noun
- A rhetorical device in which a speaker denies or refuses to say something while actually saying it, often to emphasize a point or create irony.
- In theology and philosophy, the approach of describing God or ultimate reality only through negation—stating what something is not rather than what it is.
Usage: literary; rhetoric
Usage: philosophy; theology
Examples
- The politician used apophasis when she said, 'I won't mention my opponent's criminal record,' thereby bringing it up anyway.
- In apophasis, a speaker might say 'I'm not going to talk about the elephant in the room' to draw attention to an obvious problem.
- Medieval theologians employed apophasis to discuss God's nature, arguing that we can only know what God is not.
- The author's use of apophasis—'I won't say she was dishonest'—made the accusation more pointed than a direct statement would have.
- Apophatic theology suggests that the divine transcends human language and can only be approached through negation.