¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Dogmas
1. dogma [n] - See also: dogma
Lexicographical Neighbors of Dogmas
Literary usage of Dogmas
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Outlines of a Philosophy of Religion Based on Psychology and History by Auguste Sabatier (1897)
"The first is that dogmas are immutable ; the second, that they die fatally ...
I wish to show that dogmas have neither this pretended immobility nor this ..."
2. The New Schaff-Herzog Encyclopedia of Religious Knowledge: Embracing by Johann Jakob Herzog, Philip Schaff, Albert Hauck (1909)
"Basis of the Certainty of dogmas (53). Dogmatics, Definition and Content (84).
... speaks of " the dogmas of the Lord and of the apostles," the context ..."
3. Lux Mundi: A Series of Studies in the Religion of the Incarnation by Charles Gore (1890)
"Whether the dogmas of the Church are true or not true, is itself a question of
evidence. Before, however, making any remark upon the nature of this evidence ..."
4. James Mill: A Biography by Alexander Bain (1882)
"He repeats, from the positive or constructive side, that ceremonies and dogmas
should be dispensed with. This would make a truly Catholic church : all would ..."
5. Lectures on the Philosophy of Religion: Together with a Work on the Proofs by Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel (1895)
"A great part of the danger which threatens philosophy from this side when she
considers these dogmas in order to comprehend them ought to be thus taken away ..."