Henology (from Ancient Greek ἕν (hen) 'one') is the philosophical account or discourse on the One that appears most notably in the philosophy of Plotinus.[1]
Areas of inquiry
editHenology stands in contradistinction to several other philosophical disciplines. The term henology refers to the discipline that centers around the One, as in the philosophies of Plato and Plotinus. It is sometimes used in contradistinction to disciplines that treat being as their starting point (as in Aristotle and Avicenna), and also to those that seek to understand knowledge and truth (as in Kant and Descartes).[2]
See also
edit- Ground of the Soul
- Absolute (philosophy)
- Deleuzian metaphysics
- "The One is not" in the metaphysics of Alan Badiou's work Being and Event
- Giovanni Pico della Mirandola
- "God above God" in the philosophy of Paul Tillich
- Henosis, union with what is fundamental in reality
- Monad (philosophy)
- Monism
- Non-philosophy
- Univocity of being
References
edit- ^ John N. Deely (2001). Four Ages of Understanding. ISBN 9780802047359. Retrieved May 16, 2009.
- ^ Wyller, Egil A. (1997). Henologische Perspektiven II: zu Ehren Egil A. Wyller, Internales Henologie-Symposium. Amsterdam, Netherlands: Rodopi. pp. 5–6. ISBN 90-420-0357-X. Retrieved 25 March 2017.