transcendental
English
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˌtɹænsɛnˈdɛntəl/
Noun
transcendental (plural transcendentals)
- (obsolete) A transcendentalist.
- (philosophy, metaphysics, Platonism, Christian theology, usually in the plural) Any one of the three transcendental properties of being: truth, beauty or goodness, which respectively are the ideals of science, art and religion and the principal subjects of the study of logic, aesthetics and ethics.
- 2002, Robert C. Neville, Religion in Late Modernity, State University of New York Press, page 72,
- In deference to Christian usage we can say that the transcendentals constitute the Logos within which everything has its being and according to which everything is made.
- 2012, Lukas Soderstrom (translator), Jean Grondin, Introduction to Metaphysics: From Parmenides to Levinas, Columbia University Press, page 105,
- These predicates of Being are what the Medievals called, using a term that will have a fertile future, "transcendentals" (often called the "universals") because they transcend all particular genera, following the example of Being.96 A quarrel over these transcendentals even shook the later Middle Ages. The quarrel stemmed from the question of whether the existence of these transcendentals was real or intellectual (also called nominal).
- 2012, Jan Aertsen, Medieval Philosophy as Transcendental Thought: From Philip the Chancellor (ca. 1225) to Francisco Suárez, BRILL, page 515,
- The medieval doctrine of the transcendentals is closely connected with a metaphysical conception of reality, but is there a science of being in William of Ockham (ca. 1285-1347)?
- 2015, Anthony Howard, Humanise: Why Human-Centred Leadership is the Key to the 21st Century, Wiley, page 70,
- Another fascinating thing about the transcendentals is that each is fully contained in the others. When you appreciate beauty, for example, you recognise the presence of goodness and truth. When you grasp the truth about something you experience a moment of beauty in, perhaps, the simplicity or power of the insight. When you observe goodness in the actions of another person you are seeing truth and beauty in operation.
- 2002, Robert C. Neville, Religion in Late Modernity, State University of New York Press, page 72,
Translations
transcendental property of being
Adjective
transcendental (comparative more transcendental, superlative most transcendental)
- (philosophy) Concerned with the a priori or intuitive basis of knowledge, independent of experience.
- 1985, J. N. Mohanty, The Possibility of Transcendental Philosophy, Kluwer Academic (Martinus Nijhoff), page xiii,
- The best way to demonstrate the possibility of something is to show its actuality, for actuality implies possibility. At least since Kant, transcendental philosophies have been on the scene. However, such simple demonstration of the possibility of transcendental philosophy has not been effective and is not likely to be so — so strong is the presumption that transcendental philosophy just could not be possible, or, if it was possible earlier, it is not possible now.
- 1999, Robert Stern, 4: On Kant's Response to Hume: The Second Analogy as Transcendental Argument, Robert Stern (editor), Transcendental Arguments: Problems and Prospects, 2003, Oxford University Press (Clarendon Press), Paperback, page 47,
- Whilst it was once held that transcendental arguments could provide a direct and straightforward refutation of scepticism, this view now seems over-optimistic.
- 2007, Steven Crowell, Jeff Malpas, Chapter 1: Introduction Steven Crowell, Jeff Malpas, (editors), Transcendental Heidegger, Stanford University Press, page 1,
- Not only does Heidegger's early work stand within the framework of transcendental phenomenology as established by Husserl—even though it also contests and revises that framework—but that thinking also stands in a close relationship to the critical philosophy of Immanuel Kant, and specifically to the transcendental project, and modes of argument, of Kant's Critique of Pure Reason.
- 1985, J. N. Mohanty, The Possibility of Transcendental Philosophy, Kluwer Academic (Martinus Nijhoff), page xiii,
- Superior; surpassing all others; extraordinary; transcendent.
- Mystical or supernatural.
- (algebra, number theory, field theory, of a number or an element of an extension field) Not algebraic (i.e., not the root of any polynomial that has positive degree and rational coefficients).
- 1975, Alan Baker, Transcendental Number Theory, Cambridge University Press, 1990, 2nd Edition, page 1,
- The theory of transcendental numbers was originated by Liouville in his famous memoir† of 1844 in which he obtained, for the first time, a class, très-étendue, as it was described in the title of the paper, of numbers that satisfy no algebraic equation with integer coefficients.
- 2005, Juan G. Roederer, Information and Its Role in Nature, Springer, page 28,
- If the distribution of decimal digits of (or any other transcendental number) is truly random (suspected but not yet mathematically proven!), given any arbitrary finite sequence of whole numbers, that sequence would be included an infinite number of times in the decimal expansion of .
- 1975, Alan Baker, Transcendental Number Theory, Cambridge University Press, 1990, 2nd Edition, page 1,
- (algebra, field theory, of an extension field) That contains elements that are not algebraic.
- 2006, Steven Roman, Field Theory, Springer, 2nd Edition, Graduate Texts in Mathematics 158, page 108,
- Suppose that is purely transcendental. Show that any simple extension of contained in (but not equal to ) is transcendental over .
