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单词 noetic
释义

noeticadj.1n.

Brit. /nəʊˈɛtɪk/, U.S. /noʊˈɛdɪk/
Forms: 1600s noetick, 1600s 1800s– noetic, 1800s noëtic. Also with capital initial.
Origin: A borrowing from Greek. Etymon: Greek νοητικός.
Etymology: < ancient Greek νοητικός intellectual < νοητός mental ( < νοεῖν to see, perceive, understand (see noesis n.) + -τος , suffix forming verbal adjectives) + -ικός -ic suffix. Compare earlier noetical adj.
A. adj.1
1.
a. Of a process, faculty, etc.: characterized by or involving intellectual activity or, more narrowly, intellectual intuition (cf. nous n. 1); of or relating to knowledge or the intellect, cognitive.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > intellect > [adjective]
intellectualc1454
intellectivea1475
skilful1532
dianoetical1570
intelligential1611
noetical1644
noetic1653
dianoetic1677
intellectile1677
spiritual1701
mental1840
noematic1860
1653 E. Waterhouse Humble Apol. Learning 12 All Learning, whether Noetick or Manual, of book or hand, proceeds from God.
1677 T. Gale Court of Gentiles: Pt. III iii. 92 Another attribute..of Pagan Philosophie is, that it be νοητικη, noetic or intelligent, i.e. comprehensive of the first and highest principles.
1852 W. Hamilton Discuss. Philos. & Lit. 4 The noetic faculty, intellect proper, or place of principles.
1872 Contemp. Rev. 20 75 Noetic intuition involves some discursive thought.
1890 D. Masson Edinb. Sketches 220 There was little in his mind of what may be called the purely noetic organ—that faculty which speculates, investigates [etc.].
1907 W. James Pragmatism v. 166 This is the hypothesis of noetic pluralism, which monists consider so absurd.
1925 Brit. Jrnl. Psychol. Oct. 115 The tests..measure the ‘Noetic’ and the ‘Generative’ powers of the subject.
1957 J. S. Huxley Relig. without Revelation (rev. ed.) ix. 204 Religions are thus noetic organs of evolving man.
1984 Maledicta 1983 7 73 Words are our only source of noetic nutrition. Without them, we suffer anorexia of the mind.
2000 A. Plantinga Warranted Christian Belief ii. iii. 83 According to the foundationalist, in an acceptable, properly formed noetic structure, every proposition is either in the foundations or believed on the evidential basis of other propositions.
b. Philosophy. In phenomenology: of or relating to the act or processes of perceiving or thinking.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > philosophy > existentialism > [adjective] > of the phenomenology of Husserl
noematic1914
noetic1914
noematical1931
1914 Mind 23 590 The insight into the ‘acts’ by which the grades and structures of actual (reell) consciousness (noetic) build up correlative grades and structures of intentional objects (noematic) from single objects of sense-perception to things and values of every complexity.
1929 Encycl. Brit. XVII. 700/2 The phenomenological description will comprise two parts, description of the ‘noetic’ (νóεν) or ‘experiencing’ and description of the ‘noematic’ (vóημα) or the ‘experienced’.
1943 M. Farber Found. Phenomenol. xvi. 526 This applies to the noetic side (‘I think’, ‘I experience’, etc.) as well as to the noematic side.
1986 Philos. & Phenomenol. Res. 46 580 Husserl's initial criticism of Humean skepticism is that it denies the noetic conditions for any theory by destroying the possibility of rational justification of mediate knowledge.
2. Of an object, idea, etc.: apprehended by, or belonging to the realm of, pure intellect; purely abstract or intellectual, transcendental.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > spirituality > [adjective]
inwardc888
innerc900
spiritualc1384
spiritala1393
soulya1500
interiora1513
intern1546
internal1547
soulish1581
soul-like1606
pneumatic1624
thoughtsome1627
psychical1642
pneumatical1644
animastic1651
animastical1651
intimate1671
in-written1684
soular1818
inwardly1820
psychal1822
noetica1834
the mind > mental capacity > intellect > [adjective] > calm > purely intellectual
noematical1682
noetica1834
a1834 S. T. Coleridge Lit. Remains (1838) III. 263 Reduce it to the noetic pentad, or universal form of contemplation.
a1856 W. Hamilton Lect. Metaphysics (1859) II. xxi. 33 That the sensible or ectypal world..stands to the noetic or archetypal world..in the same relation [etc.].
1881 W. R. Smith Old Test. in Jewish Church 32 Those doctrines higher than reason, those noëtic truths, as they were called, of a divine philosophy.
1923 P. E. More Hellenistic Philosophies vi. 258 In the noetic heaven, conceived as universal Nous lost in contemplation of its own thoughts, there is no place for memory of our lessons in the phenomenal world.
1932 Jrnl. Philos. 29 526 The idea that noetic principles of implication..should be formulated as premises in order to make the inferences presupposing them rigorously valid..is tantamount to a denial of the existence of necessary logical truths.
1998 Church Times 13 Nov. 16/5 Polkinghorne is a Platonist: he believes that mathematical truths exist in some noetic realm outside ourselves, and that we tap into it.
3. Given to intellectual speculation. Now historical and rare.Chiefly with reference to a school of thought that arose during the 19th cent. at Oriel College, Oxford.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > philosophy > rationalism > [adjective] > of other doctrines and their adherents
intelligiblea1398
intellectualist1857
illuministic1860
noetic1882
1882 T. Mozley Reminisc. Oriel I. iii. 19 The new Oriel sect was declared to be Noetic, whatever that may mean.
1882 Church Times 6 Oct. 674 The so called ‘Noetic’ school at Oriel was far advanced in Rationalism before Newman became a Fellow.
1893 Month Dec. 563 It is the noetic school of Whately which is really responsible for this evil.
1900 W. Tuckwell Reminisc. Oxf. ii. 17 Men who formed in Oxford what was known as the Noetic school..provoking by their political and ecclesiastical liberalism the great revolt of the Newmania.
1991 Amer. Hist. Rev. 96 1199/2 Baden Powell..began to develop..a close friendship with some of the Oriel Noetic leaders.
B. n.
1. The branch of knowledge that deals with the intellect. Also in plural (with singular agreement).
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > intellect > science of intellect > [noun]
noology1817
nooscopics1817
noetic1831
noemics1855
1831 S. T. Coleridge Aids Refl. (new ed.) 169 The universal Noetic, in which we require Terms of most comprehension and least specific import.
1875 T. Hill True Order Stud. 1 Gymnastics, or care of the body; noetics, or training of the mind.
1931 W. R. B. Gibson tr. E. Husserl Ideas ii. iv. §59. 176 So too..we cannot suspend general Noetics, which expresses our essential insight into the rationality or irrationality of the judging activity generally.
1947 Amer. Sociol. Rev. 12 712/2 I spent a lot of time in libraries over that word [sc. noetics] and found Aristotle's passage and several translations... I think noetics and noology are bound to come into use.
1992 Monumenta Nipponica 47 292 Tanabe's critique of Nishida states that the logic of place and the self-identity of absolute nothingness belong to noetics, not to metanoetics.
2. That which has a purely intellectual existence or basis.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > philosophy > existentialism > [noun] > phenomenology of Husserl
phenomenology1907
noema1914
noesis1914
reduction1914
protention1931
noetic1969
1854 F. D. Maurice Moral & Metaphysical Philos. (ed. 2) II. 59 To separate that in man which is capable of converse with the noetic, the essentially pure, from that which is..earthly.
1876 A. Wilder Knight's Symbolical Lang. Anc. Art & Mythol. 4 The end of which is the Knowledge of the First, the Lord, and the Noëtic.
1969 R. McKeon in R. Klibansky Contemp. Philos. III. 105 The difference of knower and known disappear in the description of the experiencing (or the ‘noetic’) and experienced (or the ‘noematic’).
3. A person given to intellectual speculation. Cf. sense A. 3. Now historical and rare.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > philosophy > rationalism > [noun] > other doctrines and their adherents
noetic1882
1882 M. Pattison in Academy 1 July 1 The old Oriel school—the Noetics—had no dogmas, and left no books.
1885 M. Pattison Mem. 78 The Noetics knew nothing of the philosophical movement which was taking place on the continent.
1909 W. Tuckwell (title) Pre-Tractarian Oxford. A reminiscence of the Oriel ‘Noetics’.
1992 Jrnl. Mod. Hist. 64 331 He secured a chair at Oxford on the strength of his first book and the support that he enjoyed both from High Churchmen and from the ‘Noetics’—the somewhat more liberal circle, based on Oriel College.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2003; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

