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Term in ancient Greek philosophy and Christian theology
Ousia (/ˈuːziə, ˈuːsiə, ˈuːʒə, ˈuːʃə/; Ancient Greek: οὐσία) is a philosophical and theological term, originally used in ancient Greek philosophy, then
Ousia
Underlying state or underlying substance
the individual aspect of ousia, this means ousia is the parent characteristic that is shared by the hypostasis under it. Ousia can be shared by numerous
Hypostasis (philosophy and religion)
Hypostasis_(philosophy_and_religion)
Music ensemble from Minneapolis, Minnesota
Ousia is a music ensemble from Minneapolis, Minnesota. The group classifies their music (a mixture of ambient, noise, and space rock) as "Snowbient."
Ousia_(band)
Greek adjective used in the Lord's Prayer
morphological components. Alternative theories are that—aside from the etymology of ousia, meaning 'substance'—it may be derived from either of the verbs einai (εἶναι)
Epiousion
Essence or substance of God
Godhead (or godhood) refers to the essence or substance (ousia) of God in Christianity — God the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. John Wycliffe introduced
Godhead_in_Christianity
Fictional character in a video game
aesthetic, such as her streaked hair and heterochromatic eye colors represents Ousia and Pneuma forms based on her Arkhe outfit modes. The developers created
Furina_(Genshin_Impact)
Christian theological term and concept
'same in being, same in essence', from ὁμός, homós, "same" and οὐσία, ousía, "being" or "essence") is a Christian theological term, most notably used
Homoousion
Christian theological theory on the nature of Jesus the Son of God and God the Father
Homoiousios (Greek: ὁμοιούσιος from ὅμοιος, hómoios, "similar" and οὐσία, ousía, "essence, being") is a heretical Christian theological term, coined in
Homoiousian
Theological concept central to Eastern Orthodoxy
Orthodox (Palamite) theology, there is a distinction between the essence (ousia) and the energies (energeia) of God. It was formulated by Gregory Palamas
Essence–energies_distinction
Christological doctrine attributed to Arius
are not, or who say that the Son of God is from a different hypostasis or ousia, or created, or changeable, or alterable — these the catholic and apostolic
Arianism
Philosophical doctrine developed by Aristotle
philosopher Aristotle, which conceives every physical entity or being (ousia) as a compound of matter (potency) and substantial form (act), with the
Hylomorphism
Group of early Christian chaplains
essence (ousia) is related to person (hypostasis) as the general to the particular. Each one of us partakes of existence because he shares in ousia while
Cappadocian_Fathers
Theological concept
English variant of the word godhood, and denotes the divinity or substance (ousia) of God. The term refers to the aspect or substratum of God that lies behind
Godhead
Early Christian and Jewish religious systems
their text, including such concepts as hypostasis (reality, existence), ousia (essence, substance, being), and demiurge (creator God). Both Sethian Gnostics
Gnosticism
Creeds of Arian Christians
the ousia and the will and the power and the glory of the Father'.” In contrast to the Nicene Creed, which says that the Son is of the same ousia as the
Arian_creeds
Russian Orthodox theologian (1903–1958)
the East–West Schism because the latter misunderstood such Greek terms as ousia, hypostasis, theosis, and theoria. In illustration of his argument he cites
Vladimir_Lossky
Second-largest Christian church
overlap or modality among them, who each have the same divine essence (ousia, Greek: οὐσία)—uncreated, immaterial, and eternal. These three persons are
Eastern_Orthodox_Church
