apophatic

English

Etymology

From Ancient Greek ἀποφατικός (apophatikós, negative).

Pronunciation

  • (UK) IPA(key): /apə(ʊ)ˈfatɪk/

Adjective

apophatic (comparative more apophatic, superlative most apophatic)

  1. (theology) Pertaining to knowledge of God obtained through negation rather than positive assertions.
    • 2009, Diarmaid MacCulloch, A History of Christianity, Penguin 2010, p. 488:
      For him, the assertions of Palamas ran counter to the apophatic insistence in Pseudo-Dionysius that God was unknowable in his essence.
    • 2009, Karen Armstrong, The Case for God, Vintage 2010, p. 123:
      Augustine had absorbed the underlying spirit of Greek apophatic theology, but the West did not develop a fully fledged spirituality of silence until the ninth century, when the writings of an unknown Greek author were translated into Latin and achieved near-canonical status in Europe.
  2. (by extension) That which passively defines a thing by describing what it is not characteristic thereof.
    • 2022, China Miéville, chapter 6, in A Spectre, Haunting: On the Communist Manifesto, OCLC 1331706453:
      Here is a sudden interruption of remorseless, detailed exposition with a triple-punch of one-sentence paragraphs of self-indentification (2.1–2.4), and of an apophatic, negative kind, statements of what communists are not, have not, do not []

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