- logos=اللوغوس
-
ONLINE ETYMOLOGY DICTIONARY
- logos
(n.)
- 1580s, Logos, "the divine
Word, second person of the Christian Trinity," from Gk. logos
"word, speech, discourse," also "reason," from
PIE root *leg- "to collect" (with derivatives meaning "to
speak," on notion of "to pick out words;" see
lecture
(n.)); used by Neo-Platonists in various metaphysical and
theological senses and picked up by New Testament writers. Other
English formations from logos include logolatry "worship of
words, unreasonable regard for words or verbal truth" (1810 in
Coleridge); logomania (1870); logophobia (1923).
WIKIPEDIA
Logos (
/ˈloʊɡɒs/,
UK
/ˈlɒɡɒs/,
or
US
/ˈloʊɡoʊs/;
Greek:
λόγος,
from λέγω
lego "I say") is an important term in
philosophy,
psychology,
rhetoric, and
religion.
Originally a word meaning "a ground", "a plea",
"an opinion", "an expectation", "word,"
"speech," "account," "reason,"
[1][2]
it became a technical term in philosophy, beginning with
Heraclitus
(ca. 535–475 BC), who used the term for a principle of order and
knowledge.
[3]
Ancient
philosophers used the term in different ways. The
sophists
used the term to mean
discourse,
and
Aristotle
applied the term to refer to "reasoned discourse"
[4]
or "the argument" in the field of rhetoric.
[5]
The
Stoic
philosophers identified the term with the
divine
animating principle pervading the Universe.