请输入您要查询的英文单词:

 

单词 philosophy
释义

philosophyn.

Brit. /fᵻˈlɒsəfi/, U.S. /fəˈlɑsəfi/
Forms:

α. Middle English phelosophie, Middle English philofie (probably transmission error), Middle English philophi (probably transmission error), Middle English philophie (probably transmission error), Middle English philosofie, Middle English philosofye, Middle English philozophie, Middle English philsophi, Middle English philsophie, Middle English phislophye (transmission error), Middle English pholosophie, Middle English–1500s philosophi, Middle English–1500s philosophye, Middle English–1600s philosophie, Middle English–1600s phylosophye, Middle English– philosophy, 1500s phylozophy, 1500s–1600s phylosophie, 1500s–1600s phylosophy, 1500s–1800s philosphy, 1600s (1800s nonstandard) phelosophy, 1800s– philosofy (nonstandard); Scottish pre-1700 phelosophie, pre-1700 phelosophye, pre-1700 philosaphe, pre-1700 philosephie, pre-1700 philosophe, pre-1700 philosophee, pre-1700 philosophi, pre-1700 philosophye, pre-1700 phylosophi, pre-1700 phylosophie, pre-1700 phylosophy, pre-1700 1700s philosophie, pre-1700 1700s– philosophy.

β. Middle English filosofye, Middle English filosophy, Middle English filozofe, Middle English filozofie, Middle English fylosofye, Middle English–1500s filosofie, Middle English–1500s Scottish filosophie, Middle English–1500s fylosophye, 1500s filosophye, 1800s– filosofy (nonstandard); N.E.D. (1906) also records forms late Middle English filosofi, late Middle English filosophi, late Middle English filosophye.

