The word 'vision' refers to the ability to see, to a mental image or plan for the future, or to a mystical or supernatural experience of seeing something beyond ordinary perception. It entered English in the late thirteenth century from Anglo-French 'visioun,' from Latin 'vīsiōnem' (accusative of 'vīsiō'), meaning 'the act of seeing, sight, a thing seen.' The Latin noun derives from 'vīsus,' the past participle of 'vidēre' (to see), one of the most important verbs in the Latin language.
The verb 'vidēre' traces to PIE *weyd-, a root meaning 'to see' that simultaneously carried the sense 'to know.' This dual meaning — preserved in the English phrase 'I see' meaning 'I understand' — reflects one of the deepest conceptual metaphors in human cognition: the equation of visual perception with intellectual comprehension. Across the Indo-European world, the descendants of *weyd- oscillate between literal seeing and metaphorical knowing.
In the Germanic branch, *weyd- produced Old English 'witan' (to know) and 'wīs' (wise), giving Modern English 'wit' (intelligence, the ability to make clever connections), 'wise' (possessing knowledge and good judgment), 'wisdom,' and the archaic 'to wit' (that is to say, namely). The word 'witness' also belongs here — a witness is one who knows from having seen. 'Wizard' (a wise one) is another descendant.
In Greek, the root produced 'eidos' (form, shape, appearance — what is seen), 'idea' (form, pattern, notion — what the mind sees), and 'eidōlon' (image, phantom — giving English 'idol'). Plato's theory of Forms (or Ideas) — the philosophical doctrine that abstract, perfect patterns underlie the imperfect material world — takes its central term from this root. When Plato spoke of 'ideai,' he meant the true forms that the philosopher's mind 'sees' beyond the illusions of sense perception. Thus the entire tradition of Western idealism descends, linguistically and conceptually, from the PIE
In Sanskrit, *weyd- produced 'vid-' (to know) and 'veda' (knowledge), the name given to the oldest and most sacred scriptures of Hinduism. The Vedas — the Rigveda, Yajurveda, Samaveda, and Atharvaveda — are understood as knowledge that was 'seen' (not composed) by ancient sages called 'rishis,' a word meaning 'seers.' The parallel with English 'vision' is exact: both words rest on the metaphor that supreme knowledge comes through an act of inner sight.
The Latin family generated from 'vidēre' is one of the largest in English. 'Visible' and 'visual' are direct derivatives. 'Video' (I see) became the name for moving-image technology. 'Visit' (from 'vīsitāre,' to go to see) entered through French. 'Evidence' (from 'ēvidentia,' the quality of being seen clearly) is a legal and philosophical term. 'Provide' (from 'prōvidēre,' to see ahead, to foresee) links vision to preparation. 'Supervise' (from 'supervidēre,' to look over) links it to authority. 'Revise' (from 'revīsere,' to look at
The word 'vision' itself has undergone significant semantic expansion in English. In its earliest medieval uses, it primarily referred to supernatural experiences — visions of saints, angels, or heaven, as in mystical literature and hagiography. The 'Visions of Piers Plowman' (c. 1370) and the biblical visions of Ezekiel and Revelation are typical of this usage. The physical sense of 'vision' as 'the faculty of sight' developed in parallel. The metaphorical sense — 'vision' as foresight, imagination, or a plan for the future — emerged in the sixteenth century and has become dominant in modern usage. A 'visionary' is someone who sees what does not yet exist. A company's 'vision statement' articulates what it aspires to become.
The modern proliferation of 'vision' in business, technology, and self-help language ('visionary leadership,' 'computer vision,' 'my personal vision') represents the latest extension of a metaphor that is at least six thousand years old. From the PIE speakers who used *weyd- to mean both 'see' and 'know,' through the Vedic sages who 'saw' sacred truth, through the Greek philosophers who sought to 'behold' the Forms, through the medieval mystics who experienced divine visions, to the modern entrepreneur with a 'vision' for the future — the word encapsulates the persistent human belief that the highest form of knowledge is a form of sight.