Scepticism
11scepticism — UK [ˈskeptɪˌsɪz(ə)m] / US [ˈskeptɪˌsɪzəm] noun [uncountable] doubts that someone has about something that other people think is true or right She treated this statement with a healthy degree of scepticism …
12scepticism — sceptic (US skeptic) ► NOUN 1) a person inclined to question or doubt accepted opinions. 2) a person who doubts the truth of Christianity and other religions; an atheist. DERIVATIVES scepticism noun. ORIGIN Greek skeptikos, from skepsis inquiry,… …
13Scepticism and Animal Faith — (1923) is a later work by Spanish American philosopher George Santayana. He intended it to be merely the introduction to a new system of philosophy, a work that would later be called The Realms of Being , which constitutes the bulk of his… …
14scepticism — chiefly British variant of skepticism …
15scepticism — /skep teuh siz euhm/, n. skepticism. * * * …
16SCEPTICISM — primarily doubt respecting, and ultimately disbelief in, the reality of the super sensible, or the transcendental, or the validity of the evidence on which the belief in it is founded, such as reason or revelation, and in religious matters is… …
17scepticísm — s. n …
18scepticism — (Roget s Thesaurus II) noun See skepticism …
19scepticism — scep|ti|cis|m BrE skepticism AmE [ˈskeptısızəm] n [U] an attitude of doubting that particular claims or statements are true or that something will happen …
20scepticism — scep|ti|cism [ skeptı,sızəm ] the British spelling of skepticism …