Origin: Of multiple origins. Partly a borrowing from French. Partly a borrowing from Latin. Etymons: French philosophie; Latin philosophia.
Etymology: < (i) Anglo-Norman and Old French, Middle French, French philosophie (c1175 in Old French; also in Anglo-Norman as philosofie , in Old French as philozophie , phylosophie , phyllosophye , and in Middle French as phillozophie ) the advanced study of the speculative subjects (logic, ethics, physics, and metaphysics) to which study of the liberal arts was regarded as preliminary (c1175 in Old French; now denoting a similar combination of subjects taught in grammar schools), deep wisdom consisting of love of truth and virtuous living (second quarter of the 13th cent.; now obsolete), profound learning as transmitted by the ancient writers (beginning of the 14th cent., rare, now obsolete), ethics (1370–72 in philosophie moral , but apparently not independently used in this sense in French until later (sporadically from the end of the 16th cent.); now obsolete), natural science (1379 in philosophie naturelle , but apparently not independently used in this sense in French until later (17th cent.); now obsolete), alchemy (15th cent.; now obsolete), the study of the fundamental nature of knowledge, reality, and existence, and the basics and limits of human understanding (1580 in Montaigne), a person's attitude or outlook (1588 with reference to intellectual matters, end of the 17th cent. in general use), deep wisdom founded on meditation and contemplation, which gives a person mental equilibrium and support in time of adversity (1655), the sceptical or rationalist views of thinkers in the Age of Reason (1733 in the passage translated in quot. 1749 at sense 4b), a system of ideas concerning a subject (1835), and its etymon (ii) classical Latin philosophia study or pursuit of wisdom, philosophical thought, particular philosphical system or school of philosophy, view of life, attitude < ancient Greek ϕιλοσοϕία love of knowledge, pursuit of knowledge, systematic treatment of a subject, the study of morality, existence, and the universe < ϕιλόσοϕος philosophe n. + -ία -y suffix3. Senses 4a and 6a are apparently not paralleled in French until later (respectively 1553, in a translation of the biblical passage cited in quot. c1384 at sense 4a, and 1588 in Montaigne). Compare Old Occitan philosophia, Catalan filosofia (14th cent.), Spanish filosofía (c1250), Portuguese filosofia (14th cent. as fillosafia, philosifia), Italian filosofia (a1243), and also Middle Dutch, Dutch filosofie, (now rare) philosophie (also in Middle Dutch as phylosophie and in Dutch as filozofie), German Philosophie (15th cent. as †philosophye, philozophia, etc.; earlier in Middle High German as philosophīe denoting the personification of philosophy), Old Danish filosofi (Danish filosofi, also †philosophi, †philosophie), Swedish filosofi (1541 as †philosophia, 1708 as †philosophie).The definition of Cicero ( De Officiis 2. 5) was considered authoritative for sense 2: Nec quicquam aliud est philosophia, si interpretari velis, praeter studium sapientiae; sapientia autem est rerum divinarum et humanarum causarumque quibus eae res continentur scientia, ‘philosophy, if you wish to interpret it, is nothing other than the earnest pursuit of wisdom; but wisdom is the knowledge of divine and human things and of their causes’ (compare quot. 1586 at sense 2). In post-Aristotelian times the Greek and Latin word was used by the Stoics and Epicureans chiefly to denote practical wisdom (see sense 3). It is possible that the Middle English forms philofie , philophi , philophie show syncopated forms rather than transmission errors. In philosophy of nature n. (b) at sense 5c after German Naturphilosophie Naturphilosophie n.; compare earlier natural philosophy n.
1. Knowledge, learning, scholarship; a body of knowledge; spec. advanced knowledge or learning, to which the study of the seven liberal arts was regarded as preliminary in medieval universities. Now historical except in degree titles, as Doctor, Master of Philosophy.As a subject of study, philosophy was variously subdivided at different times. Many universities adopted a threefold division into natural, moral, and metaphysical philosophy (sometimes referred to as the three philosophies). In Scottish universities philosophy came to include other elements of the course of studies required for the degree of M.A., and hence to be synonymous with arts (see art n.1 9a), although this usage declined during the 18th cent.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > philosophy > [noun] > knowledge, study, or subject
philosophyc1325
philosophedom1833
c1325 (c1300) Chron. Robert of Gloucester (Calig.) 2748 (MED) Þe clerkes sede þat it is in philosofie yfounde Þat þer beþ in þe eyr..a maner gostes, wiȝtes as it be.
