sophont
English
Etymology
From Ancient Greek σοφός (sophós, “wise”) + ὤν (ṓn, “on”), present participle of εἰμί (eimí, “being, existing, essence”). First used in the 1966 works by Poul Anderson, coined by his wife Karen Anderson.
Pronunciation
- (US) IPA(key): /ˈsoʊfɑnt/
Noun
sophont (plural sophonts)
- (chiefly science fiction) An intelligent being; a being with a base reasoning capacity roughly equivalent to or greater than that of a human being. The word does not apply to machines unless they have true artificial intelligence, rather than mere processing capacity.
- 1966, Anderson, Poul, Trouble Twisters:
- Likewise with the psychology of intelligent species. Most sophonts indeed possess basic instincts which diverge more or less from man's. With those of radically alien motivations we have little contact.
- 1980, David Brin, Sundiver, page 50:
- I'm honored to meet a sophont of the Soro line in person!
- 1992, Vernor Vinge, A Fire Upon the Deep, Tor Books, page 406:
- Evil, they argued, could only have meaning on smaller scales, in the hurt that one sophont does to another.
- 1997, Spider Robinson, Lifehouse, Baen Books, page 2:
- Only one sophont appeared to be involved—and not a sophisticated one.
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Synonyms
References
- “sophont” in Brave New Words: The Oxford Dictionary of Science Fiction, Oxford University Press, 2007, →ISBN, page 194.
- sophont at the OED Science Fiction Citations Project
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