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Transcendent

Transcendent is an adjective describing something that goes beyond ordinary experience, understanding, or existence. Its etymology is from the Latin transcendere, meaning to go beyond.

In philosophy and theology, the term denotes realities or truths that lie beyond the limits of ordinary

Historically, scholastic philosophy spoke of the transcendental properties, or transcendents, such as being (ens), unity (unum),

In mathematics, transcendence refers to a specific property of numbers and functions. A real or complex number

In contemporary usage, transcendence often describes experiences, goals, or art that surpass ordinary limits or conventional

experience
or
empirical
observation.
It
is
often
contrasted
with
immanence,
which
denotes
that
which
is
present
within
and
compatible
with
the
world
as
we
experience
it.
In
religious
contexts,
the
divine
is
frequently
described
as
transcendent,
existing
beyond
the
physical
universe
and
human
comprehension.
In
some
philosophical
traditions,
the
term
also
relates
to
the
distinction
between
what
can
be
experienced
and
what
conditions
experience
itself,
as
in
Kantian
discussions
of
the
transcendent
versus
the
transcendental.
truth
(verum),
and
goodness
(bonum).
These
properties
are
said
to
pertain
to
all
beings
and
to
transcend
particular
categories
of
being.
is
transcendental
if
it
is
not
a
root
of
any
nonzero
polynomial
equation
with
integer
coefficients.
Classic
examples
include
pi
and
e.
The
term
also
applies
to
certain
functions,
which
are
called
transcendental
because
they
are
not
algebraic.
understanding,
as
well
as
mathematical
objects
that
cannot
be
expressed
by
algebraic
equations.