c1350 (a1333) William of Shoreham Poems (1902) 132 (MED) Þaȝ [read þat] þat be fals, me may aspye By wytnesse of philosophye And clerkes fele.
a1393 J. Gower Confessio Amantis (Fairf.) vii. 1643 (MED) The ferste..is Theorique, And the secounde Rethorique, Sciences of Philosophie.
c1400 (c1378) W. Langland Piers Plowman (Laud 581) (1869) B. xv. 377 Doctoures of decres..Þat shulde konne and knowe alkynnes clergye..shulde faillen in her philosofye [c1400 C text fylosophye].
a1439 J. Lydgate Fall of Princes (Bodl. 263) vi. 3295 Ther be thre partes..Into which philosophie is deuyded. The firste..is morall, Which directeth a man to goode thewes; And the secounde, callid naturall, [etc.]
1532 (c1385) Usk's Test. Loue in Wks. G. Chaucer iii. f. ccclv Philosophie is knowyng of deuynly & manly thinges ioyned with studye of good yuyng... The first spece of philosophie is naturel... The seconde spece is moral, [etc.].
1605 F. Bacon Of Aduancem. Learning ii. sig. Ee4 Out of which seuerall inquiries, there doe arise three knowledges, divine philosophy, natvral philosophy, and hvmane philosophy, or hvmanitie. View more context for this quotation
1647 in A. Peterkin Rec. Kirk Scotl. (1838) I. 479 That all students of philosophie at their entry and at their lawreation be holden to subscribe [etc.].
1703 in A. Morgan Charters Univ. Edinb. (1937) 223 The Faculty of Philosophy in the University of Edinburgh.
1895 H. Rashdall Univ. Europe in Middle Ages II. 452 At Oxford..importance was attached to keeping up the theory that a University Arts course included the Trivium and Quadrivium of the earlier Middle Ages, as well as the ‘three Philosophies’ introduced by the rediscovery of Aristotle in the thirteenth century.
1926 P. R. Lang Duncan Dewar xi. 181 His Philosophy—or, as it is now called, his Arts—course at the [sc. St Andrews] University.
1968 L. Rosten Joys of Yiddish 63 A proud young chachem told his grandmother that he was going to become a doctor of philosophy.
1986 J. McConica Hist. Univ. Oxf. III. iv. 173 The link with the medieval curriculum of seven arts and three philosophies was tenuous [at Cambridge].
2004 Daily Post (Liverpool) (Nexis) 27 Apr. 6 [He] studied at Liverpool University for his Master of Philosophy while working as a librarian for Wirral Council.
2. The love, study, or pursuit of wisdom, truth, or knowledge. Now rare.In later use usually only in etymologizing contexts.
ΚΠ
1340 Ayenbite (1866) 126 (MED) Filozofe is ase moche worþ ase loue of wysdome.
c1460 (a1449) J. Lydgate Minor Poems (1934) ii. 751 With wyse men talke of sapience, With philosophres speke of philosophie.
?c1475 Catholicon Anglicum (BL Add. 15562) f. 47 Filosophy, philosophia.
a1500 ( J. Yonge tr. Secreta Secret. (Rawl.) (1898) 218 (MED) Philosophie is no more but loue of witte and cvnnynge, and abstynence of foly, and Victorie of foole wille.
1586 T. Bowes tr. P. de la Primaudaye French Acad. I. 40 Philosophie is a loue or desire of wisedome. Or otherwise, it is a profession, studie, and exercise of that wisedome, which is the knowledge of diuine and humane things.
1603 P. Holland tr. Plutarch Morals 804 Aristotle and Theophrastus, with the Peripateticks,..divide Philosophie in this maner; namely, into Contemplative and Active.
1612 F. Bacon Ess. (new ed.) 85 Certainely a litle Philosophie inclineth mans minde to Atheisme, but depth in Philosophie bringeth Men about to Religion.
1669 T. Gale Court of Gentiles: Pt. I i. x. 50 Al human wisdome may be reduced to these two Heads of Philologie, and Philosophie.
1775 J. Harris Philos. Arrangem. i. 1 Philosophy, taking its name from the Love of Wisdom, and having for its End the Investigation of Truth, has an equal regard both to Practice and Speculation.
1854 G. R. Gliddon in J. C. Nott & G. R. Gliddon Types of Mankind iii. i. 576 What is Philosophy? Etymologically, the ‘love of wisdom’, and paraphrastically, the ‘love of knowledge’.
1966 S. H. Nasr Ideals & Realities of Islam vi. 168 Much of modern philosophy is in fact not at all a ‘love of wisdom’ but a hatred of it.
1989 S. Lamont In Good Faith (BNC) 85 The enthusiasm for something which can be—depending on the individual—a love of wisdom (philosophy), the English (anglophile), or postage stamps (philatelist).
3. The branch of knowledge that deals with the principles of human behaviour; the study of morality; ethics. Also: practical or proverbial wisdom; virtuous living. Obsolete except as retained in moral philosophy (moral philosophy n. at moral adj. Compounds 2).
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > philosophy > moral philosophy > [noun]
philosophy1340
ethica1387
moralityc1390
ethics?a1425
moral philosophyc1443
morals?1566
moral science1656
moral sciences1656
ethology1696
aretaics1865
meta-ethics1938
the mind > mental capacity > understanding > reason, faculty of reasoning > common sense > [noun]
witc1175
sensea1382
conscience1449
mother witc1475
common wit1517
common sense1536
