The English word "antipathy" denotes a deep-seated feeling of dislike or aversion, often implying a natural incompatibility or opposition between entities. Its etymology traces back through Latin and Greek, revealing a rich semantic history grounded in notions of feeling and opposition.
"Antipathy" entered English in the late 16th century, specifically in the 1590s, via philosophical and medical Latin usage. The immediate source is the Latin term "antipathīa," which itself is a borrowing from the Greek "antipátheia" (ἀντιπάθεια). This Greek compound is formed from the prefix "antí-" (ἀντί), meaning "against" or "opposite to," combined with "pátheia" (πάθεια), a noun derived from "páthos" (πάθος), signifying "feeling," "suffering," or "experience."
The Greek prefix "antí-" stems from the Proto-Indo-European (PIE) root *h₂enti, which conveys the sense of "facing" or "in front of." This root is the source of various English prefixes such as "anti-" (against) and "ante-" (before), reflecting spatial or oppositional relationships. In "antipathy," "antí-" functions to express opposition or contrast.
The second element, "páthos," is a central term in Greek, encompassing meanings related to feeling, suffering, or experience. It derives from the verb "páschein" (πάσχειν), meaning "to suffer" or "to experience." The verb "páschein" is traced back to the PIE root *kwent(h)-, which carries the meaning "to suffer" or "to endure." This root is significant in the Indo-European family, giving rise to various cognates across languages
The semantic development of "páthos" and its derivatives in Greek and later in English is notable for the breadth of emotional and experiential connotations. The root "páthos" generated a remarkable family of related terms in English, many of which entered the language through Greek or Latin intermediaries. These include "sympathy" (from Greek "sumpáthēs," meaning "feeling together," composed of "syn-" meaning "with" and "páthos"), "empathy" ("em-" meaning "in" or "into" plus "páthos," thus "feeling into"), "apathy" ("a-" meaning "without" plus "páthos," thus "without feeling"), as well as "pathetic," "pathology," "psychopath," and "telepathy." Each of these words
"Antipathy," specifically, conveys a sense of "feeling against" or opposition in feeling, distinguishing it from mere intellectual disagreement. It implies a deep, instinctive repulsion or incompatibility rather than a superficial or reasoned dislike. This nuance aligns with the Greek original "antipátheia," which denotes opposition in feeling or natural contrariety.
In summary, "antipathy" is a compound word of Greek origin, combining the prefix "antí-" (against) with "páthos" (feeling, suffering), the latter rooted in the PIE *kwent(h)- (to suffer, to endure). The term passed into Latin as "antipathīa" before entering English in the 16th century. Its semantic field is closely related to a family of words expressing various modes of feeling and emotional experience, reflecting a complex interplay of linguistic inheritance and borrowing within the Indo-European tradition.