philosophistic

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English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

philo- +‎ sophistic

Adjective[edit]

philosophistic (comparative more philosophistic, superlative most philosophistic)

  1. Exhibiting a love of or tendency toward sophistry; pertaining to spurious philosophy.
    • 1845, Moses Stuart, A Commentary on the Apocalypse - Volume 2, page 420:
      That many philosophistic and superstitious conceits have been mixed with it, in process of time, proves nothing against the general fact as stated.
    • 1993, Vincent Descombes, The Barometer of Modern Reason: On the Philosophies of Current Events, page 45:
      A philosophy of the French Revolution should take care to avoid such philosphistic procedures.
    • 2010, Michael O'Brien, Intellectual Life and the American South, 1810-1860, →ISBN:
      This premodern pitilessness Pettigrew deprecated, but he was less enthusiastic about aspects of modernity other than compassion, like “atheism, deism, and philosophistic religion, so prevalent in the soi-disant enlightened countries.
    • 2017, Benedetto Croce, Logic as the Science of the pure Concept, →ISBN:
      The real epochs are not exempt from philosophistic caprices; the ideal sometimes become converted into a mythology (though full of profound meanings).