请输入您要查询的英文单词:

 

单词 epoché
释义

epochén.

/ˈɛpɒki/
Etymology: Greek ἐποχή suspension of judgement, < ἐπέχειν to cease, suspend judgement.
Philosophy.
a. Also epochē. In Greek Scepticism, (the principle of) suspension of judgement or belief in the face of the impossibility of attaining actual knowledge.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > philosophy > ancient Greek philosophy > post-Socratic philosophy > [noun] > Greek scepticism > elements of
acatalepsy1640
trope1841
epoché1923
1660 T. Stanley Hist. Philos. III. iv. 28 Ἐποχὴ, Suspension, is so called,..from the mind's being held in suspence, betwixt asserting and denying.
1899 M. M. Patrick Sextus Empiricus ii. 29 It is not necessary to accept any statement whatever as true, and consequently a state of ἐποχή may always be maintained.]
1923 P. E. More Hellenistic Philosophies vii. 305 Translate his avowed ignorance in the face of alternative views into suspension of judgment (epochê).
1929 M. M. Patrick Greek Sceptics v. 47 The term epochê, or suspension of judgment, is usually attributed to Arcesilaus, although Pyrrho is said to have been the first to use it in reference to attitudes of mind.
1967 Encycl. Philos. II. 33/2 The Stoics..attacked the New Academy for undermining human action by trying to put into epoche, or suspension, the reasonable grounds of human action.
1974 Encycl. Brit. Micropædia III. 929/3 Epochē,..a principle originally espoused by nondogmatic philosophical Skeptics of the ancient Greek Academy.
1983 D. Sedley in M. Burnyeat Skeptical Tradition 10 Arcesilaus, the founder of Academic skepticism and probably the first champion of epochē, suspension of assent,..became head of the Academy around 273 b.c.
b. In Phenomenology, the setting aside of all historical and natural assumptions and factual knowledge in order to be able to apprehend more readily the phenomena and the subject's consciousness of them. Also transferred.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > philosophy > empiricism > [noun] > phenomenology > elements of
intentionality1931
intentional object1931
epoché1940
1929 E. Husserl in Encycl. Brit. XVII. 700/2 The phenomenologist, who will only notice phenomena, and know purely his own ‘life’, must practice an ἐποχή.]
1940 R. H. Williams tr. A. Schuetz in M. Farber Philos. Ess. in Memory E. Husserl 169 In the epoché..I abstain from belief in the being of this world, and I direct my view exclusively to my consciousness of the world.
1960 D. D. Runes Dict. Philos. (ed. 15) 233/1 If this attitude of self-restraint (epoché) is consistently maintained, one can discriminate a status of one's consciousness more fundamental than its actuality or its possibility in a world.
1972 Musical Analysis (Denton, Texas) I. 24/1 After the epoché has been performed it is easy to discover just exactly what makes the object what it is or is not.
1977 M. M. A. Fontana & R. Van de Water in J. D. Douglas & J. M. Johnson Existential Sociol. iii. 106 Roquentin is experiencing a Husserlian epoché, without the long preparation involved in Husserl.
This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1993; most recently modified version published online December 2021).
<
n.1923
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:2024/12/24 20:25:28