcendence/immanence
Immanence

Immanence, derived from the Latin in manere "to remain within", refers to philosophical and metaphysical theories of the divine as existing and acting within the mind or the world....
, is used primarily with reference to God
God

God is a deity in theism and deism religions and other belief systems, representing either the sole deity in monotheism, or a principal deity in polytheism....
's relation to the world and is particularly important in theology
Theology

Theology is the study of the existence or attributes of a deity or gods, or more generally the study of religion or spirituality. It is sometimes contrasted with religious studies: theology is understood as the study of religion from an internal perspective , and religious studies as the study of religion from an external perspective....
. Here transcendent means that God is completely outside of and beyond the world, as contrasted with the notion that God is manifested in the world. This meaning originates both in the Aristotelian view of God
Aristotelian view of God

File:Francesco Hayez 001.jpgThe Aristotelian and Neo-Aristotelian views of God have been very influential in Western intellectual history....
 as the prime mover, a non-material self-consciousness that is outside of the world. Philosophies of immanence
Immanence

Immanence, derived from the Latin in manere "to remain within", refers to philosophical and metaphysical theories of the divine as existing and acting within the mind or the world....
 such as stoicism
Stoicism

Stoicism was a school of Hellenistic philosophy founded in Athens by Zeno of Citium in the early third century B.C. The stoics considered passionate emotions to be the result of errors in judgment, and that a Sage , or person of "moral and intellectual perfection," would not have such emotions....
, Spinoza, Deleuze or pantheism
Pantheism

Pantheism is the view that everything is part of an all-encompassing Immanence abstract God. In pantheism the Universe, or nature, and God are equivalent....
 maintain that God is manifested in and fully present in the world and the things in the world.

Medieval usage

In the second meaning, which originated in Medieval philosophy, concepts are transcendental if they are broader than what falls within the Aristotelian
Aristotelian

Aristotelian matters may refer to:* Aristotle * List of teachings attributed to Aristotle* Aristotelianism, the philosophical tradition begun by Aristotle...
 categories
Categories (Aristotle)

Categories is a text from Aristotle's Organon that enumerates all the possible kinds of thing which can be the subject or the Predicate of a proposition....
 that were used to organize reality conceptually. Primary examples of the transcendental are the existent (ens) and the characteristics, designated transcendentals, of unity, truth, and goodness.

Transcendent theosophy


Transcendent theosophy or al-hikmat al-muta’liyah (Persian: ???? ???????), the doctrine and philosophy that has been developed and perfected by Persian
Iranian philosophy

Iranian philosophy or Persian philosophy can be traced back as far as to Old Iranian philosophical traditions and thoughts which originated in ancient Indo-Iranian roots and were considerably influenced by Zarathustra's teachings....
 Islamic philosopher
Early Islamic philosophy

Early Islamic philosophy or classical Islamic philosophy is a period of intense philosophical development beginning in the 2nd century AH of the Islamic calendar and lasting until the 6th century AH ....
, Mulla Sadra
Mulla Sadra

?adr ad-Din Mu?ammad Shirazi also called Mulla Sadra was a Iranian philosophy Islamic philosophy, Kalam and Ulema who led the Iranian cultural renaissance in the 17th century....
, is one of two main disciplines of Islamic philosophy
Islamic philosophy

Islamic philosophy is a branch of Islamic studies, and is a longstanding attempt to create harmony between philosophy and the religious teachings of Islam ....
 which is very alive and active even today.

The expression al-hikmat al-muta’liyah comprises two terms al-hikmat (meaning theosophia) and muta’liyah (meaning exalted or Transcendent). This school of Mulla Sadra
Mulla Sadra

?adr ad-Din Mu?ammad Shirazi also called Mulla Sadra was a Iranian philosophy Islamic philosophy, Kalam and Ulema who led the Iranian cultural renaissance in the 17th century....
 in Islamic philosophy is usually called al-hikmat al-muta’liyah. It is a most appropriate name for his school, not only for historical reasons, but also because the doctrines of Mulla Sadra are veritably both hikmah or theosophy in its original sense and an intellectual vision of the transcendent which leads to the Transcendent Itself. So Mulla Sadra’s school is transcendent for both historical and metaphysical reasons.