View taken by some 4th-century Christians
Father, Son, and Holy Spirit were three separate essences or substances (ousia), and that the Son and Spirit derived their divinity from the Father, were
Semi-Arianism
Arian faction, 350s-365 CE
specifically anti-Nicene. Particularly, it opposes all ousia-language. They were “refusing to allow ousia-terms of any kind into professions of faith.” (RW
Acacians
Ancient Greek philosopher and polymath (384–322 BC)
just by virtue of being. Aristotle examines the concepts of substance (ousia) and essence (to ti ên einai, "the what it was to be") in his Metaphysics
Aristotle
Greek term that means a change of ousia
Metousiosis is a Greek term (μετουσίωσις) that means a change of ousia (οὐσία 'essence, inner reality'). The declaration of the 1672 Synod of Jerusalem
Metousiosis
2020 studio album by Sufjan Stevens and Lowell Brams
Aporia track listing No. Title Length 1. "Ousia" 2:33 2. "What It Takes" 3:23 3. "Disinheritance" 1:13 4. "Agathon" 3:02 5. "Determined Outcome" 2:12
Aporia (Sufjan Stevens and Lowell Brams album)
Aporia_(Sufjan_Stevens_and_Lowell_Brams_album)
Greek-born Belgian philosopher (born 1941)
archaïque et historique (Bruxelles, Ousia, 2014) La proximité et la question de la souffrance humaine (Bruxelles, Ousia, 2005) Histoire de la philosophie
Lambros_Couloubaritsis
without overlap or modality among them, who each have one divine essence (ousia, Greek: οὐσία)—uncreated, immaterial, and eternal. The Father is eternal
Eastern_Orthodox_theology
Text from Aristotle's Organon
explanation (with some alternative translations) is as follows: Substance (οὐσία, ousia, essence or substance). Substance is that which cannot be predicated of
Categories_(Aristotle)
Feminine figure in Gnosticism
Christus who at once ascends into the Pleroma, and after this she produces an ousia amorphos, the image of her suffering, out of which the Demiurge and the
Sophia_(Gnosticism)
Rejection of the Christian doctrine of the Trinity
and indivisibly united in one being, or essence (from the Ancient Greek ousia). Certain religious groups that emerged during the Protestant Reformation
Nontrinitarianism
Christian doctrine that God exists in three persons
For example, he describes that the Son and Father are the same "being" (ousia) and yet are also distinct faces (prosopa), anticipating the three persons
Trinity
Christian group from Mesopotamia
centred on Constantinople". The sect's teaching asserted that: The essence (ousia) of the Trinity could be perceived by the carnal senses. The Threefold God
Euchites
4th-century Christian bishop, theologian, and saint
divinity of the Holy Spirit. Basil was responsible for defining the terms "ousia" (essence/substance) and "hypostasis" (person/reality), and for defining
Basil_of_Caesarea
Christological position
they came together in one person (prosopon) and one hypostasis. Nature (ousia) in the Chalcedonian sense can be understood to be referring to a set of
Dyophysitism
4th-century Christian sect
heterooúsios 'differing in substance' from ἕτερος, héteros 'another' and οὐσία, ousía 'substance, being'. The semi-Arians condemned the Anomoeans in the Council
Anomoeanism
Ancient philosophy
categories: Substance (ὑποκείμενον): The primary matter, formless substance, (ousia) that things are made of Quality (ποιόν): The way matter is organized to
Stoicism
Person in Christian theology
that prosopon is the "appearance" of the ousia (essence), and stating: "the prosopon makes known the ousia". On several instances, he emphasized the
Prosopon
Christian theological concept
Theodore's time the word hypostasis could be used in a sense synonymous with ousia (which clearly means "essence" rather than "person") as it had been used
