Ontotheology

The term onto-theology ( from Ancient Greek ὄν on, past participle to εἶναι einai "to be", and theology ) was coined by Immanuel Kant, which including a form of transcendental theology sees who does not understand God grasping, to experience, but these with the help of transcendental concepts to trying to think.

Martin Heidegger uses this term to refer to the traditional metaphysics with regard to their question of how she thinks the highest being. The idea that a generally higher being or beings - be it God, the substance in Spinoza, the Absolute in Hegel or Schelling or the monad in Leibniz - as the guarantor of the world order is necessary, is called ontotheologische form of metaphysics.

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