¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Indifferentists
1. indifferentist [n] - See also: indifferentist
Lexicographical Neighbors of Indifferentists
Literary usage of Indifferentists
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. History of Philosophy by William Turner (1903)
"CHAPTER XXXI WILLIAM OF CHAMPEAUX, THE Indifferentists, ETC. WILLIAM OF CHAMPEAUX
Life. William of Champeaux was, like St. Anselm, an opponent of the ..."
2. The English Review (1848)
"The truth is, as we clearly showed at the outset, they have no fixed religious
principles; they are indifferentists in religion, and therefore, by necessary ..."
3. The American Catholic Quarterly Review by James Andrew Corcoran, Patrick John Ryan, Edmond Francis Prendergast (1886)
"And when we add the mighty masses of indifferentists [skepticism infects one-half
of the population], it is no marvel that the aggressiveness of the ..."
4. Charles Bradlaugh: A Record of His Life and Work by Hypatia Bradlaugh Bonner, John Mackinnon Robertson (1895)
"There may be many Indifferentists who act as Secularists without caring at all
to discuss the religious question ; and there may even be a few of the ..."
5. The Study of Religion in the Italian Universities by Louis Henry Jordan, Baldassare Labanca (1909)
"The attitude of Indifferentists, who lay undue stress on merely abstract ...
Indifferentists mislead when they advocate a policy of mere neutrality towards ..."
6. Letters Archaeological and Historical Relating to the Isle of Wight by Edward Boucher James (1896)
"The English people were indifferentists; they were not irreligious, they adhered
to those doctrines which were taught both in the Reformed Church of England ..."
7. The Liberal View: A Series of Articles on Current Politics by the Members of by Eighty Club (London, England). (1904)
"Some of these are no doubt genuine Indifferentists —wilful, deliberate, and
persistent ... Indifferentists are usually well- disposed to an Establishment, ..."