philosopher

A lover of wisdom.

Noun

  1. A lover of wisdom.

    Antonyms: misosopher

  2. A student of philosophy.
  3. A scholar or expert engaged in or contributing to philosophical inquiry.
    • Not much later—perhaps only two or three weeks later he has discovered meaning in them; he knows that they say "The cat sat on the hat." How this happens no one really knows, despite the efforts of philosophers and...
    • Their playwrights knew better. Scandal, murder, hair-rending and railing against the gods sold tickets. King is not a philosopher. He knows how to sell tickets. - 2007, Harold Bloom, Bloom's Modern Critical Views:...
  4. A person who applies the principles of philosophy to the conduct of their life, as by acting calmly and rationally in the face of inevitable change.
    • Then certaine Philosophers of the Epicureans, and of the Stoikes, encountred him - 1611, The Holy Bible, […] (King James Version), London: […] Robert Barker, […], →OCLC, Acts 17:18:
    • This is not the sort of happiness which a man would in general wish to owe to his wife; but where other powers of entertainment are wanting, the true philosopher will derive benefit from such as are given. - 1813...
  5. A student, scholar, or expert in any branch of knowledge, especially those branches studied prior to being considered part of pure science.
  6. An alchemist.
    • Then thus conclude I, since that God of heaven Will not that these philosophers neven How that a man shall come unto this stone, I rede as for the best to let it gon. - 1813, Geoffrey Chaucer, The Canterbury Tales: The...
    • No further progress was made in this science until the Mohammedan alchemists embarked upon their search for the philosopher's stone, the elixir of life, and a method of transmuting base metals into gold. - 1945,...

Origin

From Middle English philosophre, from Anglo-Norman or Middle French philosophe, from Latin philosophus, from Ancient Greek φιλόσοφος (philósophos, literally “lover of wisdom”) + -er. Credited as having been coined by Pythagoras to describe himself. Displaced native Old English ūþwita.

Forms

philosophers phylosopher

Synonyms

philosopher

Hypernyms

person

Hyponyms

ontologist metaphysician logician epistemologist ethicist aesthetician empiricist rationalist monist dualist pluralist realist idealist materialist existentialist nihilist Aristotelian Platonist Kantian Kuhnian Marxist Popperian Spinozist

Related

misosopher philosophaster philosophe philosophical philosophical method philosophicide philosophizer philosophy scholar thinker reasoner arguer rhetorician sophist scientist author writer reason abstraction generality Appendix:Roget MICRA thesaurus/Class IV § 492. Scholar Appendix:Moby Thesaurus II/62 § philosopher Appendix:Glossary of philosophical isms

Derived

analytic philosopher antiphilosopher biophilosopher cyberphilosopher ecophilosopher ethnophilosopher fire philosopher foolosopher geophilosopher macaroni philosopher metaphilosopher natural philosopher neurophilosopher nonphilosopher philosopher by fire philosopheress philosopher king philosopher-king philosopher of fire philosopher's game philosophership philosopher's lamp philosopher's stone philosophers' stone