philosophy1557
good sense?1562
sconce1567
mother-sense1603
ingenuity1651
bonsense1681
rumgumption1686
nous1706
gumption?1719
rummlegumption1751
savvy1785
horse sense1832
kokum1848
sabe1872
common1899
marbles1902
gump1920
loaf1925
1340 Ayenbite (1866) 97 Þis [sc. the Beatitudes] is þe zoþe filozofie [c1450 Bk. Vices & Virtues philophie] þet þe mayster of angles tekþ to his deciples.
1340 Ayenbite (1866) 251 (MED) Þet is þe heȝeste wyt of man, wel to knawe his sseppere and him louie..Vor wyþoute þise filosofie, alle oþre wyttes ys folye.
a1425 (?a1400) G. Chaucer Romaunt Rose (Hunterian) 5664 In Boece of Consolacioun..By teching of philosophie..lewid men myght lere wit.
1481 W. Caxton tr. Myrrour of Worlde iii. xii. 160 After cam Boece..And compiled..plente of fair volumes aourned of hye and noble philosophye.
1557 T. North tr. A. de Guevara Diall Princes iii. l. 332 The chiefe of all philosophy consisteth to serve God, and not to offend men.
1597 W. Shakespeare Romeo & Juliet iii. iii. 55 Ile giue thee armour to beare off this word, Aduersities sweete milke, philosophie, To comfort thee though thou be banished. View more context for this quotation
1637 J. Milton Comus 17 How charming is divine Philosophie!
1679 W. Penn Addr. Protestants (1692) i. viii. 37 Famous for her Virtue and Philosophy, when that word was understood not of vain Disputing but of Pious Living.
1684 T. Creech tr. Pelopidas in J. Dryden tr. Plutarch Lives II. 342 Epaminondas made his familiar and hereditary Poverty more light and easie, by his Philosophy and single Life.
a1751 Visct. Bolingbroke Lett. Study Hist. (1777) ii. 25 History is Philosophy teaching by example.
1752 Philos. Trans. 1749–50 (Royal Soc.) 46 750 The original meaning of the Word Philosophy was rightly applied to moral Wisdom.
1816 P. B. Shelley Alastor 6 The fountains of divine philosophy Fled not his thirsting lips.
4.
a. Rational inquiry or argument, as opposed to divinely revealed knowledge; (in depreciative use) mere argument, sophistry. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > knowledge, what is known > [noun] > obtained by natural reason
philosophyc1384
c1384 Bible (Wycliffite, E.V.) (Douce 369(2)) (1850) Coloss. ii. 8 Se ȝe that no man disseyue ȝou by philosofye [c1425 Concordance pholosophie] and veyn fallace.
c1449 R. Pecock Repressor (1860) 101 Tho ben argumentis of pure philosophie, and..thei han no place in mater of feith.
c1454 R. Pecock Folewer to Donet 17 (MED) Euydence such as may be had as of philosophie, þat is to seie, of mannys inquisicioun in resoun is þis.
1605 F. Bacon Of Aduancem. Learning ii. sig. Ff2 Concerning Divine Philosophie, or Naturall Theologie, It is that knowledge..concerning God, which may be obtained by the contemplation of his Creatures. View more context for this quotation
1640 F. Quarles Enchyridion iv. xci Let Phylosophy not be asham'd to be confuted.
1850 Ld. Tennyson In Memoriam lii. 75 Hold thou the good: define it well: For fear divine philosophy Should push beyond her mark, and be Procuress to the Lords of Hell. View more context for this quotation
b. spec. The sceptical or rationalistic views current (esp. in France) in the 18th cent. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > philosophy > scepticism > [noun]
scepticisma1651
sceptisma1651
philosophy1749
philosophism1793
scepsis1876
1749 T. Smollett tr. A. R. Le Sage Gil Blas II. iv. viii. 86 Our lady,..is also a little tainted with philosophy [Fr. entichée de Philosophie].
1791 H. More Estimate Relig. Fashionable World 16 Philosophy..(as Unbelief..has lately been pleased to call itself) will not do nearly so much mischief to the present age, as its great apostles intended.
1795 E. Burke Corr. (1844) IV. 308 He is certainly a man of parts; but one who has dealt too much in the philosophy of France.
5.
a. The branch of knowledge that deals with the principles governing the material universe and perception of physical phenomena; natural science, scientific knowledge. Obsolete except as retained in natural philosophy (natural philosophy n.).
ΘΚΠ
the world > matter > physics > [noun]
physicc1330
philosophya1387
natural philosophya1393
natural science?a1425
physicsc1487
philosophy of nature1695
physiology1704
science1779
azoology1817
material science1837
the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > branch of knowledge > systematic knowledge, science > [noun] > of material universe
philosophya1387
natural philosophya1393
natural science?a1425
experimental philosophy1651
science1779
stinks1869
a1387 J. Trevisa tr. R. Higden Polychron. (St. John's Cambr.) (1869) II. 61 (MED) Þis accordeþ wel to resoun and to philosofie þat treteþ of hote welles.
c1454 R. Pecock Folewer to Donet 49 (MED) Speculatijf science is departid..into methaphisik, into natural philosophie comoun, and into medicinal philosophie, and into astronomye, geometrie, arsmetrie, and musik.
