Noumenon, plur. noumena, is a modern philosophic word used in many languages. It is borrowed without change from the Greek present middle and passive participle of the contract verb, noein (no-e-ein), “to know.” The present participle has a continuous aspect, so that noumenon means more exactly “a thing that is currently being continuously known.” It may mean specifically:
Philosophy and religion
- Noumenon, the conceived, as opposed to phainomenon, the sensed (Plato) or the inferred, or thing-in-itself, as opposed to phenomenon, the experienced thing (Kant)
 - Noumenon, translation of Sat (Sanskrit), the real, as in the Pavamana Mantra
 - Noumenon, as universal spiritual essence, God in Buddhism
 - Noumenon, the transcendent Brahman
 - Noumenon, realised by denial in Apophatic theology
 - Noumenon, translation of Li, one of the Four Dharmadhātu of Tu-shun
 
Arts and entertainment
Music
- Noumena (band), a Finnish melodic death metal band
 - Noumenon, a 2005 album by Absurd Minds
 - "Noumenon", a song by Nevermore from the 2003 album Enemies of Reality
 - "Noumenon and Phenomenon", a song by Scar Symmetry from the 2009 album Dark Matter Dimensions
 
Other arts and entertainment
- Noumenon, a 1953 choreography by Alwin Nikolais
 - Noumenon, a 1992 work by Evan Oakley
 - Noumenon, an unknown beast in the drawings of Charles Avery
 - Noumenon, a 2006 sculpture by Steve Brudniak
 - Noumenon, a 2017 novel by Marina J. Lostetter
 - Noumena, a series of science fiction novels by Lindsay Ellis
 
See also
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