Hypostatic_union
Theology of the Oriental Orthodox Churches
doctrine of the Trinity: God is one in essence (Greek: οὐσία, romanized: Ousia ) and in three in persons (Greek: ὑπόστασις, romanized: Hypostasis)—Father
Oriental_Orthodox_theology
Topics referred to by the same term
2: Sons of Liberty Dravya, a term used in Jainism to refer a substance Ousia, term for substance in ancient Greek philosophy and Christian theology Substance
Substance
Personification of wisdom in philosophy and religion
"consubstantiality of the Holy Trinity", operating as the aspect of consubstantiality (ousia or physis, substantia or natura) or "hypostaticity" of the Trinity of the
Sophia_(wisdom)
Christian statement of belief focused on Trinitarian doctrine and Christology
Athanasian Creed uses the term substantia (a Latin translation of the Nicene ousia: 'being' or 'substance') with respect to the relation of the Son to the
Athanasian_Creed
Short formulaic prayer in Christianity
Metousiosis Mystical theology Nicene Creed Nepsis Oikonomia vs Akribeia Ousia Palamism Philokalia Phronema Sin Theosis Theotokos Differences from the
Jesus_Prayer
First among equals of leaders in the Eastern Orthodox Church
Metousiosis Mystical theology Nicene Creed Nepsis Oikonomia vs Akribeia Ousia Palamism Philokalia Phronema Sin Theosis Theotokos Differences from the
Ecumenical Patriarch of Constantinople
Ecumenical_Patriarch_of_Constantinople
relationship between the Father, Son and Holy Spirit as one substance (ousia) and three co-equal persons (hypostaseis). Some Trinitarians say the doctrine
Trinitarianism in the Church Fathers
Trinitarianism_in_the_Church_Fathers
Small tablet with a curse written on it from the Greco-Roman world
to give them strength through inclusion of the central essence (Greek: Ousia) of the person. This is especially the case in love spells, which calls
Curse_tablet
Greek-Cypriot musician (born 1986)
Fora" 2012: "Ematha" 2013: "Eklapsa" 2014: "Mia Akoma Voutia" 2015: "Stin Ousia" 2017: "De Pao Sti Douleia" 2017: "Stoihima" 2018: "Ypokrinesai" 2019: "Ela
Loukas_Yorkas
American musical artist (born 1968)
Stan Ridgway, jazz guitarist Skip Heller, Future Perfect Sound System, Ousia, and Savage Aural Hotbed. UltraModern received wider distribution through
Chris_Strouth
Episcopal councils
by questions concerning what is called in Latin substantia, but in Greek ousia, that is, to make it understood more exactly, as to 'coessential,' or what
Councils_of_Sirmium
Mormon conception of God
three persons, or hypostases, sharing one immaterial divine substance, or ousia—a concept that some claim found no backing in scripture, but closely mirrored
God_in_Mormonism
Christian theology of the Trinity
Seleucia regarding the Arian controversy) in the year 359. The term οὐσία (ousia) is an Ancient Greek noun, formed on the feminine present participle of
Consubstantiality
Work by Thomas Aquinas
essendi Primum Movens Correspondence theory Hylomorphism Substance theory (ousia) Substantial form Quiddity (essence / accident nature) Peripatetic axiom
Summa_contra_Gentiles
Greek philosophical and theological term
it refers to much the same thing as ousia it is more empirical and descriptive focussing on function while ousia is metaphysical and focuses more on reality
Physis
1986 book by Ronald Dworkin
Wesche, Stefen and Zanetti, Véronique, eds. Dworkin: Un débat. Paris: Ousia, 2000. NYU Law Faculty profile UCL Faculty of Laws profile Archived 2013-06-15
Law's_Empire
Christological doctrine
of Chalcedon used physis to mean a set of properties appropriate to an ousia ('essence'), and defined that there is in Christ one hypostasis but two
Miaphysitism
