Noumenon
Noumenon (νοούμενoν) is a Greek word that could be translated as "something that is thought", or "the object of an act of thought". This word is sometimes used for object or principles that cannot be known through the use of the senses.
1. The intellectual conception of a thing as it is in itself, not as it is known through perception.
2. The of itself unknown and unknowable rational object, or thing in itself, which is distinguished from the phenomenon through which it is apprehended by the senses, and by which it is interpreted and understood; -- so used in the philosophy of Kant and his followers. [1]
The term is generally used in contrast with, or in relation to "phenomenon", which refers to anything that appears to, or is an object of the senses.
In Ancient philosophy, the noumenal
realm was equated with the world of ideas known to the philosophical mind, in contrast to the phenomenal realm, which was equated with the world of sensory reality, known to the uneducated mind.[2] Modern philosophy has generally denied the possibility of knowledge independent of the senses, and Immanuel Kant gave this point of view its classical version, saying that the noumenal world may exist, but it is completely unknowable to humans. In Kantian philosophy the unknowable noumenon is often linked to the unknowable "thing per se" (Ding an sich), although how to characterize the nature of the relationship is a question yet open to some controversy.
- ↑ [1]
- ↑ "Platonist frames of thought draw a dividing line between two realms. One realm, the inferior of the two, is the material, physical world of sense experience. It is the "phenomenal" world, the world of objects, of the body, of immediate perception. The other, superior realm is the world of the immaterial, the spiritual, the world of realities not accessible to the body's senses, the world known by intellect or spiritual sense, the "noumenal" world."