The word 'autonomy' is a product of Greek political thought, coined to describe one of the most prized conditions of a city-state: the right to live under its own laws. Greek 'autonomia' compounds 'autos' (self) with 'nomos' (law, custom, usage), creating a term that meant, with crystalline precision, 'the condition of having one's own laws' — self-legislation, self-governance, independence from external authority.
Greek 'nomos' derives from PIE *nem-, meaning 'to assign,' 'to allot,' or 'to take.' The progression from 'assigning' to 'law' reflects the ancient idea that law is fundamentally about the allocation of rights, duties, and shares — the assignment of each person's due. This root produced an enormous family of words through Greek, all centered on the concept of organized assignment.
'Economy' (from 'oikonomia,' house-management — 'oikos,' house + 'nomos,' management/law) is the management of a household's allotments. 'Astronomy' ('astron' + 'nomos') is the law or ordering of the stars. 'Taxonomy' ('taxis' + 'nomos') is the ordering of classifications. 'Gastronomy' ('gaster' + 'nomos') is the law or art of the stomach — the rules of good eating. Each '-nomy' word uses 'nomos' to indicate
The PIE root *nem- took different paths in other branches. In the Germanic languages, it produced Proto-Germanic *nemaną (to take), which became German 'nehmen' (to take). English 'nimble' may also derive from this root, originally meaning 'quick to take or grasp.' Greek 'nemein' (to distribute, to manage, to pasture) gave 'nemesis
In Greek political discourse, 'autonomia' was a term of art in interstate relations. Thucydides, writing in the fifth century BCE, used it to describe the status of city-states that were free to govern themselves, as opposed to those subject to Athenian or Spartan hegemony. The Peace of Nicias (421 BCE) and other treaties included provisions guaranteeing the 'autonomia' of specific cities. The concept was so central to Greek political identity that the loss of autonomy was considered one
The word entered English in the early seventeenth century, initially in discussions of ancient Greek history. By the eighteenth century, it had broadened to describe any condition of self-governance, whether political, personal, or institutional. Kant's moral philosophy made 'autonomy' a cornerstone of ethics: moral autonomy is the capacity to give oneself moral laws through reason, as opposed to following external commands (heteronomy, from 'heteros,' other + 'nomos,' law).
In the twentieth and twenty-first centuries, 'autonomy' has become one of the most important terms in bioethics (patient autonomy — the right to make one's own medical decisions), political theory (regional autonomy, indigenous autonomy), technology (autonomous vehicles, autonomous systems), and psychology (autonomy as a basic human need). Each usage preserves the Greek core: the self makes its own laws.
The prefix 'auto-' (self) appears in dozens of English words: 'automatic' (self-moving), 'autograph' (self-writing), 'automobile' (self-moving vehicle), 'autopsy' (seeing for oneself). But 'autonomy' may be the most philosophically significant of all auto- compounds, because it addresses the fundamental question of who makes the rules — the self or an external authority. In this sense, 'autonomy' is not just a word but a political and ethical ideal that has shaped the modern world.