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essence

 
Dictionary: es·sence   (ĕs'əns) pronunciation
n.
  1. The intrinsic or indispensable properties that serve to characterize or identify something.
  2. The most important ingredient; the crucial element.
  3. The inherent, unchanging nature of a thing or class of things.
    1. An extract that has the fundamental properties of a substance in concentrated form.
    2. Such an extract in a solution of alcohol.
    3. A perfume or scent.
  4. One that has or shows an abundance of a quality as if highly concentrated: a neighbor who is the essence of hospitality.
  5. Something that exists, especially a spiritual or incorporeal entity.
idioms:

in essence

  1. By nature; essentially: He is in essence a reclusive sort.
of the essence
  1. Of the greatest importance; crucial: Time is of the essence.

[Middle English essencia and French essence, both from Latin essentia, from esse, to be, from the presumed present participle *essēns, *essent- (on the model of differentia, difference , from differēns, different-, present participle of differre, to differ), created to translate Greek ousiā (from ousa, feminine present participle of einai, to be).]


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Thesaurus: essence
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noun

  1. A basic trait or set of traits that define and establish the character of something: being, essentiality, nature, quintessence, substance, texture. See surface/depth.
  2. The most central and material part: core, gist, heart, kernel, marrow, meat, nub, pith, quintessence, root1, soul, spirit, stuff, substance. Law gravamen. See be.

Antonyms: essence
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n

Definition: significance
Antonyms: peripherals


Dental Dictionary: essence
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(es′ens)
n

An alcoholic solution of an essential oil.

(Latin, esse, to be) The basic or primary element in the being of a thing; the thing's nature, or that without which it could not be what it is. A thing cannot lose its essence without ceasing to exist, and the essential nature of a natural kind, such as water or gold, is that property without which there is no instance of the kind. Locke contrasted real essences, in something like this sense, with the nominal definition provided by a description of the common properties of a thing. Throughout Greek, scholastic, and some modern philosophy there have been many proposals of ways for finding the essences of things, and views about what science would be like if we did know them. The distinction between essential and accidental properties is rejected by holistic approaches to science, such as that advocated by Quine. See also essentialism, haecceity, quiddity.

 
essence, in philosophy, the nature of a thing. Aristotle maintained that there is a distinction between the form of a thing-its intelligible, verbally formulable character-and the essence of a thing, i.e., what it is in itself, which is not common to anything else. The essence of a thing is what is formulated as a universal in the mind and in language. St. Thomas Aquinas distinguished between the essence of a thing and the fact of its being, or its existence. In modern existentialist thought Jean-Paul Sartre made use of Aquinas's distinction between essence and existence but reversed them by insisting that existence precedes essence. By this he asserted that people do not have predetermined natures; what a person is follows from the choices he or she makes.


World of the Mind: essence
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The essence of something is what it is to be that thing as opposed to something else. Thus the essence of a triangle is three-sidedness. In Aristotelian philosophy, a thing's essence is given by specifying its defining characteristics — its 'essential' as opposed to 'accidental' features. Thus, being a malleable metal would be an essential characteristic of gold, but being mined in South Africa would be an accidental characteristic (since if gold ceased to be mined in South Africa it would still be gold).

There is a celebrated philosophical debate about whether statements about essence reflect the real nature of things or merely human linguistic conventions. The former view is known as 'essentialism' or 'realism', the latter as 'nominalism'. Recently the American philosopher Saul Kripke has revived a version of essentialism according to which natural kinds (gold, water) possess real essences: that is, certain characteristics are necessarily true of these substances, and this is not a matter of linguistic convention but is a matter of the real structure that these substances necessarily possess.

Questions about essence ('what is X?', 'what is it to be X?') have traditionally been distinguished from questions about existence ('does X exist?'), and questions of the former sort have been supposed to be prior to the latter (thus we can raise questions about the essential characteristics of triangles without having to concern ourselves about whether triangles really exist). Existentialists such as Sartre, however, maintain that, in the case of human beings, 'existence precedes essence'. On this view, the first truth of which a human is aware is simply that he exists; his freedom to choose how to live is not constrained by any predetermined 'nature' or essence.

(Published 1987)

— John G. Cottingham

    Bibliography
  • Kripke, S. (1980). Naming and Necessity.


1. the distinctive or individual principle of anything.
2. a mixture of alcohol with a volatile oil.

Word Tutor: essence
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pronunciation

IN BRIEF: Most important or basic quality of a thing.

pronunciation It is the essence of genius to make use of the simplest ideas. — Charles Deguy.

