ontonomous

English

Etymology

ontonomy + -ous

Adjective

ontonomous (comparative more ontonomous, superlative most ontonomous)

  1. Pertaining to or characteristic of ontonomy; Involving the harmonious coexistence of disparate entities.
    • 1992, James Ogilvy, Revisioning Philosophy, →ISBN, page 242:
      Man is a person, a knot in a net of relationships, and not an autonomous individual. Man is an ontonomous being.
    • 2005, The Review of Policy Research - Volume 22, Issues 1-3, page 98:
      Religious-cultural issues are part of that expanded view -- one that sees the relationship between politics and religion as ontonomous.
    • 2015, Raimon Panikkar & Milena Carrara ‎Pavan, Christianity: Opera Omnia, Volume III, Part 1, The Christian Tradition, →ISBN:
      The true Christian ontonomous attitude recognizes the internal hierarchy of values and discovers something very dear to the humanist position, but that humanism alone is incapable of fulfilling.

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