a1500 (c1477) T. Norton Ordinal of Alchemy (BL Add.) (1975) 2221 (MED) Studientis in first philosophy Said Ayre condensid turned in to Rayne, And watir Rarified becom ayre agayne.
1568 ( D. Lindsay Satyre (Bannatyne) l. 1971 in Wks. (1931) II. 106 Bot fosterit with philosephie, A strange man in astronomy.
1681 J. Ray Corr. (1848) 130 I hope you [sc. the naturalist Dr. Sloane] persist in your resolution of making your discoveries and observations public, for..the advancement of real philosophy.
1728 H. Pemberton View Sir I. Newton's Philos. 2 It is..to be wished, that the whole of his [sc. Newton's] improvements in philosophy might be universally known.
1785 W. Cowper Task i. 712 Where finds Philosophy her eagle eye [sc. the telescope], With which she gazes at yon burning disk Undazzled?
1813 (title) Annals of philosophy; or magazine of chemistry, mineralogy, mechanics, natural history, agriculture and arts.
a1856 W. Hamilton Lect. Metaphysics (1859) I. iii. 61 Sciences, which the term philosophy exclusively denotes, when employed in propriety and rigour.
b. Knowledge of the occult; magic; alchemy. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > the supernatural > the occult > [noun] > occult doctrine or lore
philosophyc1395
gramaryec1470
cabbalisma1592
metaphysicsa1593
cabalie1652
telesiurgics1662
Cabbala1665
mysticism1825
occultism1876
c1395 G. Chaucer Canon's Yeoman's Tale 1058 I wol yow teche pleynly the manere How I kan werken in philosophye [v.r. filosophie].
c1425 J. Lydgate Troyyes Bk. (Augustus A.iv) ii. 6766 (MED) Þei wondre..Of a tree..Musing wher it wer..set by magik natural..Or profond castyng of philosophie Be apparence or illusioun.
c1450 Mandeville's Trav. (Coventry) (1973) 1674 (MED) In that lande..Is moch crafft of philosophie, For goolde and siluere thei wille make Of what metalle men wille hem take.
a1500 (c1477) T. Norton Ordinal of Alchemy (BL Add.) (1975) 183 (MED) Holye Alchymye, A wonderful science, secrete philosophie..neuir was fownde bi labour of man.
1568 (a1500) Freiris Berwik 382 in W. T. Ritchie Bannatyne MS (1930) IV. 272 Ane man of grit science..Hes brocht ws heir throw his..knawlege in filosophie.
1610 E. Bolton Elements of Armories sig. ee2 Symbolical Philosophie therefore is that kinde of learning, and wisdome, which knowing the causes, and proprieties of things naturall, and supernaturall, doth teach how to make, or to expound those mystical, and artificial bodies, called Symbols.
c. philosophy of nature n. (a) = natural philosophy n.; (b) Philosophy = Naturphilosophie n.; cf. physiophilosophy n.
ΘΚΠ
the world > matter > physics > [noun]
physicc1330
philosophya1387
natural philosophya1393
natural science?a1425
physicsc1487
philosophy of nature1695
physiology1704
science1779
azoology1817
material science1837
the mind > mental capacity > philosophy > German romanticism > [noun] > naturphilosophie
philosophy of nature1695
Naturphilosophie1816
Identitätsphilosophie1866
1695 J. Collier Misc. upon Moral Subj. 23 Whether they had a deeper In-sight into the Philosophy of Nature, and understood the Laws of the Union of the Soul and Body more throughly..Is not so Clear.
1748 W. Duncan Elements Logick ii. i. 152 In order to improve this branch of knowledge, we must betake ourselves to the method of trial and experiment. Accordingly, we find, that while this was neglected, little advance was made in the philosophy of nature.
1832 A. Johnson tr. W. G. Tennemann Man. Hist. Philos. §391. 440 Schelling was led to form the idea of two opposite and parallel philosophical Sciences—the Transcendental Philosophy, and the Philosophy of Nature.
1912 E. C. Moore Outl. of Hist. Christian Thought 61 The dominating idea of Schelling's philosophy of nature may be said to be the exhibition of nature as the progress of intelligence toward consciousness and personality.
1959 Dict. National Biogr. 1941–50 at Whitehead, A. N. The discovery of the special theory of relativity in 1904 had opened up new prospects in the philosophy of nature.
2002 R. J. Bernstein Radical Evil (2003) iii. 94 Schelling introduces the distinction between ground and existence—a distinction derived from the philosophy of nature (Naturphilosophie) which is applicable to all beings, including God.
6. Frequently as a count noun.
a. A particular system of ideas or beliefs relating to the general scheme of existence and the universe; a philosophical system or theory.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > philosophy > [noun] > system or theory
secta1387
philosophyc1387
scheme1690
thought1692
thought system1845
new thinking1853
thought structure1867
the mind > mental capacity > perception or cognition > faculty of ideation > idea, notion, or concept > [noun] > system of
philosophyc1387
zeitgeist1848
thought model1891
c1387–95 G. Chaucer Canterbury Tales Prol. 295 Hym was leuere haue..Twenty bookes clad in blak or reed Of Aristotle and his philosophie [v.r. philophi].
