Numinous is an English adjective and noun, taken from the Latin numen, “divinity.” But where numen refers to an objective divine being, numinous as an adjective refers to a subjective state. Numinous the noun refers to that which stimulates the subjective state. For example, a numinous grotto is distinct from the numen of the grotto. Numinous is used in the following contexts:

Interface with divinity

Philosophy

  • Numinous legitimacy, political legitimacy of a state based on divine ordination
  • Numinous Way, the current self-named philosophy of David Myatt, ex-neo-nazi and ex-Islamic-convert
  • Numinous, a property of all minds in the Korean Zen philosophy of Jinul
  • School of the Numinous Treasure, another name for the Chinese Lingbao School
  • Numinous presence in nature, a belief of Finnish neopaganism
  • Numinous quality, a characteristic of Jung’s collective unconscious

Numinous contexts

  • Numinous, the feeling evoked by horror fiction
  • Numinous, the feeling evoked by anasyrma
  • Numinous, the feeling evoked by chanting a mantra
  • Numinous, the feeling evoked by a grotto
  • Numinous, the feeling evoked by the festival of Skira at ancient Athens
  • Numinous, said of the mystical wu-practice of Chinese shamanism in the Shang Period

Numinous objects

Roman numina

Other numina

  • Numinous, a power ascribed to Teotl

Other uses

  • Numinous, the fictional experiences of teen-agers in Mondo and Other Stories by J. M. G. Le Clézio
  • Numinous Negro, a term coined by Richard Brookhiser based on the previous term Magical Negro
  • Numinous communal experiences, a topic of study of Roger D. Nelson
  • Numinous Pivot, a translation of the Lingshu Jing, a Chinese medical text

See also

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