释义 |
meontic, a. Philos. Brit. |meɪˈɒntɪk|, |ˌmiːˈɒntɪk|, U.S. |meɪˈɑntɪk|, |miˈɑntɪk| [‹ ancient Greek µή not + ontic adj., after ancient Greek µὴ ὄν that which is not, nothingness, void (see meonic adj.). Compare earlier meonic adj.] = meonic adj. Also: indicating that aspect of artistic creativity which seeks to depict what has not been seen or experienced in reality (contrasted with mimetic).
1951P. Tillich Systematic Theol. I. 209 Christianity has rejected the concept of mē-ontic matter on the basis of the doctrine of creatio ex nihilo... The nihil out of which God creates is ouk on, the undialectical negation of being. 1961C. O. Schrag Existence & Freedom vii. 177 Man's being, argues Berdyaev, springs from a primeval, uncreated, meontic freedom, which provides the ontological condition for an ethics of creativity. 1979T. MacFarland Boundary 2 7 285 The opposition of..the mimetic and the meontic, can be illustrated in rudimentary terms by Keats' comparison of himself with Byron..: ‘There is this great difference between us. He describes what he sees—I describe what I imagine.’ 1999S. Huang Essentials Neo-Confucianism iv. 63 The Daoist nonbeing may be explained in terms of meontic sense, since it is the origin of being..it can become the creative principle of being. |