Dictionary Definition
deity n : any supernatural being worshipped as
controlling some part of the world or some aspect of life or who is
the personification of a force [syn: divinity, god, immortal]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Etymology
From deus ‘god’ + -ī.Noun
rfex all
Translations
essential nature of a god, divinity
- Czech: božství
- Dutch: godheid
- Finnish: jumaluus
- German: Gottheit
- Greek: θεότητα (theótita)
- Hebrew:
- Norwegian: guddom
- Portuguese: divindade
- Russian: божественность (božéstv'ennost')
- Slovene: božanstvo
a powerful entity that possesses numerous
miraculous powers
- ttbc French: divinité , déité
- ttbc Hungarian: istenség
- ttbc Italian: divinità
- ttbc Japanese: 神性 (shinsei)
- ttbc Korean: 신성
Extensive Definition
- See also: List of deities
A deity is a postulated preternatural or supernatural being, who is always of
significant power, worshipped, thought holy, divine, or sacred, held in high regard, or
respected by human beings. Deities assume a variety of forms, but
are frequently depicted as having human or animal form. Some faiths
and traditions consider it blasphemous to imagine or
depict the deity as having any concrete form. They are usually
immortal. They are
commonly assumed to have personalities and to possess
consciousness, intellects, desires, and emotions similar to those
of humans. Such natural phenomena as lightning, floods, storms,
other 'acts of God', and miracles are attributed to them,
and they may be thought to be the authorities or controllers of
every aspect of human life (such as birth or the afterlife). Some deities are
asserted to be the directors of time and fate itself, to be the
givers of human law and morality, to be the ultimate judges of
human worth and behavior, and to be the designers and creators of
the Earth or
the universe.
Etymology
The word "deity" derives from the Latin "dea", ("goddess"), and "deus", ("god"). Related are words for "sky": the Latin "dies" ("day") and "divum" ("open sky"), and the Sanskrit "div," "diu" ("sky," "day," "shine"). Also related are "divine" and "divinity," from the Latin "divinus," from "divus."The English word "god" comes from Anglo-Saxon,
and similar words are found in many Germanic
languages (e.g. the German
"Gott" — "God").
Relation with humanity
Theories and narratives about, and modes of
worship of, deities are
largely a matter of religion. At present, the vast majority of
humans are adherents of some religion, and this has been true for
at least thousands of years. Human burials from between 50,000 and
30,000 B.C. provide evidence of human belief in an afterlife and possibly in
deities, although it is not clear when human belief in deities
became the dominant view.
Some deities are thought to be invisible or
inaccessible to humans—to dwell mainly in otherworldly, remote or
secluded and holy places, such as Heaven, Hell, the sky, the
under-world, under the sea, in the high mountains or deep forests,
or in a supernatural plane or celestial sphere. Typically, they
rarely reveal or manifest themselves to humans, and make themselves
known mainly through their effects. Monotheistic
deities are often thought of as being omnipresent, though
invisible.
Often people feel an obligation to their deity,
although some view their deity as something that serves them.
Folk religions usually contain active and worldly
deities.
In polytheism, deities are
conceived of as a counterpart to humans. In the reconstructed and
hypothetical Proto-Indo-European,
humans were described as chthonian ("earthly") as opposed to the
deities which were deivos ("celestial"). This almost symbiotic
relationship is present in many later cultures: humans are defined
by their station subject to the deities, nourishing them with
sacrifices, and
deities are defined by their sovereignty over humans, punishing and
rewarding them, but also dependent on their worship.
The boundary between human and divine in most
cultures is by no means absolute. Demigods are the
offspring from a union of a human with a deity, and most royal
houses in Antiquity claimed divine ancestors.
Beginning with Djedefra (26th
century BC), the Egyptian
pharaohs called
themselves "Son of Ra" as well as "Bull
(son) of his Mother" among their
many titles. One, Hatshepsut, who
ruled from 1479 BC to 1458 BC, traced her heritage not only to her
father, Thutmose I,
who would have become deified upon his death—but also to the deity,
Mut, as a
direct ancestor.
Some human rulers, such as the pharaohs of the
New
Kingdom, the Japanese Tennos, and some
Roman
Emperors have been worshipped by their subjects as deities
while still alive. The earliest ruler known to have claimed
divinity is Naram-Sin (22nd
century BC). In many cultures rulers and other prominent or holy
persons may be thought to become deities upon death (see Osiris, ancestor
worship, canonization).
Forms of theism
Some religions are monotheistic and assert the
existence of a unique deity. In the English language, the common noun
god is equivalent to deity, while God (capitalized)
references the unique deity of monotheism. Pantheism
considers the universe itself to be a deity. Dualism is the view
that there are two deities: a deity of good who is opposed and
thwarted by a deity of evil, of equal power. Manichaeism,
Zoroastrianism,
and Gnostic sects of
Christianity are, or were, dualist. Polytheism
asserts the existence of several deities, who together form a
pantheon.
