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Webster 1913 Edition


Inexistence

Inˊex-ist′ence

,
Noun.
[Pref.
in-
in +
existence
.]
[Obs.]
(a)
Inherence; subsistence.
Bp. Hall.
(b)
That which exists within; a constituent.
A. Tucker.

Inˊex-ist′ence

,
Noun.
[Pref.
in-
in +
existence
: cf. F.
inexistence
.]
Lack of being or existence.

Webster 1828 Edition


Inexistence

INEXIST'ENCE

,
Noun.
[in and existence.]
1.
Want of being or existence.
2.
Inherence.

Definition 2024


inexistence

inexistence

See also: in existence

English

Noun

inexistence (usually uncountable, plural inexistences)

  1. The state of not being, not existing, or not being perceptible.
    • 1648, Robert Boyle, Seraphic Love, 1997 Kessinger ed. edition, ISBN 1564590089, 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; []
    • 1941, Giuseppe di Gioia, Swift are the Shadows, page 78:
      In order to prove the inexistence of God, he challenged Him to strike him down in five minutes while timing himself with a watch.
    • 2007, Jacques-Alain Miller, “The Sinthome, A Mixture of Symptom and Fantasy”, in The Later Lacan, ISBN 0791469972, 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.
  2. 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; []
    • 1854, Christopher Walton, Notes and Materials for an Adequate Biography of the Celebrated Divine and Theosopher: William Law, page 207:
      She distinguished as to this, the inexistence in God from eternity, and the figurative manifestation in time.
    • 2005, Louis Dupre, The Enlightenment and the Intellectual Foundations of Modern Culture, ISBN 0300113463, page 303:
      Berkeley's theory of the creature's permanent inexistence in God evoked a suspicion of pantheism.
  3. That which exists within; a constituent.
    (Can we find and add a quotation of A. Tucker to this entry?)

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

Related terms


French

Noun

inexistence f (plural inexistences)

  1. inexistence