Study of the nature of deities and religious beliefs
only be present in something of this nature, i.e., some immutable being (ousia akinetos)." Howard, Thomas Albert. 2006. Protestant Theology and the Making
Theology
That which makes or defines an entity
philosophers, in order to provide an adequate Latin translation for the Greek term ousia. The concept originates as a precise technical term with Aristotle, who
Essence
Epistle by Thomas Aquinas
essendi Primum Movens Correspondence theory Hylomorphism Substance theory (ousia) Substantial form Quiddity (essence / accident nature) Peripatetic axiom
De regimine Judaeorum, ad Ducissam Brabantiae
De_regimine_Judaeorum,_ad_Ducissam_Brabantiae
Essence or inherent nature of thing
Everville, and the related short story, "On Amen's Shore". Hypokeimenon Ousia Problem of universals Quidditism Similarity (philosophy) Substance theory
Quiddity
Penultimate stanza of Thomas Aquinas' Sacric solemniis
essendi Primum Movens Correspondence theory Hylomorphism Substance theory (ousia) Substantial form Quiddity (essence / accident nature) Peripatetic axiom
Panis_angelicus
2020 American film
Ryan LeBoeuf Music by Will Patterson Production companies Lola Pictures Ousia Entertainment Mutressa Movies Silver State Productions Distributed by Universal
Viena_and_the_Fantomes
Interpretation of the Trinity
divine nature: their essence ("ousia" in Greek). It was in the development of the Trinity that the Greek terms ousia and hypostasis were fully separated;
Social_trinitarianism
Work of dramatic theory by Aristotle
Four causes Hexis Horror vacui Hylomorphism Hypokeimenon Minima naturalia Ousia Passive intellect Potentiality and actuality Substance theory Substantial
Poetics_(Aristotle)
Metousiosis Mystical theology Nicene Creed Nepsis Oikonomia vs Akribeia Ousia Palamism Philokalia Phronema Sin Theosis Theotokos Differences from the
Evergetinos
Early Christian governance councils
Metousiosis Mystical theology Nicene Creed Nepsis Oikonomia vs Akribeia Ousia Palamism Philokalia Phronema Sin Theosis Theotokos Differences from the
First seven ecumenical councils
First_seven_ecumenical_councils
Verse of the New Testament
εἰμί (eimi), from the latter of which are derived words such as οὐσία (ousia), the range of whose meanings is indicated in A Greek-English Lexicon. Daily
Matthew_6:11
Former Christian jurisdiction
Metousiosis Mystical theology Nicene Creed Nepsis Oikonomia vs Akribeia Ousia Palamism Philokalia Phronema Sin Theosis Theotokos Differences from the
Orthodox Church of Greece (Holy Synod in Resistance)
Orthodox_Church_of_Greece_(Holy_Synod_in_Resistance)
Treatise by Thomas Aquinas (c.1255)
essendi Primum Movens Correspondence theory Hylomorphism Substance theory (ousia) Substantial form Quiddity (essence / accident nature) Peripatetic axiom
De principiis naturae, ad fratrem Sylvestrum
De_principiis_naturae,_ad_fratrem_Sylvestrum
Way of describing the divine by explaining what God is not
beings (or even angels) can understand. He is transcendent in essence (ousia). Further knowledge must be sought in a direct experience of God or his
Apophatic_theology
Christian prayer attributed to Jesus
εἰμί (eimi), from the latter of which are derived words such as οὐσία (ousia), the range of whose meanings is indicated in A Greek–English Lexicon. And
Lord's_Prayer
Metousiosis Mystical theology Nicene Creed Nepsis Oikonomia vs Akribeia Ousia Palamism Philokalia Phronema Sin Theosis Theotokos Differences from the
Assembly of Canonical Orthodox Bishops of Belgium, Holland, and Luxembourg
Assembly_of_Canonical_Orthodox_Bishops_of_Belgium,_Holland,_and_Luxembourg
Neapolitan Catholic bishop (died 1351)