- 2006, Steven Roman, Field Theory, Springer, 2nd Edition, Graduate Texts in Mathematics 158, page 108,
Antonyms
Hypernyms
- (not the root of a polynomial with rational coefficients): irrational
Derived terms
terms derived directly from transcendental
- purely transcendental
- transcendental ego
- transcendental function
- transcendental idealism
- transcendental meditation
- transcendental number
- transcendental number theory
Related terms
terms etymologically related to transcendental
Translations
independent of experience
|
|
supernatural
|
|
not algebraic; containing elements that are not algebraic
|
|
Further reading
Transcendence on Wikipedia.Wikipedia- (philosophy):
Transcendentals on Wikipedia.Wikipedia Epistemology#Idealism on Wikipedia.Wikipedia Metaphysics on Wikipedia.Wikipedia Critique of Pure Reason on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
- (algebra, number theory, field theory):
Transcendental number on Wikipedia.Wikipedia Liouville number#Liouville numbers and transcendence on Wikipedia.Wikipedia Field (mathematics)#Transcendence bases on Wikipedia.Wikipedia Field extension#Transcendental extension on Wikipedia.Wikipedia- Transcendental extension on Encyclopedia of Mathematics
- Transcendental Extension on Wolfram MathWorld
German
Adjective
transcendental (comparative transcendentaler, superlative am transcendentalsten)
- Obsolete spelling of transzendental
Declension
Positive forms of transcendental
number & gender | singular | plural | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
masculine | feminine | neuter | all genders | ||
predicative | er ist transcendental | sie ist transcendental | es ist transcendental | sie sind transcendental | |
strong declension (without article) |
nominative | transcendentaler | transcendentale | transcendentales | transcendentale |
genitive | transcendentalen | transcendentaler | transcendentalen | transcendentaler | |
dative | transcendentalem | transcendentaler | transcendentalem | transcendentalen | |
accusative | transcendentalen | transcendentale | transcendentales | transcendentale | |
weak declension (with definite article) |
nominative | der transcendentale | die transcendentale | das transcendentale | die transcendentalen |
genitive | des transcendentalen | der transcendentalen | des transcendentalen | der transcendentalen | |
dative | dem transcendentalen | der transcendentalen | dem transcendentalen | den transcendentalen | |
accusative | den transcendentalen | die transcendentale | das transcendentale | die transcendentalen | |
mixed declension (with indefinite article) |
nominative | ein transcendentaler | eine transcendentale | ein transcendentales | (keine) transcendentalen |
genitive | eines transcendentalen | einer transcendentalen | eines transcendentalen | (keiner) transcendentalen | |
dative | einem transcendentalen | einer transcendentalen | einem transcendentalen | (keinen) transcendentalen | |
accusative | einen transcendentalen | eine transcendentale | ein transcendentales | (keine) transcendentalen |
Comparative forms of transcendental
number & gender | singular | plural | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
masculine | feminine | neuter | all genders | ||
predicative | er ist transcendentaler | sie ist transcendentaler | es ist transcendentaler | sie sind transcendentaler | |
strong declension (without article) |
nominative | transcendentalerer | transcendentalere | transcendentaleres | transcendentalere |
genitive | transcendentaleren | transcendentalerer | transcendentaleren | transcendentalerer | |
dative | transcendentalerem | transcendentalerer | transcendentalerem | transcendentaleren | |
accusative | transcendentaleren | transcendentalere | transcendentaleres | transcendentalere | |
weak declension (with definite article) |
nominative | der transcendentalere | die transcendentalere | das transcendentalere | die transcendentaleren |
genitive | des transcendentaleren | der transcendentaleren | des transcendentaleren | der transcendentaleren | |
dative | dem transcendentaleren | der transcendentaleren | dem transcendentaleren | den transcendentaleren | |
accusative | den transcendentaleren | die transcendentalere | das transcendentalere | die transcendentaleren | |
mixed declension (with indefinite article) |
nominative | ein transcendentalerer | eine transcendentalere | ein transcendentaleres | (keine) transcendentaleren |
genitive | eines transcendentaleren | einer transcendentaleren | eines transcendentaleren | (keiner) transcendentaleren | |
dative | einem transcendentaleren | einer transcendentaleren | einem transcendentaleren | (keinen) transcendentaleren | |
accusative | einen transcendentaleren | eine transcendentalere | ein transcendentaleres | (keine) transcendentaleren |
Superlative forms of transcendental
number & gender | singular | plural | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
masculine | feminine | neuter | all genders | ||
predicative | er ist am transcendentalsten | sie ist am transcendentalsten | es ist am transcendentalsten | sie sind am transcendentalsten | |
strong declension (without article) |
nominative | transcendentalster | transcendentalste | transcendentalstes | transcendentalste |
genitive | transcendentalsten | transcendentalster | transcendentalsten | transcendentalster | |
dative | transcendentalstem | transcendentalster | transcendentalstem | transcendentalsten | |
accusative | transcendentalsten | transcendentalste | transcendentalstes | transcendentalste | |
weak declension (with definite article) |
nominative | der transcendentalste | die transcendentalste | das transcendentalste | die transcendentalsten |
genitive | des transcendentalsten | der transcendentalsten | des transcendentalsten | der transcendentalsten | |
dative | dem transcendentalsten | der transcendentalsten | dem transcendentalsten | den transcendentalsten | |
accusative | den transcendentalsten | die transcendentalste | das transcendentalste | die transcendentalsten | |
mixed declension (with indefinite article) |
nominative | ein transcendentalster | eine transcendentalste | ein transcendentalstes | (keine) transcendentalsten |
genitive | eines transcendentalsten | einer transcendentalsten | eines transcendentalsten | (keiner) transcendentalsten | |
dative | einem transcendentalsten | einer transcendentalsten | einem transcendentalsten | (keinen) transcendentalsten | |
accusative | einen transcendentalsten | eine transcendentalste | ein transcendentalstes | (keine) transcendentalsten |
Romanian
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˌtrans.t͡ʃe.denˈtal/
Adjective
transcendental m or n (feminine singular transcendentală, masculine plural transcendentali, feminine and neuter plural transcendentale)
Spanish
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.