A concept that lies at the heart of Mulla Sadra's philosophy is the idea of "existence precedes essence
Existence precedes essence

The proposition that existence precedes essence is a central claim of existentialism, which reverses the traditional philosophical view that the essence or nature of a thing is more fundamental and immutable than its existence....
", a key foundational concept of existentialism
Existentialism

Existentialism is a term that has been applied to the work of a number of nineteenth and twentieth century philosophers who, despite profound doctrinal differences, took the human subject — not merely the thinking subject, but the acting, feeling, living human individual and his or her conditions of existence — as a starting point...
. This was also the opposite of the idea of "essence
Essence

In philosophy, essence is the attribute or set of attributes that make an object or substance theory what it fundamentally is, and which it has by metaphysical necessity, and without which it loses its identity....
 precedes existence
Existence

In common usage, existence is the world of which we are aware through our senses, but in philosophy the word has a more specialized meaning, and is often contrasted with essence....
" previously supported by Avicenna
Avicenna

, known as Abu Ali Sina Balkhi or Ibn Sina and commonly known in English by his Latinized name Avicenna , was a Persian people polymath and the foremost Islamic medicine and Early Islamic philosophy of his time....
 and his school of Avicennism
Avicennism

Avicennism is a school of early Islamic philosophy which began during the middle of the Islamic Golden Age. The school was founded by Avicenna , an 11th-century Iranian philosophy who attempted to redefine the course of Islamic philosophy and channel it into new directions....
 as well as Shahab al-Din Suhrawardi
Shahab al-Din Suhrawardi

"Shahab ad-Din" Ya?y? ibn ?abash as-Suhrawardi was a Persian philosopher, Sufism and the founder of the School of Illumination, one of the most important schools in Islamic philosophy....
 and his school of Illuminationism
Illuminationist philosophy

For other uses, see Illuminati .Illuminationist Philosophy is an Iranian philosophy and Islamic philosophy first developed by Shahab al-Din Suhrawardi , the famous Persian people philosopher....
.

Kant (and modern philosophy)


In modern philosophy, Kant
KANT

KANT is a computer algebra system for mathematicians interested in algebraic number theory, performing sophisticated computations in algebraic number fields, in Global field function fields, and in local fields....
 introduced a new term - transcendental, thus instituting a new, third meaning. In his theory of knowledge
Epistemology

Epistemology or theory of knowledge is the branch of philosophy concerned with the nature and scope of knowledge. It addresses the questions:...
, this concept is concerned with the conditions of possibility of knowledge itself. He also opposed the term transcendental to the term transcendent, the latter meaning "that, which goes beyond" (transcends) any possible knowledge of a human being. For him transcendental meant knowledge about our cognitive faculty with regard to how objects are possible a priori
A priori and a posteriori (philosophy)

The terms "a priori" and "a posteriori" are used in philosophy to distinguish two types of knowledge, justifications or arguments....
. "I call all knowledge transcendental if it is occupied, not with objects, but with the way that we can possibly know objects even before we experience them." He also equated transcendental with that which is "...in respect of the subject's faculty of cognition." Something is transcendental if it plays a role in the way in which the mind "constitutes" objects and makes it possible for us to experience them as objects in the first place. Ordinary knowledge is knowledge of objects; transcendental knowledge is knowledge of how it is possible for us to experience those objects as objects. This is based on Kant's acceptance of David Hume
David Hume

David Hume was a Scotland philosopher, economist, historian and a key figure in the history of Western philosophy and the Scottish Enlightenment....
's argument that certain general features of objects (e.g. persistence, causal relationships) cannot derive from the sense impressions we have of them. Kant argues that the mind must contribute those features and make it possible for us to experience objects as objects. In the central part of his Critique of Pure Reason
Critique of Pure Reason

The Critique of Pure Reason by Immanuel Kant, first published in 1781, second edition 1787, is one of the most influential works in the history of philosophy....
, the "Transcendental Deduction of the Categories", Kant argues for a deep interconnection between the ability to have self-consciousness and the ability to experience a world of objects. Through a process of synthesis, the mind generates both the structure of objects and its own unity.

A metaphilosophical question discussed by many Kantian scholars is how transcendental reflection is itself possible. Stephen Palmquist
Stephen Palmquist

Stephen Richard Palmquist is a contemporary philosopher known for his work in interpretation of the work of Immanuel Kant, and on philosophy of religion, political theology, and the logic of symbolism....
 interprets Kant's appeal to faith
Faith

Faith is the confident belief in the truth of or trustworthiness of a person, idea, or thing. It is also used for a belief, characteristically without proof....
 as his most effective solution to this problem.

For Kant, the "transcendent", as opposed to the "transcendental", is that which lies beyond what our faculty of knowledge can legitimately know. Hegel's counter-argument to Kant was that to know a boundary is also to be aware of what it bounds and as such what lies beyond it – in other words, to have already transcended it.

