metaphysics

[met-uh-fiz-iks] /ˌmɛt əˈfɪz ɪks/
noun, (used with a singular verb)
1.
the branch of philosophy that treats of first principles, includes ontology and cosmology, and is intimately connected with epistemology.
2.
philosophy, especially in its more abstruse branches.
3.
the underlying theoretical principles of a subject or field of inquiry.
4.
(initial capital letter, italics) a treatise (4th century b.c.) by Aristotle, dealing with first principles, the relation of universals to particulars, and the teleological doctrine of causation.
Origin
1560-70; < Medieval Latin metaphysica < Medieval Greek () metaphysiká (neuter plural), Greek tà metà tà physiká the (works) after the Physics; with reference to the arrangement of Aristotle's writings

metaphysic

[met-uh-fiz-ik] /ˌmɛt əˈfɪz ɪk/
noun
adjective
Origin
1350-1400; Middle English metaphisik < Medieval Latin metaphysica (neuter plural); see metaphysics
Related forms
unmetaphysic, adjective
Examples from the web for metaphysics
  • They agree on physics but disagree on metaphysics.
  • But that's not an answer from the field of science–that's metaphysics.
  • He loved the age-old mysteries surrounding the nature of matter, time and space at the heart of cosmology and metaphysics.
  • Reality is a subject of metaphysics and properly belongs to philosophy.
  • Modern computer technology provides the key with which the cabalists sought to make their metaphysics come to life.
  • At such places, physics dissolves into metaphysics.
  • The two assumptions stated are more in the nature of metaphysics than science.
  • Science doesn't say anything about the realm of metaphysics or transcendent beings.
  • It embodies, indeed, something better than the metaphysics.
  • To say that we still do not know what we see is metaphysics.
British Dictionary definitions for metaphysics

metaphysics

/ˌmɛtəˈfɪzɪks/
noun (functioning as sing)
1.
the branch of philosophy that deals with first principles, esp of being and knowing
2.
the philosophical study of the nature of reality, concerned with such questions as the existence of God, the external world, etc
4.
(popularly) abstract or subtle discussion or reasoning
Derived Forms
metaphysician (ˌmɛtəfɪˈzɪʃən), metaphysicist (ˌmɛtəˈfɪzɪsɪst) noun
Word Origin
C16: from Medieval Latin, from Greek ta meta ta phusika the things after the physics, from the arrangement of the subjects treated in the works of Aristotle

metaphysic

/ˌmɛtəˈfɪzɪk/
noun
1.
the system of first principles and assumptions underlying an enquiry or philosophical theory
2.
an obsolete word for metaphysician
adjective
3.
(rare) another word for metaphysical
Word Origin and History for metaphysics
n.

1560s, plural of Middle English metaphisik, methaphesik (late 14c.), "branch of speculation which deals with the first causes of things," from Medieval Latin metaphysica, neuter plural of Medieval Greek (ta) metaphysika, from Greek ta meta ta physika "the (works) after the Physics," title of the 13 treatises which traditionally were arranged after those on physics and natural sciences in Aristotle's writings. The name was given c.70 B.C.E. by Andronicus of Rhodes, and was a reference to the customary ordering of the books, but it was misinterpreted by Latin writers as meaning "the science of what is beyond the physical." See meta- + physics. The word originally was used in English in the singular; plural form predominated after 17c., but singular made a comeback late 19c. in certain usages under German influence.

metaphysic

n.

late 14c., from Medieval Latin metaphysica (see metaphysics). The usual form of metaphysics until 16c.; somewhat revived 19c. under German influence.

metaphysics in Culture

metaphysics definition


The field in philosophy that studies ultimate questions, such as whether every event has a cause and what things are genuinely real.