a1393 J. Gower Confessio Amantis (Fairf.) vi. 1404 (MED) He was a..clerk knowende of every thing..Of Tholome thastronomie, Of Plato the Philosophie.
1561 T. Norton tr. J. Calvin Inst. Christian Relig. i. xiv. f. 48 Let vs therfore forsake that Platonicall philosophie.
1573 G. Harvey Let.-bk. (1884) 10 Mi chefist propositions against Aristotles philosophi.
1603 W. Shakespeare Hamlet i. v. 169 There are more things in heauen and earth Horatio, Then are Dream't of, in your philosophie.
1675 N. Grew Disc. conc. Mixture 1 I shall endeavour to conform to the Philosophy, which this Society doth profess; which is, Ratiocination, grounded upon Experiment, and the Common Notions of Sense.
1727 W. Warburton Crit. & Philos. Enq. Causes Prodigies & Miracles ii. 85 The Atomist Lucretius, whose cold Philosophy had formerly excluded all Intendency of a superior Mind.
1785 T. Jefferson Let. 19 Aug. in Papers (1953) VIII. 407 In morality read Epictetus, Xenophontis memorabilia, Plato's Socratic dialogues, Cicero's philosophies.
1841 M. Elphinstone Hist. India I. ii. v. 237 The Indian philosophy resembles that of the earlier rather than of the later Greeks.
a1866 J. Grote Exam. Utilit. Philos. (1870) xvi. 249 The special doctrines of other philosophies.
1884 Mind 9 159 The Thomist philosophy, now again authoritatively proclaimed to be the sheet-anchor of Catholic doctrine.
1975 J. Plamenatz Karl Marx's Philos. of Man i. 4 It is not surprising, then, that these ideas, derived from philosophies alien to them, should be less interesting to Marxists and students of Marxism outside the West.
1996 Church Times 29 Nov. 12/5 Some believe that Jesus was influenced by popular Hellenistic philosophies, such as Cynicism, with its itinerant lifestyle and rejection of power and wealth.
b. In extended use: a set of opinions or ideas held by an individual or group; a theory or attitude which acts as a guiding principle for behaviour; an outlook or world view.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > philosophy > moral philosophy > [noun] > moral principles or moral law
moralitiesc1400
moral law1609
ethic1659
philosophy1727
natural law1899
1727 Lady M. W. Montagu Let. July (1966) II. 82 You see my Philosophy is not altogether so Lugubre as yours.
1791 J. Boswell Life Johnson anno 1770 I. 340 [W. Maxwell:] His philosophy..was by no means morose and cynical.
1853 E. Bulwer-Lytton My Novel IV. xii. xxxv. 282 Levy is a man who has admitted the fiercer passions into his philosophy of life.
1899 O. Wilde Ideal Husband i. 12 Mrs. Cheveley. I don't know that women are always rewarded for being charming. I think they are usually punished for it!..Sir Robert Chittern. What an appalling philosophy that sounds!
1903 G. B. Shaw Man & Superman iii. 126 Yes, Juan: we know the libertine's philosophy. Always ignore the consequences to the woman.
1946 E. O'Neill Iceman Cometh i. 44 You pretend a bitter, cynic philosophy, but in your heart you are the kindest man among us.
1992 I. Pattison More Rab C. Nesbitt Scripts 128 You know my philosophy, Amanda. I always reason before I hit.
2003 Wall St. Jrnl. 5 Sept. a1/6 ‘We have a philosophy and a strategy,’ he says. ‘When times are tough, you build [market] share’.
7. Originally: the branch of knowledge that deals with ultimate reality, or with existence and the nature and causes of things; = metaphysics n. 1a. Later: the study of the fundamental nature of knowledge, reality, and existence, and the basis and limits of human understanding; this considered as an academic discipline. (Now the usual sense.)Sometimes with preceding word indicating the origin or nature of a specific system of philosophy, or the field of inquiry with which it is concerned, as Aristotelian, Eastern, existential, scientific philosophy, etc. (see also the first element). The term moral philosophy, although originally part of the division outlined in sense 1, is now understood in this sense.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > philosophy > [noun]
philosophy1531
science1831
thoughta1853
the mind > mental capacity > philosophy > metaphysics > [noun]
metaphysica1387
theology1390
philosophy1531
ultramundane1549
metaphysicals1550
supernaturals1562
metaphysics1569
1531 T. Elyot Bk. named Gouernour ii. v. sig. Piv His [sc. Alexander's] singuler doctrine in philosophy, taught hym by Aristotle.
1651 T. Hobbes Leviathan iv. xlvi. 370 They [sc. the Jews] turned the doctrine of their law into a Phantasticall kind of Philosophy, concerning the incomprehensible nature of God, and of Spirits.
1656 T. Stanley Hist. Philos. II. v. 58 Of Theoretick Philosophy, one part enquires into things immutable.., and the first causes of things.
1682 J. Norris tr. Hierocles Golden Verses 61 Philosophy, which exactly knows the nature of things, and their consequent operations.
