English edit

Etymology edit

multi- +‎ unity

Noun edit

multiunity (countable and uncountable, plural multiunities)

  1. A unified whole or wholeness formed from multiple parts.
    • 1975, Dane Rudhyar, Occult preparations for a new age, page 108:
      I have spoken of it as "birth in light" for in the white light of the sun all the colors exist in a state of unity or multiunity.
    • 2001, Russian Studies in Philosophy - Volume 38, Issues 2-4, page 62:
      In the broad sense, multiunity means great communicational richness, the mutual enrichment of experience, and inestimable cognitive possibilities.
    • 2016, Heyward Isham, Richard Pipes, Remaking Russia: Voices from within:
      In his Philosophy of the Common Task Nikolai Fedorov outlined his thesis that the world organism is one whole and that the task of man (of the Christian) is to draw together the fragmented multiplicity into a “multiunity.”