¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Agnostics
1. agnostic [n] - See also: agnostic
Lexicographical Neighbors of Agnostics
Literary usage of Agnostics
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Civilization of Christendom: And Other Studies by Bernard Bosanquet (1893)
"Does it much matter whether we call ourselves Agnostics or not ? This depends,
I suppose, on the depth and clearness of meaning which a name possesses. ..."
2. Modern Egypt by Evelyn Baring Cromer (1908)
"CHAPTER XXXVII THE EUROPEANISED EGYPTIANS The Europeanised Egyptians are generally
Agnostics—Effects of Europeanising the ..."
3. What Can I Know?: An Inquiry Into Truth, Its Nature, the Means of Its by George Trumbull Ladd (1914)
"... CHAPTER Agnostics AND PEOPLE OF COMMON-SENSE T has long been customary to
divide men somewhat roughly into classes according to . i their theoretical or ..."
4. Problems of the Future and Essays by Samuel Laing (1890)
"... not Reason—Descarte, Kant, Coleridge—Christian Agnostics—Tendency of the Age—
Carlyle, George Eliot, Renan—Anglican Divines, Spurgeon— Robert Elsmere. ..."
5. The Humanity, Benevolence and Charity Legislation of the Pentateuch and the by Maurice Fluegel (1908)
"... AND Agnostics. Thus the Mosaic doctrine reunites these elsewhere scattered
divine attributes, justice and love; in God is justice tempered with love; ..."
6. The Unitarian edited by Jabez Thomas Sunderland, Brooke Herford, Frederick B. Mott (1895)
"LIBERAL RELIGION AND Agnostics. What message has Liberal Religion for practical
agnostics ? In trying to answer this question, I would suggest in the first ..."