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Definition of Naturistic
1. Adjective. In accord with naturism.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Naturistic
Literary usage of Naturistic
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Ground and Goal of Human Life by Charles Gray Shaw (1919)
"Naturistic POSSIBILITIES OF SELFHOOD When individualism seeks to sever its
connection with anti-natural decadence, it is led to wonder how it will be ..."
2. The Encyclopaedia Britannica: A Dictionary of Arts, Sciences, and General by Thomas Spencer Baynes (1888)
"Certain it is that the oldest religions must have contained the germs of all the
later growth, and, though perhaps more thoroughly naturistic than the most ..."
3. Principles of Therapeutics by A. Manquat (1910)
"EMPIRICAL, EXPECTANT, Naturistic AND PATHOLOGICAL THERAPEUTICS We have not admitted
the ... Naturistic therapeutics consists in exaggerating the functional ..."
4. Popular Science Monthly (1901)
"Professor Rouleau, of Berlin, divides culture into phases which he calls '
manganic' and ' naturistic'; the former term applies to the use of machinery and ..."
5. The Monist by Hegeler Institute (1908)
"Such myths, of course, were shocking to graver thinkers, but they formed the
staple for the masses till the time of naturistic religious decay. ..."
6. Social Institutions in Their Origin, Growth, and Interconnection by Denton Jaques Snider (1901)
"Then this Order sets forth the Ethical Religions, which have overcome the naturistic
element in man and God, but may be still incumbered with the nativistic ..."
7. The Precinct of Religion in the Culture of Humanity by Charles Gray Shaw (1908)
"Taoism itself is not so naturistic as to obscure the mind in its view of human
destiny, for the use of nature is primitive and nihilistic, and the favourite ..."