vision Formal distinction Hylomorphism Scotistic realism Substance theory (ousia) Accident Substantial form Quiddity (essence / nature) Individuation Existence
Landolfo_Caracciolo
Byzantine Greek theologian (c. 1296 – 1357/9)
Metousiosis Mystical theology Nicene Creed Nepsis Oikonomia vs Akribeia Ousia Palamism Philokalia Phronema Sin Theosis Theotokos Differences from the
Gregory_Palamas
Fictional nation in Genshin Impact
sickness. The development team introduced new mechanics called "Pneuma" and "Ousia" (jointly known as Fontaine's "Arkhe" system) in Fontaine's puzzles. These
Fontaine_(Genshin_Impact)
Ecumenical council of the Eastern Orthodox Church and the Catholic Church (787 AD)
Metousiosis Mystical theology Nicene Creed Nepsis Oikonomia vs Akribeia Ousia Palamism Philokalia Phronema Sin Theosis Theotokos Differences from the
Second_Council_of_Nicaea
Mediation proposal by Athanasius, 362
Gregory of Nazianzus subsequently established the concept of the one being (Ousia) and the three hypostases of God, which became binding with the decision
Tomus_ad_Antiochenos
Christian scholar, ascetic, and theologian (c. 185 – c. 253)
hypostasis as heretical. According to Rowan Williams, because the words ousia and hypostasis were used synonymously in Origen's time, Origen almost certainly
Origen
Family name
governance. The name derives from the Perso-Arabic word jawhar (جوهر; Greek: ousía), translating to "jewel" or "essence". Historically, it has denoted value
Al-Jawhar
Eastern Orthodox and Eastern Catholic Church exclamation at funerals
Metousiosis Mystical theology Nicene Creed Nepsis Oikonomia vs Akribeia Ousia Palamism Philokalia Phronema Sin Theosis Theotokos Differences from the
Memory_Eternal
Christian monk, priest, hymnographer and apologist (675/6–749)
Metousiosis Mystical theology Nicene Creed Nepsis Oikonomia vs Akribeia Ousia Palamism Philokalia Phronema Sin Theosis Theotokos Differences from the
John_of_Damascus
Attribute of God in Christian theology
Actus purus Altruism Anatta Causa sui Gnosiology Hypostasis (philosophy) Ousia Ontology Martin Heidegger Solipsism Svayambhu Sauvage, George (1907). "Aseity"
Aseity
Capital of Cyprus and Northern Cyprus
usually interpeted as meaning "the white estate" (ἡ λευκή οὐσία, hē leukḗ ousía). This form later developed into modern Greek Lefkosia (Λευκωσία, Lefkosía
Nicosia
Ancient Roman family
brother, and disappeared. Gallia Polla, the proprietor of a first-century ousia in Egypt that later passed to the imperial freedman Marcus Antonius Pallas
Gallia_gens
381 AD council of Christian bishops
Metousiosis Mystical theology Nicene Creed Nepsis Oikonomia vs Akribeia Ousia Palamism Philokalia Phronema Sin Theosis Theotokos Differences from the
First Council of Constantinople
First_Council_of_Constantinople
Council of Christian bishops in Nicaea, 325
Metousiosis Mystical theology Nicene Creed Nepsis Oikonomia vs Akribeia Ousia Palamism Philokalia Phronema Sin Theosis Theotokos Differences from the
First_Council_of_Nicaea
Epistemological view centered on reason
include idéa, morphē, eîdos, and parádeigma, but also génos, phýsis, and ousía. He also uses expressions such as to x auto, "the x itself" or kath' auto
Rationalism
Eastern Orthodox book of spiritual writings
Metousiosis Mystical theology Nicene Creed Nepsis Oikonomia vs Akribeia Ousia Palamism Philokalia Phronema Sin Theosis Theotokos Differences from the
Philokalia
piano MWV Q 20 (1829) Fabio Mengozzi Phoenix (violin and harp) Ousia (harp and piano) Ousia II (flute, cello, harp, piano) Auriga (harp and piano) Sergiu
List_of_compositions_for_harp
Topics referred to by the same term
fictional lifeform Being Human (disambiguation) Ontology, the study of being Ousia, Greek for being This disambiguation page lists articles associated with
