释义 |
‖ anamnesis|ænəmˈniːsɪs| [Gr. ἀνάµνησις remembrance, n. of action f. ἀναµνα- stem of ἀνα-µι-µνή-σκ-ειν to remember, f. ἀνά back + µνα- call to mind, f. µέν-ος mind.] a. The recalling of things past; recollection, reminiscence.
1657J. Smith Myst. Rhet. 249 Anamnesis is a figure whereby the speaker calling to mind matters past, whether of sorrow, joy, &c. doth make recital of them. 1876tr. Wagner's Gen. Path. 11 Diagnosis from the Anamnesis, that is, from the story which the patient tells of his illness. 1876C. M. Davies Unorth. Lond. 22 The doctrine of anamnesis, in Plato, according to which the soul had pre-existed in a purer state, and there gained its ideas. b. Liturgiol. That part of the Eucharistic canon in which the sacrifice of Christ is recalled and pleaded.
1894H. Lucas in Dublin Rev. CXIV. 123 The Anamnesis, a prayer commencing with the words Μεµνηµένοι οὖν, and answering more closely to the Roman Unde et memores than to any Gallican Post Secreta or Mozarabic Post Pridie. 1912A. Fortescue Mass ii. 103 The next prayer (Post pridie or Post mysterium) contains the Anamnesis and Epiklesis of the Holy Ghost. 1945G. Dix Shape of Liturgy vii. 205 It was precisely the institution-narrative which would need amplifying and the anamnesis section which would have to be supplied. |