Wikipedia: Essence
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In philosophy, essence is the attribute or set of attributes that make an object or substance what it fundamentally is, and which it has by necessity, and without which it loses its identity. Essence is contrasted with accident: a property that the object or substance has contingently, without which the substance can still retain its identity. The concept originates with Aristotle, who used the Greek expression to ti ên einai, literally 'the what it was to be', or sometimes the shorter phrase to ti esti, literally 'the what it is,' for the same idea. This phrase presented such difficulties for his Latin translators that they coined the word essentia to represent the whole expression. For Aristotle and his scholastic followers the notion of essence is closely linked to that of definition (horismos) [1]

In the history of western thought, essence has often served as a vehicle for doctrines that tend to individuate different forms of existence as well as different identity conditions for objects and properties; in this eminently logical meaning, the concept has given a strong theoretical and common-sense basis to the whole family of logical theories based on the "possible worlds" analogy set up by Leibniz and developed in the intensional logic from Carnap to Kripke, which was later challenged by "extensionalist" philosophers such as Quine.

The English word "essence" comes from the Latin essentia, which was coined (from the Latin esse, "to be") by ancient Roman scholars in order to translate the Ancient Greek phrase to ti ēn einai (literally, "what it is for a thing to be"), coined by Aristotle to denote a thing's essence.

Contents

Ontological status

In his dialogues Plato suggests that concrete beings acquire their essence through their relations to "forms" (ειδε: eide) - abstract universals logically or ontologically separate from the objects of sense perception. These forms are often put forth as the models or paradigms of which sensible things are "copies". Sensible bodies are in constant flux and imperfect and hence, by Plato's reckoning, less real than the forms which are eternal, unchanging and complete. Typical examples of forms given by Plato are largeness, smallness, equality, unity, goodness, beauty and justice.

Aristotle moves the forms of Plato to the nucleus of the individual thing, which is called ousía or substance. Essence is the of the thing, the to tí en einai. Essence corresponds to the ousia's definition; essence is a real and physical aspect of the ousía. (Aristotle, "Metaphisic", I)

According to nominalists (Roscelin of Compiègne, William of Ockham, John Duns Scoto, William of Champeaux, Bernard of Chartres), universals aren't concrete entities, just voice's sounds; there are only individuals: "nam cum habeat eorum sententia nihil esse praeter individuum(...)" (Roscelin, De gener. et spec., 524). Universals are words that can to call several individuals; for example the word "homo". Therefore a universal is reduced to a sound's emission. (Roscelin, "De generibus et speciebus")

According to Edmund Husserl essence is ideal. However, ideal means that essence is the intentional object of the conscience. Essence is interpreted as sense. (E. Husserl, "Ideas pertaining to a pure phenomenology and to a phenomenological philosophy", paragraphs 3 and 4).

Existentialism

Existentialism was coined by Jean-Paul Sartre's statement that for human beings "existence precedes essence." In as much as "essence" is a cornerstone of all metaphysical philosophy and the grounding of Rationalism, Sartre's statement was a refutation of the philosophical system that had come before him (and, in particular, that of Husserl, Hegel, and Heidegger). Instead of "is-ness" generating "actuality," he argued that existence and actuality come first, and the essence is derived afterward. For Kierkegaard, it is the individual person who is the supreme moral entity, and the personal, subjective aspects of human life that are the most important; also, for Kierkegaard all of this had religious implications.[2]

In metaphysics

"Essence," in metaphysics, is often synonymous with the soul, and some existentialists argue that individuals gain their souls and spirits after they exist, that they develop their souls and spirits during their lifetimes. For Kierkegaard, however, the emphasis was upon essence as "nature." For him, there is no such thing as "human nature" that determines how a human will behave or what a human will be. First, he or she exists, and then comes attribute. Jean-Paul Sartre's more materialist and skeptical existentialism furthered this existentialist tenet by flatly refuting any metaphysical essence, any soul, and arguing instead that there is merely existence, with attributes as essence.

Thus, in existentialist discourse, essence can refer to physical aspect or attribute, to the ongoing being of a person (the character or internally determined goals), or to the infinite inbound within the human (which can be lost, can atrophy, or can be developed into an equal part with the finite), depending upon the type of existentialist discourse.

Marxism's essentialism

Karl Marx was, along with Kierkegaard, a follower of Hegel's, and he, too, developed a philosophy in reaction to his master. In his early work, Marx used Aristotalian style teleology and derived a concept of humanity's essential nature. Marx's Economic and Philosophical Manuscripts of 1844 describe a theory of alienation based on human existence being completely different from human essence. Marx said human nature was social, and that humanity had the distinct essence of free activity and conscious thought.

Some scholars, such as Philip Kain, have argued that Marx abandoned the idea of a human essence, but many other scholars point to Marx's continued discussion of these ideas despite the decline of terms such as essence and alienation in his later work.