Being_(disambiguation)
Roman model of church organization
Metousiosis Mystical theology Nicene Creed Nepsis Oikonomia vs Akribeia Ousia Palamism Philokalia Phronema Sin Theosis Theotokos Differences from the
Pentarchy
Philosophical attribute
Essence Hypostasis (philosophy and religion) Indeterminism Modal logic Ousia Qualia Randomness Coincidence and synchronicity, in which accident may seem
Accident_(philosophy)
True Orthodox organisation
Metousiosis Mystical theology Nicene Creed Nepsis Oikonomia vs Akribeia Ousia Palamism Philokalia Phronema Sin Theosis Theotokos Differences from the
Holy Orthodox Church in North America
Holy_Orthodox_Church_in_North_America
Metousiosis Mystical theology Nicene Creed Nepsis Oikonomia vs Akribeia Ousia Palamism Philokalia Phronema Sin Theosis Theotokos Differences from the
List of bishops and Ecumenical Patriarchs of Constantinople
List_of_bishops_and_Ecumenical_Patriarchs_of_Constantinople
Specific understanding of how the human and divine relate within the person of Jesus
person of Jesus Christ. The Nicene Creed said that Jesus was "of one Being (ousia) with (God) the Father" and that he "was incarnate of the Holy Spirit and
Eutychianism
existence (hypostasis or persona). Jesus was God in essence, being and nature (ousia or substantia). The first council did not end the conflict. When Emperor
History of the Eastern Orthodox Church
History_of_the_Eastern_Orthodox_Church
Stages an Eastern Orthodox monk or nun passes through in their religious vocation
Metousiosis Mystical theology Nicene Creed Nepsis Oikonomia vs Akribeia Ousia Palamism Philokalia Phronema Sin Theosis Theotokos Differences from the
Degrees of Eastern Orthodox monasticism
Degrees_of_Eastern_Orthodox_monasticism
Byzantine galley warship
οὑσιακόν) or simply ousiakon or ousiakos, so named because it was manned by an ousia of 108 men, and the chelandion pamphylon (Greek: χελάνδιον πάμφυλον), or
Chelandion
Principles in the philosophy of Aristotle
from that material, and one part of how we can understand the substance (ousia, sometimes translated as "thinghood") of any separate thing. (As emphasized
Potentiality_and_actuality
Study of Christian belief and practice
expressed as the doctrine of the Trinity, which describes the single divine ousia (substance) existing as three distinct and inseparable hypostases (persons):
Christian_theology
Basic ontological concept
hylomorphic categories. Aristotle used the term "substance" (Greek: οὐσία ousia) in a secondary sense for genera and species understood as hylomorphic forms
Substance_theory
Academic journal
peer-reviewed academic journal originally published in French by Éditions Ousia. The journal was founded in 1985 by Jacques Taminiaux edited it until its
Études_phénoménologiques
Eastern Christian liturgical rite
Metousiosis Mystical theology Nicene Creed Nepsis Oikonomia vs Akribeia Ousia Palamism Philokalia Phronema Sin Theosis Theotokos Differences from the
Byzantine_Rite
French philosopher (1930–2004)
always designated an invariable presence – eidos, archē, telos, energeia, ousia (essence, existence, substance, subject), alētheia, transcendentality, consciousness
Jacques_Derrida
OUSIA
OUSIA
OUSIA
OUSIA
Girl/Female
Muslim
Prayer
Boy/Male
Tamil
East
Boy/Male
Hindu
Goddess
Female
German
Pet form of German Annelie, ANNELIEN means "favor; grace" and "God is my oath."
Boy/Male
Hindu
Deep, Serious, Profound, Tolerant
Boy/Male
British, Danish, English
Form of Sigar
Boy/Male
Assamese, Gujarati, Hindu, Indian, Kannada, Malayalam, Marathi, Sindhi
Moon
Boy/Male
British, English
From the Island of Linden Trees
Girl/Female
Latin
Of the sea.and Mary.
Boy/Male
Welsh
Ruler.
OUSIA
OUSIA
OUSIA
OUSIA
OUSIA