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May 31, 2018
This week’s themeThere’s a word for it This week’s words metanoia cremnophobia ochlocracy enantiodromia obverse Have your say in our discussion forum Wordsmith Talk A.Word.A.Day
with Anu Gargenantiodromia
PRONUNCIATION:
MEANING:
noun: The tendency of things, beliefs, etc., to change into their opposites.
ETYMOLOGY:
From Greek enantio- (opposite) + dromos (running). Earliest documented use: 1917.
NOTES:
You can keep going up a mountain, but once you hit the peak you can
only go down. A pendulum moves in one direction, but once it has reached
its rightmost it travels left. So it goes with beliefs, ideologies, and
politics, apparently. Once we have elected a black man as a president, we
have to pick someone with a long sordid record of discrimination. The concept of enantiodromia is attributed to the Greek philosopher Heraclitus (c. 535-475 BCE). Later it was discussed by the psychiatrist Carl Jung (1875-1961) as “the principle which governs all cycles of natural life”. USAGE:
“The union that Philip Murray had founded in 1936 as a way of combatting
the wretched excess of management had come full circle in the cycle of
enantiodromia, and had fallen victim to its own wretched excess.” Tom O’Boyle; Excess, the Golden Rule; Pittsburgh Post-Gazette; Sep 4, 1994. A THOUGHT FOR TODAY:
This is a deluded generation, veiled with ignorance, that though popery and slavery be riding in upon them, do not perceive it; though I am sure that there was no man born marked by God above another; for none comes into this world with a saddle on his back, neither any booted and spurred to ride him. -Richard Rumbold, revolutionary (1622-1685)
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