安裝中文字典英文字典辭典工具!
安裝中文字典英文字典辭典工具!
|
- Pneuma - Wikipedia
In Stoic philosophy, pneuma is the concept of the "breath of life," a mixture of the elements air (in motion) and fire (as warmth) [6] For the Stoics, pneuma is the active, generative principle that organizes both the individual and the cosmos [7]
- Strongs Greek: 4151. πνεῦμα (pneuma) -- Spirit, wind, breath
4151 pneúma – properly, spirit (Spirit), wind, or breath The most frequent meaning (translation) of 4151 (pneúma) in the NT is " spirit " (" Spirit ") Only the context however determines which sense (s) is meant
- PNEUMA Definition Meaning - Merriam-Webster
The meaning of PNEUMA is soul, spirit; specifically : holy spirit How to use pneuma in a sentence
- What Is Pneuma? The Stoic Lifeforce Behind Nature and Reason
Pneuma is the animating force of the cosmos: a rational, life-giving breath that forms the soul, binds matter, and expresses divine reason throughout nature This makes it not only metaphysical but practical It underpins Stoic physics, ethics, and psychology, helping us understand our place in the universe and how to live in harmony with it
- pneuma - Wiktionary, the free dictionary
(Gnosticism) One of three levels of a human being, the spirit, along with the body and soul pneuma m (plural pneumas) Obsolete form of neuma
- Pneuma | Oxford Classical Dictionary - Oxford Research Encyclopedias
Pneuma (πνεῦμα , Lat spiritus) is connected etymologically with πνέω , breathe or blow, and has a basic meaning of ‘air in motion’, or ‘breath’ as something necessary to life In Greek tragedy it is used of the ‘breath of life’ and it is the ‘Spirit’ of the New Testament
- Pneuma | definition of pneuma by Medical dictionary
In ancient Greek, pneuma is the word for air or breath, from pnein, to breathe; it gives us words like pneumatic (full of air) and pneumonia (a disease of our air lung organs)
- Pneuma - Etymology, Origin Meaning - Etymonline
in pathology, "suspension of breathing," originally, and until recently most commonly, apnoea, 1719, Modern Latin, from Greek apnoia "absence of respiration," from apnoos "without breathing, without wind," from a- "not, without" (see a- (3)) + pnein "to breathe" (see pneuma)
|
|
|