transcendental

[ tran-sen-den-tl, -suh n- ]
/ ˌtræn sɛnˈdɛn tl, -sən- /

adjective

noun

Mathematics. transcendental number.
transcendentals, Scholasticism. categories that have universal application, as being, one, true, good.

Origin of transcendental

From the Medieval Latin word trānscendentālis, dating back to 1615–25. See transcendent, -al1

OTHER WORDS FROM transcendental

tran·scen·den·tal·i·ty, noun tran·scen·den·tal·ly, adverb un·tran·scen·den·tal, adjective un·tran·scen·den·tal·ly, adverb

Example sentences from the Web for transcendentally

British Dictionary definitions for transcendentally

transcendental
/ (ˌtrænsɛnˈdɛntəl) /

adjective

transcendent, superior, or surpassing
(in the philosophy of Kant)
  1. (of a judgment or logical deduction) being both synthetic and a priori
  2. of or relating to knowledge of the presuppositions of thought
philosophy beyond our experience of phenomena, although not beyond potential knowledge
theol surpassing the natural plane of reality or knowledge; supernatural or mystical

Derived forms of transcendental

transcendentality, noun transcendentally, adverb