From the English word vision, rooted in Latin videre, meaning sight or foresight.
Vision as a given name belongs to a small, bold category of English words elevated to names because of their metaphysical weight. Its Latin ancestor *visio* — from *videre*, to see — originally described the experience of prophetic sight, the kind granted to saints and seers in medieval Christian literature. Hildegard of Bingen famously called her mystical writings *Scivias* (Know the Ways) based on the visions she recorded from the age of three; in this tradition, Vision is not passive perception but active divine communication.
In the twenty-first century, the name gained enormous cultural visibility through Marvel Comics and the MCU, where Vision is an android Avenger of extraordinary intellect and compassion, played by Paul Bettany in a series of films beginning in 2015. The 2021 Disney+ series *WandaVision* deepened the character's cultural footprint considerably, exploring themes of grief, identity, and what it means to be alive. For many parents, the name now carries this layer of meaning — a being who perceives reality differently and whose capacity for empathy transcends his artificial origins.
Beyond pop culture, Vision functions as a spiritual word-name in the tradition of Hope, Faith, and Journey. It speaks to foresight, purpose, and clarity — the quality of seeing what others miss. As a name, it is still rare enough to feel distinctive, yet grounded enough in recognizable English to wear easily. Its two clear syllables give it a confident, unhurried rhythm that suits both a child and an adult equally well.