entelechy means the complete realisation and final form of some potential concept or function; the conditions under which a potential thing becomes actualized.
entelechy is pronounced /ɛnˈtɛləki/.
Why “entelechy” is a great word
The complete realization or actualization of a potential, or the inherent force directing an entity toward its final form and purpose. From Late Latin entelechia, from Ancient Greek ἐντελέχεια (entelékheia), coined by Aristotle from ἐντελής (entelḗs, "complete, perfect") (from τέλος (télos, "end, goal")) + ἔχειν (échein, "to have"). Unlike "potentiality" (which lingers as dormant possibility, a seed curled in the dark) or "mechanism" (a clatter of gears driven by external force), entelechy is the immanent purpose made manifest. It is the acorn’s stubborn architecture unfurling into the oak, the silent choreography of cells composing a specific face, and the final, perfect note toward which a melody has been yearning from its first bar—the quiet, inarguable fact of a thing becoming only and entirely itself.
Etymology
From Late Latin entelechia, from Ancient Greek ἐντελέχεια (entelékheia), coined by Aristotle from ἐντελής (entelḗs, “complete, finished, perfect”) (from τέλος (télos, “end, fruition, accomplishment”)) + ἔχω (ékhō, “to have”).
noun
- The complete realisation and final form of some potential concept or function; the conditions under which a potential thing becomes actualized.“[Pages 114–115] [H]e [Aristotle] tells us expressly, that that which we call the rational soul is […] 'separable from the body,' […] 'because it is not the entelech of any body.' […] [page 500] Wickedness is the form and entelech of all the wicked spirits: it is the difference of a name, rather than any proper difference of natures that is between the devil and wicked men.”
- The complete realisation and final form of some potential concept or function; the conditions under which a potential thing becomes actualized.; In the metaphysics of Aristotle (384–322 B.C.E.) and Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz (1646–1716): a soul; a monad (Leibniz).“Aristotle […] calleth it [the soul] Entelechy, or perfection moving of it selfe (as cold an invention as any other) for he neither speaketh of the essence, nor of the beginning, nor of the soules nature; but onely noteth the effects of it […].”
- A particular type of motivation, need for self-determination, and inner strength directing life and growth to become all one is capable of being; the need to actualize one's beliefs; having both a personal vision and the ability to actualize that vision from within.“The entelechy is the name given to our inner dynamic purpose. It is the seed of potential that nestles deep within us, containing the fractal image of who we really are and what we can become. The Greek philosopher Socrates first coined the term entelechy, and the great mystic [Pierre] Teilhard de Chardin brought it to public attention. […] The inner sense of purpose that is governed by the entele”
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