Monolatry
is a type of polytheism in which deities are believed to exert
power only on those who worship them. Henotheism is a
form of monolatry in which one deity is worshipped as supreme.
Animism is
the belief that spirits inhabit every existing thing, including
plants, minerals, animals, and, including all the elements, air,
water, earth, and fire. The anthropologist E. B.
Tylor argued that religion originally took an animist form.
Theism is
the view that at least one deity exists.
It may not be readily apparent what form a
religion takes. Religions that avow monotheism may, in fact, be
henotheistic in that they recognize the existence of several
echelons of supernatural, immortal beings in addition to the
central deity, such as angels, saints, Satan, demons, and devils, although these beings may
not be considered deities. Adherents of polytheistic religions,
such as certain schools of Hinduism, may
regard all deities in the pantheon as manifestations, aspects, or
multiple personalities of the single supreme deity, and the
religions may be more akin to pantheism, monotheism, or henotheism
than is initially apparent to an observer.
The many religions
do not generally agree on which deities exist, although sometimes
the pantheons may overlap, or be similar except for the names of
the deities. It is frequently argued that Judaism, Christianity,
and Islam all
worship the same monotheistic deity, although they differ in many
important details. Comparative
religion studies the similarities and contrasts in the views
and practices of various religions. Philosophy
of religion discusses philosophical issues related to theories
about deities. Narratives about deities and their deeds are
referred to as myths, the study of which is mythology. The word "myth" has
an overtone of fiction,
so religious people commonly (although not invariably) refrain from
using this term in relation to the stories about deities which they
themselves believe in.
Buddhism
In Buddhism, devas are
beings inhabiting certain happily-placed worlds of Buddhist
cosmology. These beings are mortal (being part of ),
numerous, and are not worshipped; it is also common for Yidams to be called
deities, although the nature of Yidams are distinct from what is
normally meant by the term.
The Buddhist Madhyamaka argue
strongly against the existence of a universal creator or essential
being (such as Brahman), yet
Buddhists are not atheist or agnostic - due to these terms being
strongly tied to concepts of existence. Some Prasangikas hold
that even the conventional existence of universal (monotheistic)
deities is a non-existent, whereas others consider that the
conventional existence of such a being is an existent.
Some modern Buddhists, especially in the west,
believe that deities exist in the same manner that elves or
unicorns do - as an archetypal consensual entity that serves a
symbolic purpose in the popular imagination.
Though this may seem a rather weak basis of
existence for some, as Buddhists (such as the Yogacara) deny any
objective existence (of e.g. a chair), and many more deny any sort
of essential existence of phenomena at all, the distinction between
the existence and non-existence of consensual entities is important
to Buddhist philosophy. However, a necessary requirement of
Candrakirti's
(Prasangika) view
is that existents must not conflict with essencelessness, and it is
generally agreed by them that monotheistic assertions of deity do
not make much sense without some assertion of essence, which itself is
vehemently rejected, so thereby monotheistic
(objectively/essentially existing) deities are non-existent even in
a conventional sense.
Polytheism
A pantheon, (from Greek Πάνθειον, temple of all deities, from πᾶν, all + θεός, god), is a set of all the deities of a particular polytheistic religion or mythology, such as the Egyptian pantheon, or Greek pantheon.Max Weber's
1922 opus, Economy
and Society discusses the link between a pantheon of deities
and the development of monotheism.
Monotheism
In some cases, especially the monotheistic Abrahamic god or the supreme deity of henotheistic religions, the divine entity is not thought of by some believers in the same terms as deities - as a powerful, anthropomorphic supernatural being - but rather becomes esoteric, the reification of a philosophical category - the Ultimate, the Absolute Infinite, the Transcendent, the One, the All, Existence, or Being itself, the ground of being, the monistic substrate, etc.In this view, God (Allah, Brahman, Elohim, Jesus
Christ, Waheguru, etc) is
not a deity, and the anthropomorphic myths and iconography
associated with him are regarded as symbolism, allowing
worshippers to speak and think about something which otherwise
would be beyond human comprehension.
There also are many such deities from ancient
times, such as in Egypt, Greece, and Rome who were "the" local or
regional deity, and who became lost in our view of these cultures
only as a whole. According to Plutarch, who
lived from circa 46 - 120 A.D., the Egyptian temple of Neith bore the
inscription: I am All That Has Been, That Is, and That Will Be. No
mortal has yet been able to lift the veil that covers Me. This is a
creator deity who was
worshipped by devotees in the western delta region of Egypt for
over three thousand years. That worship assigned many roles to the
deity and took many forms—even including one of earliest known
oracle traditions and a
resurrection
cult—and that worship spread to other regions of Egypt and, some
suspect, to other ancient cultures that arose during the beginning
of recorded human history. Herodotus
describes the annual festival of lights associated with this deity
in late December—thousands of years after the earliest records
attest an already-established worship of the deity.
Not many of these endured so long, but records of
such deities exist from the beginning of human records of their
beliefs. Tantalizing images of what may be tens of thousands of
years of worship of deities who seem to have been unchallenged and
essentially unchanged, therefore easily suggesting that perhaps,
humans believed in a single deity initially, that some later
developed pantheons and returned again to single deities, and that
others developed cosmological concepts that
were quite abstract and not dependent upon deities.