Buddhism

Within the Madhyamika school of Mahayana Buddhism, Candrakirti identifies the self as:

an essence of things that does not depend on others; it is an intrinsic nature. The non-existence of that is selflessness.
-- Bodhisattvayogacaryācatuḥśatakaṭikā 256.1.7

Indeed the concept of Buddhist Emptiness is the strong assertion that all phenomena are empty of any essence (as outlined in the concept of smarana and in the Heart Sutra) - demonstrating that anti-essentialism lies at the very root of Buddhist praxis. Therefore, within this school it is the innate belief in essence that is considered to be an afflictive obscuration which serves as the root of all suffering. However, the school also rejects the tenets of Idealism and Materialism; instead, the ideas of truth or existence, along with any assertions that depend upon them are limited to their function within the contexts and conventions that assert them, somewhat akin to Relativism or Pragmatism. For them, replacement paradoxes such as Ship of Theseus are answered by stating that the Ship of Thesesus remains so (within the conventions that assert it) until it ceases to function as the Ship of Theseus.

Of the many places to find the philosophical Examination of Essence, it is discussed in Nagarjuna's Mulamadhyamakakarika, The Fundamental Wisdom of the Middle Way. Chapter I examines the Conditions of Existence, while Chapter XV examines Essence in itself, difference, the eternalist's view and nihilists view of essence and non-essence.

Hinduism

In understanding any individual personality, a distinction is made between one's Swadharma (essence) and Swabhava(mental habits and conditionings of ego personality). Svabhava is the nature of a person, which is a result of his or her samskaras (impressions created in the mind due to one's interaction with the external world). These samskaras create habits and mental models and those become our nature. While there is another kind of svabhava that is a pure internal quality - smarana - we are here focusing only on the svabhava that was created due to samskaras (because to discover the pure, internal svabhava and smarana, one should become aware of one's samskaras and take control over them). Dharma is derived from the root Dhr - to hold. It is that which holds an entity together. That is, Dharma is that which gives integrity to an entity and holds the core quality and identity (essence), form and function of that entity. Dharma is also defined as righteousness and duty. To do one's dharma is to be righteous, to do one's dharma is to do one's duty (express one's essence). [1]

Notes and References

  1. ^ S. Marc Cohen, "Aristotle's Metaphysics", Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, accessed 20 April 2008.
  2. ^ The Story of Philosophy, Bryan Magee, Dorling Kindersley Lond. 1998, ISBN 0-7513-0590-1

See also

Related Concepts

Self Actualization by Maslow

External links

  • Ontological status of essence [2]
  • Husserl's Ideas on a Pure Phenomenology[3]
  • A Sense of Eidos[4]
  • Nominalism, realism, conceptualism[5]

Misspellings: essence
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Common misspelling(s) of essence

  • essense

Translations: Essence
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Dansk (Danish)
n. - kerne, hovedindhold, koncentrat, essens, parfume, væsen, natur

idioms:

  • in essence    fundamentalt set
  • of the essence    af afgørende betydning

Nederlands (Dutch)
essentie, wezenlijkheid, essence (concentraat), parfum, grond

Français (French)
n. - essence, fond, essentiel, (Chim) essence, (Culin) extrait, (Philos) essence, nature

idioms:

  • in essence    par essence, essentiellement
  • of the essence    essentiel, qui s'impose

Deutsch (German)
n. - Essenz, Wesen

idioms:

  • in essence    im wesentlichen
  • of the essence    von entscheidender Bedeutung sein

Ελληνική (Greek)
n. - (κυρία) ουσία, (χημ.) αιθέριο έλαιο, εσάνς, άρωμα

idioms:

  • in essence    στην ουσία, κατ' ουσίαν, ουσιαστικά
  • of the essence    ζωτικής σημασίας

Italiano (Italian)
essenza, essere

idioms:

  • in essence    in sostanza
  • of the essence    essenziale

Português (Portuguese)
n. - essência (f), âmago (m)

idioms:

  • in essence    por natureza
  • of the essence    essencialmente

Русский (Russian)
сущность, существо, эссенция

idioms:

  • in essence    в сущности, по существу
  • of the essence    самое главное

Español (Spanish)
n. - esencia, perfume, extracto, fondo

idioms:

  • in essence    esencialmente, en esencia
  • of the essence    esencial, imprescindible

Svenska (Swedish)
n. - väsen, innersta väsen

中文(简体)(Chinese (Simplified))
基本, 原素, 本质

idioms:

  • in essence    本质上, 实质, 基本上
  • of the essence    极其重要的, 必不可少的

中文(繁體)(Chinese (Traditional))
n. - 基本, 原素, 本質

idioms:

  • in essence    本質上, 實質, 基本上
  • of the essence    極其重要的, 必不可少的

한국어 (Korean)
n. - 본질, 실체

idioms:

  • in essence    본질에 있어서

日本語 (Japanese)
n. - 本質, 真髄, エキス, 精

idioms:

  • in essence    本質において
  • of the essence    最も重要な

العربيه (Arabic)
‏(الاسم) جوهر الشيء‏

עברית (Hebrew)
n. - ‮עיקר, תמצית, המציאות שבבסיסה של תופעה‬


 
 
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