inexistence
See also: in existence
English
    
    
Pronunciation
    
- IPA(key): /ˌɪnɪɡˈzɪstəns/
- Audio (UK) - (file) 
Noun
    
inexistence (usually uncountable, plural inexistences)
- The state of not being, not existing, or not being perceptible.
-  1648, Robert Boyle, Seraphic Love, 1997 Kessinger ed. edition, →ISBN, page 57:- Our inexistence indeed was a condition, wherein nothing in us was capable of being a motive of God's love; but our enmity proceeded further, and made us worthy of his detestation; […]
 
-  2007, Jacques-Alain Miller, “The Sinthome, A Mixture of Symptom and Fantasy”, in The Later Lacan, →ISBN, page 57:- Axiomatics (namely, that everything that will be used for the purposes of a demonstration is explained) does nothing more than formalizing this wiping clean — in other words, inexistence is posed as the condition for necessity to emerge.
 
 
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- The state of existing in something
-  1663, Isaac Barrow, “A Defence of the Blessed Trinity”, in The Theological Works of Isaac Barrow, published 1830, page 188:- that there is a mutual inexistence of one in all, and all in one; […]
 
 
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- That which exists within; a constituent.
- 1768-1777, Abraham Tucker, The Light of Nature Pursued
- where could they find such receptacle for their inexistence
 
 
- 1768-1777, Abraham Tucker, The Light of Nature Pursued
Usage notes
    
- In modern philosophical writing, this is chiefly used with the sense "nonexistence" as a literal translation or calque of a corresponding term in another European language, such as the German Inexistenz or the Spanish inexistencia.
Synonyms
    
- (not existing): nonexistence, absence, lack; See also Thesaurus:inexistence
- (existing within): inherence; See also Thesaurus:intrinsicality
Related terms
    
French
    
    Pronunciation
    
- Audio - (file) 
Further reading
    
- “inexistence”, in Trésor de la langue française informatisé [Digitized Treasury of the French Language], 2012.
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