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vücuda

Vücuda is the Turkish term rooted in the Arabic word wujūd and is used in philosophical, theological, and Sufi contexts to denote existence or being. In Turkish discourse, vücut can refer to the state of existing or the reality of things, especially in discussions of ontology and metaphysics. In everyday language the word also appears with its more physical sense of body, but in metaphysical usage it is chiefly about existence.

Vücuda is most prominently encountered in phrases that describe coming into existence or form. The dative form

In Sufi and Islamic philosophy, wujud (vücut) underpins central doctrines such as vahdet-i vücud, the Unity of

Contemporary Turkish usage retains vücut primarily within academic, theological, and philosophical writing. It is commonly contrasted

vücuda
appears
in
expressions
such
as
vücuda
getirmek,
meaning
to
bring
into
existence
or
realize,
and
vücut
bulmak,
meaning
to
take
form
or
to
come
into
being.
The
term
thus
functions
as
a
technical
label
for
the
ontological
status
of
beings.
Being.
This
concept,
associated
with
Ibn
ʿArabi
and
later
Turkish
thinkers,
posits
that
all
creatures
exist
in
relation
to
the
one
ultimate
reality,
often
interpreted
as
God.
Debates
around
vücut
address
whether
beings
possess
real,
independent
existence
or
derive
their
being
from
the
divine
presence.
with
terms
such
as
varlık
(existence
or
being
in
a
general
sense)
and
mevcudiyet
(existence
as
a
state).
The
word
reflects
a
long
tradition
linking
language,
metaphysics,
and
mysticism
in
Turkish
thought.