In phenomenology, the "transcendent" is that which transcends our own consciousness - that which is objective rather than only a phenomenon of consciousness. Noema
Noema

Noema is Greek for the meaning of something. It is the mental equivalent of a Schema or schematic of something. It is the "representation" of an experience of a meaning based system through its own self-referential process....
 is employed in phenomenology to refer to the terminus
Terminus

Terminus is a Latin word that literally means boundary marker but can refer to:*Train station#Terminus, a train station acting as an end destination...
 of an intention as given for consciousness
Consciousness

Consciousness is a difficult term to define, because the word is used and understood in a wide variety of ways, so that it frequently happens that what one person sees as a definition of consciousness is seen by others as about something else altogether....
.

Jean-Paul Sartre
Jean-Paul Sartre

Jean-Paul Charles Aymard Sartre , commonly known simply as Jean-Paul Sartre , was a French existentialism philosopher, playwright, novelist, screenwriter, political activist, biographer, and literary criticism....
 also speaks of transcendence in his works. In Being and Nothingness, Sartre utilizes transcendence to describe the relation of the self to the object oriented world, as well as our concrete relations with others. For Sartre, the for-itself is sometimes called a transcendence. Additionally if the other is viewed strictly as an object, much like any other object, then the other is, for the for-itself, a transcendence-transcended. When the for-itself grasps the other in the others world, and grasps the subjectivity that the other has, it is referred to as transcending-transcendence. Thus, Sartre defines relations with others in terms of transcendence.

Colloquial usage

In everyday language, "transcendence" means "going beyond", and "self-transcendence" means going beyond a prior form or state of oneself. Mystical experience is thought of as a particularly advanced state of self-transcendence, in which the sense of a separate self is abandoned. "Self transcendence" is believed to be psychometrically measurable, and (at least partially) inherited. The discovery of this is described in the book "The God Gene" by Dean Hamer
Dean Hamer

Dr Dean Hamer is an United States genetics. Hamer is the director of the Gene Structure and Regulation Unit at the National Cancer Institute ....
, although this has been criticized by commentators such as Carl Zimmer
Carl Zimmer

Carl Zimmer is a popular science writer and blogger, especially regarding the study of evolution and parasites. He has written several books and contributes science essays to publications such as The New York Times and Discover ....
.

See also

  • Immanence
    Immanence

    Immanence, derived from the Latin in manere "to remain within", refers to philosophical and metaphysical theories of the divine as existing and acting within the mind or the world....
    , which is the reverse of transcendence.
  • Maslow's hierarchy of needs
    Maslow's hierarchy of needs

    Maslow's hierarchy of needs is a theory in psychology, proposed by Abraham Maslow in his 1943 paper A Theory of Human Motivation, which he subsequently extended to include his observations of humans' innate curiosity....
  • Metaphysics
    Metaphysics

    Metaphysics investigates principles of reality transcending those of any particular science. cosmology and ontology are traditional branches of metaphysics....
  • Ontology
    Ontology

    Ontology in philosophy is the study of the nature of being, existence or reality in general, as well as of the basic category of being and their relations....
  • Transcendental idealism
    Transcendental idealism

    Transcendental idealism is a doctrine founded by Germany philosophy Immanuel Kant in the eighteenth century. Kant's doctrine maintains that human experience of things consists of how they phenomenon ? implying a fundamentally subject-based component, rather than being an activity that directly comprehends the things as they are noumenon....
  • Transcendentalism
    Transcendentalism

    Transcendentalism was a group of new ideas in literature, religion, culture, and philosophy that emerged in New England in the early to middle 19th century....
  • God gene
    God gene

    The 'God gene' hypothesis proposes that human beings inherit a set of genes that predisposes them to believe in a higher power. The idea has been postulated by Genetics Dean Hamer, the director of the Gene Structure and Regulation Unit at the United States National Cancer Institute, who has written a book on the subject titled, The God Gene...
  • For the traditional Jewish mystical
    Kabbalah

    Kabbalah is a discipline and school of thought discussing the mysticism aspect of Judaism. It is a set of esoteric teachings that are meant to explain the relationship between an infinite, eternal and essentially unknowable Creator deity with the finite and mortal universe of His creation....
     understanding, see the article on Tzimtzum
    Tzimtzum

    In the kabbalah theory of creationism, Tzimtzum refers to the notion, based on the teachings of Isaac Luria , that God in Judaism "contracted" his Ein Sof light in order to allow for a "conceptual space" in which a wiktionary:finite, seemingly independent world could exist....
    .


External links

  • What is Self Transcendence?
  • Stephen Palmquist
    Stephen Palmquist

    Stephen Richard Palmquist is a contemporary philosopher known for his work in interpretation of the work of Immanuel Kant, and on philosophy of religion, political theology, and the logic of symbolism....
    , (Lanham: University Press of America, 1993). See especially Part Two.