1776 E. Gibbon Decline & Fall I. viii. 203 A bold and injudicious attempt of Eastern philosophy to reconcile the existence of moral and physical evil, with the attributes of a beneficent Creator.
1794 J. Hutton Diss. Philos. Light 121 Now, philosophy is that general knowledge by which the works of nature are understood in seeing the wisdom of design.
1857 W. Fleming Vocab. Philos. 381 Underlying all our inquiries into any of these departments [sc. God, nature, or man], there is a first philosophy, which seeks to ascertain the grounds or principles of knowledge, and the causes of all things.
1865 J. Grote Exploratio Philosophica Pt. I xi Philosophy, by which I mean the study of thought and feeling..as we understand, think, feel them of ourselves and from within.
1895 F. Harrison in 19th Cent. Aug. 215 Many of his criticisms of modern scientific philosophy are precisely those which I have long urged.
1938 R. G. Collingwood Princ. Art ii. 38 The theory of knowledge, as that which lures us onward in the path of philosophy, the quest of truth.
1944 Philos. & Phenomenol. Res. 5 127 Existential philosophy..is the extreme attempt to find a meaning in the existence of modern man.
1974 German Q. 47 446 The dialectic structure..was partially influenced by Aristotelian philosophy.
2000 Econ. & Philos. 16 166 He says that we have resources that are not acknowledged in philosophy for making sense of our lives.
8. The study of the general principles of a particular subject, phenomenon, or field of inquiry.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > branch of knowledge > [noun] > theory of knowledge, system
system1615
theory?1634
philosophy1668
technology1683
scheme1690
stock-in-tradea1806
episteme1842
Wissenschaftslehre1846
epistemics1901
1668 Bp. J. Wilkins Ess. Real Char. iii. vii. 349 More agreeable to the Philosophy of Speech.
1676 J. Glanvill Ess. iii. 52 They [sc. the Peripatetick Disputers] imployed their Younger Studies upon the Philosophy of Disputation.
1790 A. Smith Theory Moral Sentiments (ed. 6) I. iii. iii. 332 A man must be, in some measure, acquainted with the philosophy of vision, before he can be thoroughly convinced, how little those distant objects would appear to the eye.
1791 E. Burke Let. to Member National Assembly in Wks. (1823) VI. 32 The great professor..of the philosophy of vanity [sc. Rousseau].
1835 A. Ure (title) The Philosophy of manufactures; or, An exposition of the scientific, moral, and commercial economy of the factory system of Great Britain.
1837 W. Whewell Hist. Inductive Sci. I. Pref. p. viii His [sc. Bacon's] Reform of the Methods and Philosophy of Science.
1843 J. S. Mill Syst. Logic I. i. v. 119 The notion..seems to me one of the most fatal errors ever introduced into the philosophy of Logic.
1890 W. James Princ. Psychol. I. xiv. 585 We see in the philosophy of desire and pleasure, that such nascent excitements..may become potent mental stimuli and determinants of desire.
1919 G. B. Shaw Heartbreak House Pref. in Heartbreak House, Great Catherine, & Playlets of War p. xxvii It is impossible to estimate what proportion of us..grasped the war and its political antecedents as a whole in the light of any philosophy of history or knowledge of what war is.
1940 F. J. E. Woodbridge Ess. Nature i. 53 Expressions like ‘philosophy of science’, ‘philosophy of history’, ‘philosophy of government’, ‘philosophy of law’, ‘philosophy of religion’, and so forth creep into the language, indicating that after scientists, historians, statesmen, jurists, priests, and the rest have said all they have to say, there is still need of a special kind of knowledge to inform us what it is all about.
2000 Econ. & Philos. 16 facing p. 1 He works on decision making, the borderline between philosophy of mind and ethics, and the philosophy of language.
9. The attitude or habit of a philosopher; mental or emotional equilibrium; calmness or serenity of temperament; uncomplaining acceptance of adverse circumstances; stoicism, resignation. Cf. philosophical adj. 3. Now rare.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > emotion > calmness > patience > [noun] > patient resignation
philosophy1731
1731 E. Thomas Pylades & Corinna 8 I have Philosophy enough to live contented with a little, and to bear my own Afflictions with Patience.
1771 Ld. Chesterfield Let. 12 Aug. (1932) (modernized text) VI. 2931 Philosophy, and confidence in the mercy of my Creator, mutually assist me in bearing my share of physical ills.
1811 J. Austen Sense & Sensibility I. xxi. 277 As it was impossible however now to prevent their coming, Lady Middleton resigned herself to the idea of it, with all the philosophy of a well bred woman. View more context for this quotation
1832 E. Bulwer-Lytton Eugene Aram I. i. v. 81 Philosophy has become another name for mental quietude.
1974 Daily Tel. 21 June At this stage I am taking things with philosophy.

