Abnegation

Abnegation

Abnegation


ab-nih-GAY-shun

Definition

(noun) The act of renouncing or rejecting something; self-denial or the setting aside of one’s own needs and desires.

Example

Her years of abnegation — skipping vacations, forgoing promotions, putting everyone else first — had gone largely unnoticed by the family she’d sacrificed everything for.

Word Origin


From Latin abnegatio, derived from abnegare, meaning “to refuse or deny” — formed from ab- (away from) + negare (to deny). The root negare also gives us negate, negative, and renege — all carrying the core sense of refusal or denial. The word entered English in the 16th century, used primarily in religious contexts to describe the denial of worldly pleasures in service of spiritual devotion.

Fun Fact

Abnegation sits at the heart of some of history’s most influential philosophical and religious traditions. In Buddhism, the renunciation of personal desire is considered essential to the path toward enlightenment — the Buddha himself abandoned a life of wealth and comfort before arriving at his teachings. In Stoic philosophy, voluntary abnegation was practiced as a discipline: Stoics would periodically deprive themselves of comfort and luxury not out of punishment but to prove to themselves that they could survive without it, and to appreciate what they had. Marcus Aurelius wrote extensively about this practice as essential to maintaining clarity and moral integrity.

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