See also
deity in Arabic: رب
deity in Belarusian (Tarashkevitsa): Богі
deity in Bulgarian: Божество
deity in Catalan: Deïtat
deity in Czech: Božstvo
deity in Welsh: Duwdod
deity in Estonian: Jumalus
deity in Spanish: Deidad
deity in Esperanto: Diaĵo
deity in French: Dieux
deity in Korean: 신
deity in Indonesian: Dewa
deity in Icelandic: Goð
deity in Hebrew: אל
deity in Latin: Deitas
nah:Teōtl
deity in Portuguese: Deidade
deity in Quechua: Dyus kay
deity in Albanian: Hyji
deity in Simple English: Deity
deity in Swedish: Gudom
deity in Ukrainian: Боги
deity in Chinese: 神
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
Aides,
Aidoneus, Amen-Ra,
Amor, Aphrodite, Apollo, Apollo Musagetes,
Ares, Artemis, Ashtoreth, Astarte, Astraea, Athena, Atropos, Baal, Bellona, Bragi, Cailleac, Calliope, Castilian Spring,
Cerberus, Ceres, Charon, Clio, Clotho, Cora, Cupid, Cynthia, Dame Fortune, Davy, Davy Jones, Decuma, Demeter, Despoina, Diana, Dike, Dionysos, Dionysus, Dis, Dis pater, Discordia, Donar, Dylan, Earth, Enyo, Erato, Erebus, Eris, Eros, Euterpe, Fata, Fates, Faunus, Flora, Fortuna, Frey, Freya, Frigg, Gaea, Gaia, Ge, Hades, Heaven, Hecate, Hekate, Hel, Helicon, Helios, Hera, Hermes, Hestia, Hippocrene, Hymen, Hyperion, Indra, Isis, Juno, Jupiter Fidius, Jupiter
Fulgur, Jupiter Pluvius, Jupiter Tonans, Justice, Justitia, Kama, Kore, Lachesis, Loki, Love, Luna, Mars, Melpomene, Mercury, Minerva, Minos, Moirai, Morta, Muse, Nemesis, Neptune, Nereid, Nereus, Nona, Norns, Oceanid, Oceanus, Odin, Orcus, Osiris, Pan, Parcae, Parnassus, Persephassa, Persephone, Phoebe, Phoebus, Phoebus Apollo, Pierian
Spring, Pierides,
Pluto, Polyhymnia, Pomona, Poseidon, Priapus, Pronuba, Proserpina, Proserpine, Providence, Ra, Rhadamanthus, Satan, Savitar, Selene, Set, Shamash, Skuld, Sol, Surya, Teleia, Tellus, Terpsichore, Terra, Thalia, Themis, Thetis, Thor, Titan, Tiu, Triptolemos, Triptolemus, Triton, Tyche, Typhon, Tyr, Urdur, Varuna, Vayu, Venus, Verthandi, Vesta, Vidar, Vitharr, Weird Sisters, Weirds, Woden, Wotan, Zephyr, Zephyrus, Zeus, afflatus, artistic imagination,
ball lightning, biosphere, blindfolded
Justice, bolt, bolt of
lightning, chain lightning, clash, clashing, commercialism, conception, conflict, contention, corn god, corn
spirit, creative imagination, creative power, creative thought,
creator, dark lightning,
deep, demigod, demigoddess, disaccord, disaffinity, discord, discordance, discordancy, disharmony, dread rattling
thunder, enmity,
esemplastic imagination, esemplastic power, faun, fertility god, field spirit,
fire of genius, fireball, firebolt, flying flame, forest
god, forked lightning, fresh-water nymph, friction, fulguration, fulmination, genius, geography, geosphere, globe, god, goddess, hero, heroine, idol, incompatibility,
incompatibleness,
industrialism,
inharmoniousness,
inharmony, inspiration, jangle, jar, kelpie, lares and penates, levin
bolt, lightning,
limniad, man fish,
mercantilism,
mermaid, merman, mischief, mother earth,
muse, mythicization, mythification, mythopoeia, naiad, nix, nixie, noncooperation,
oak-cleaving thunderbolts, ocean nymph, open conflict, panisc, panisca, paniscus, peal of thunder,
phoenix, poesy, poetic genius, poetic
imagination, rub, satyr, sea devil, sea god, sea
nymph, sea-maid, sea-maiden, seaman, shaping imagination,
sheet lightning, silenus, siren, strained relations, stroke
of lightning, sylvan deity, tension, terra, terrestrial globe, the
Muses, the blue planet, the goat god, this pendent world, thunder, thunderball, thunderbolt, thunderclap, thundercrack, thundering, thunderpeal, thunderstorm, thunderstroke, undine, unharmoniousness,
unpleasantness,
vale, vale of tears,
vegetation spirit, water god, water spirit, water sprite, whole
wide world, world