prolepsis
English
Etymology
From Latin prolepsis, from Ancient Greek πρόληψις (prólēpsis, “preconception, anticipation”), from προλαμβάνω (prolambánō, “take beforehand, anticipate”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /pɹoʊˈlɛpsɪs/
Noun
prolepsis (countable and uncountable, plural prolepses)
Examples (rhetoric) |
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Dead man walking. (He's not dead yet.) |
Examples (logic) |
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Alexander Pope, Epistle to Dr Arbuthnot (1735) |
Examples (grammar, rhetoric) |
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That noise, I just heard it again. |
- (rhetoric) The assignment of something to a period of time that precedes it.
- (logic) The anticipation of an objection to an argument.
- (grammar, rhetoric) A construction that consists of placing an element in a syntactic unit before that to which it would logically correspond.
- (philosophy, epistemology) A so-called "preconception", i.e. a pre-theoretical notion which can lead to true knowledge of the world.
- 2017, Attila Németh, Epicurus on the Self, page 42:
- Point (1) seems to imply that one may have a false judgement because of a mismatch between different criteria for truth. For example, my sensation is paired with a prolepsis of a horse, therefore I make an assertion that ‘there is a horse’, which upon further inspection may turn out to be a cow.
- (botany) Growth in which lateral branches develop from a lateral meristem, after the formation of a bud or following a period of dormancy, when the lateral meristem is split from a terminal meristem.
- (authorship) The practice of placing information about the ending of a story near the beginning, as a literary device.
Synonyms
- (representation of something that has occurred before its time): anachronism, flashforward, foreshadowing
- (anticipation of objection to an argument): procatalepsis
- (grammar, rhetoric): left dislocation
Antonyms
- (botany) syllepsis
Derived terms
Translations
assignment
representation
grammatical construction
philosophical concept
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References
Spanish
Further reading
- “prolepsis”, in Diccionario de la lengua española, Vigésima tercera edición, Real Academia Española, 2014
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