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metaphysician

American  
[met-uh-fuh-zish-uhn] / ˌmɛt ə fəˈzɪʃ ən /
Also metaphysicist

noun

  1. a person who creates or develops metaphysical theories.


Etymology

Origin of metaphysician

1425–75; late Middle English metaphisicien, probably < Middle French metaphysicien, equivalent to metaphysique metaphysic + -ien -ian

Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

Hegel was a metaphysician whose insistence that Geist, or spirit, pervades the historical process and moves it to some grand culmination is difficult to distinguish from New Age mysticism, and hence charlatanism.

From Salon • Mar. 28, 2026

He was a radical obsessed with both revolution and order, an incorrigible skeptic and an insightful metaphysician.

From Los Angeles Times • Oct. 22, 2019

But just when things get comfortable, in drops Jay Electronica, hip-hop metaphysician, with some confidently delivered and unusually phrased truisms: “Reality is kinda hard to face/Like actual facts is to flat-earthers.”

From New York Times • Apr. 6, 2018

I guess I’ve always been a metaphysician disguised as a theoretical physicist.

From Scientific American • Mar. 4, 2018

An orator must be a poet, a metaphysician, a logician—and above all, must have sympathy with all.

From The Works of Robert G. Ingersoll, Vol. 11 (of 12) Dresden Edition?Miscellany by Ingersoll, Robert Green