From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Transcendental in philosophical contexts
In philosophy, transcendental experiences are experiences of an exclusively human nature that are other-worldly or beyond the human realm of understanding.
Things sometimes considered transcendental are religion, parts of philosophy and mathematics (especially metaphysics and ontology), humour, death and more.
See also metaphysics.
A transcendental element ξ of a field extension K over the field F an element that is not the solution of a polynomial equation with coefficients in F, i.e., if there exists no polynomial
In the case of the field C of complex numbers or the field R of real numbers, a transcendental number is a number which is transcendental over the field Q of rational numbers.
See also: (spiritual) transcendentalismTranscendental field elements in mathematics
with all ai ∈ F, such that P(ξ) = 0.