Compounds

C1.
a. General attributive, as philosophy course, philosophy lecture, philosophy professor, philosophy school, etc.
ΚΠ
1613 S. Purchas Pilgrimage iii. vi. 230 It was therefore ordained, that the Philosophy-lecture should bee taken away.
1651 T. Hobbes Leviathan i. i. 4 The Philosophy-Schooles, through all the Universities of Christendome, grounded upon certain Texts of Aristotle, teach another doctrine.
1778 T. Warton Hist. Eng. Poetry II. xviii. 455/1 The philosophy reader is not only ordered to explain Aristotle, but Plato.
1898 Catholic World June 302 In our philosophy courses the teaching was violently opposed to the scholastic system.
1973 Amer. Notes & Queries 83/1 Eliot began Ph.D. studies at Harvard, majoring jointly in the Indic and Philosophy Departments.
1997 Independent 28 May 19/2 ‘Conceptual art gives concepts a bad name anyway, but this must be post-conceptual,’ groaned a philosophy professor.
b. Objective.
philosophy-dreamer n. Obsolete
ΚΠ
1796 S. T. Coleridge Let. 19 Nov. (1956) I. 260 All the strange phantasms that ever possessed your philosophy-dreamers from Tauth [i.e. Thoth], the Egyptian, to Taylor the English Pagan.
philosophy hater n.
ΚΠ
1711 Ld. Shaftesbury Characteristicks III. Misc. iii. i. 159 Here, methinks, the Ridicule turns more against the Philosophy-Haters than the Virtuosi or Philosophers.
1997 Re: the Inevitability of Absolute Motion & Position in sci.physics (Usenet newsgroup) 14 Apr. The logically impaired and inveterate philosophy hater.
C2.
philosophy game n. Obsolete = philosopher's game n. at philosopher n. Compounds 3.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > entertainment > pastimes > game > board game > other board games > [noun] > philosophers' game
ryghtmathyc1450
philosopher's game1563
philosopher's table1584
philosophy game1621
1621 R. Burton Anat. Melancholy ii. ii. iv. 348 The like I may say of Cl. Bruxers Phylosophy game.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2006; most recently modified version published online June 2022).

philosophyv.

Brit. /fᵻˈlɒsəfi/, U.S. /fəˈlɑsəfi/
Forms: see philosophy n.
Origin: Formed within English, by conversion. Etymon: philosophy n.
Etymology: < philosophy n. Compare classical Latin philosophārī, Old French, Middle French philosophier (early 14th cent.).
Now rare.
intransitive. = philosophize v. 1a.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > philosophy > philosopher > [verb (intransitive)]
philosophya1382
philosophize1594
philosophate1603
intellectualize1827
a1382 Prefatory Epist. St. Jerome in Bible (Wycliffite, E.V.) (Bodl. 959) (1959) vi. 19 Oþer with þe brow born down, weyȝyng grete wordez, emong ȝong wymmen philosofyen [a1425 L.V. talken as filosoferes] of holy lettrez.
1584 R. Scot Discouerie Witchcraft xv. xxxiii. 454 Salomon..did philosophie about all things.
a1631 J. Donne Βιαθανατος (1647) i. ii. §2 Ambrose Philosophying divinely in a contemplation of Bees.
1654 R. Flecknoe Ten Years Trav. 134 You see..how I Philosophy on every thing.
1664 T. Killigrew 2nd Pt. Thomaso ii. iv, in Comedies & Trag. 408 This time I may waste to my advantage, by contemplating and Philosophying upon my own misfortunes.
1862 Vanity Fair (N.Y.) 4 Jan. 254/1 We think for ourselfs, we hav philosophied for ourselfs.
1937 Mississippi Valley Hist. Rev. 24 429 He is at his best when philosophying, interpreting, and commenting, though one may not always agree with his conclusions.
2002 Times-Picayune (New Orleans) (Nexis) 29 Dec. (Travel section) 1 He too philosophied about why he left corporate sales to become a nature guide.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2006; most recently modified version published online March 2022).
<
n.c1325v.a1382
随便看

 

英语词典包含1132095条英英释义在线翻译词条,基本涵盖了全部常用单词的英英翻译及用法,是英语学习的有利工具。

 

Copyright © 2004-2022 Newdu.com All Rights Reserved
更新时间:2025/2/3 15:20:24