A new Age belief that all that exists is derived from a single source of divine energy See New Age See Panentheism See Pantheism
A metaphysical theory that sees all of reality as a unified whole Everything in the universe is seen as being made of the same stuff
the belief that there is but one fundamental reality, despite the appearance and/or experience of diversity See also Monotheism, Pantheism, and Polytheism
The doctrine that both mind and matter can be reduced to one substance or ultimate reality HA 17,25,716; UF 115-24
In metaphysics, the doctrine that the world is essentially one substance or contains only one kind of substance. Monism is opposed both to dualism and to pluralism. Examples of monism include materialism, pantheism, and metaphysical idealism. See also Benedict de Spinoza
That doctrine which refers all phenomena to a single ultimate constituent or agent; the opposite of dualism
The belief that the solution to the mind-body problem is that only one domain (it may be physical or spiritual) is real
The doctrine that the universe is an organized unitary being or total self-inclusive structure
The belief that there is only one fundamental kind of stuff in the world (see dualism)
the theory that everything in the cosmos is a unity and is equated with the divine
the view that reality is reducible to one kind of thing or one explanatory principle monotheism the belief in a single god morality the standards that an individual or a group has about what is right and wrong or good and evil
The thesis that all of reality is of one kind See materialism, idealism, neutral monism, anomalous monism, dualism <Discussion> <References> Chris Eliasmith
An ontological view which asserts that there is only one ultimately real sort of thing in the universe
The view that there is only one basic and fundamental reality, that all existence is this one reality
The doctrine of the oneness of mind and matter, God and the universe It ignores all that is supernatural, and the dualism of mind and matter, God and creation; and, as this is the case, of course, there can be no opposition between God and the world, as unity cannot be in opposition to itself Monism teaches that all are but parts of one stupendous whole, whose body nature is, and God the soul; hence, whatever is, only conforms to the cosmical laws of the universal ALL Haeckel, of Jena, in 1866, revived this theory, and explains it thus: Monism (the correlative of Dualism) denotes a unitary conception, in opposition to a supernatural one Mind can never exist without matter, nor matter without mind As God is the same yesterday, to-day, and for ever, creation must be the same, or God would not be unchangeable
is the belief of all-in-one It is the unity of all reality, not the belief in a single God It is similar in results to pantheism
of or relating to the philosophical doctrine of monism; "the monistic school would regard national law and international law as an integrated whole"- J S Roucek
() The word was coined by German philosopher Baron Christian von Wolff and first used in English in 1862, from New Latin monismus, from Greek μόνος "alone".