Apophasis
ἀπόφασις · negation, "unsaying"; the via negativa of mystical theology
Apophasis (ἀπόφασις, literally “unsaying” or “denial”) is the technical term for the negative mode of theological speech. Where the kataphatic mode proceeds by affirmation — God is good, God is wise — the apophatic mode proceeds by denial: God is not good in the manner that creatures are good, not even being in the manner that creatures are. The ultimate aim of apophatic discourse is not to deliver propositional content but to bring the speaker to the silence in which the divine, exceeding every concept, is encountered.
The locus classicus is Pseudo-Dionysius the Areopagite’s brief and dense Mystical Theology (c. 500 CE), which closes by negating even the negations. From Dionysius the apophatic mode descends through Maximus the Confessor, John Scotus Eriugena, the Rhineland mystics (Eckhart, Tauler, Suso), the anonymous Cloud of Unknowing, and into the Carmelite tradition of John of the Cross.
Cross-tradition
The Islamic doctrine of tanzih — the radical transcendence of God beyond every creaturely attribute — performs structurally parallel work, though it is balanced in Akbarian theology by tashbih (immanence/likeness) in a way that has no exact Christian parallel. The Kabbalistic concept of Ein Sof — the Godhead “without end,” beyond every name and sefirah — represents a third independent solution to the same theological pressure.
Cross-tradition analogues
- Tanzih (islamic-mysticism) -- Arabic for transcendence; the theological move of denying creaturely attributes of God. Structurally analogous to apophasis though doctrinally distinct.
- Ein Sof (jewish-mysticism) -- The Godhead without end, beyond every name and attribute. Kabbalistic equivalent of apophatic ultimacy.
- Language
- Greek
- Tradition
- christian-mysticism
- Script
- Greek