Noeticadj.2

Brit. /nəʊˈɛtɪk/, U.S. /noʊˈɛdɪk/
Forms: 1600s Noetick, 1800s Noetic, 1800s Noëtic.
Origin: From a proper name, combined with an English element. Etymons: proper name Noe , -ic suffix.
Etymology: < post-classical Latin Noe Noah (Vulgate: see Noah's Ark n.) + -ic suffix, with insertion of -t- apparently after e.g. poetic adj.
rare.
Of or relating to the biblical patriarch Noah or his time; Noachian.
ΘΚΠ
the world > time > relative time > the past > historical period > [adjective] > of the time of the flood or Noah
Noachical1668
Noachian1678
Noetic1695
Noachic1722
Noachide1736
Noahic1842
1695 J. Woodward Ess. Nat. Hist. Earth 112 Ever since the time of the Noetick Deluge.
1803 G. S. Faber Diss. Myst. Cabiri I. 131 The mutual resemblance of the Cabiri, the Titans, the Rishis, and the Noëtic family, is too striking to be the effect of mere accident.
1880 Princeton Rev. July–Dec. 79 In the Chaldean records the period corresponding to the pre-Noetic era is filled out with ten kings.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2003; most recently modified version published online March 2022).
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adj.1n.1653adj.21695
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