NOUN
  1. a stubborn person of arbitrary or arrogant opinions
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How To Use dogmatist In A Sentence

  • He wants free speech dogmatists to think again, and presents a series of challenges to the prevailing view in the US. The Times Literary Supplement
  • If all the clowns who excoriate Keynes just because some ignorant dogmatist told them to, would actually go read the General Theory (which is exceptionally lucidly written), perhaps they might begin to understand why. Matthew Yglesias » “Taking Money From One Place and Giving it To Another Place”
  • Intellectuals are becoming unhappy with dogmatists in the party leadership.
  • They no longer seemed charming buccaneers but out-of-touch dogmatists. Times, Sunday Times
  • He was one of those rare and terrible dogmatists capable of destroying nine-tenths of the human race to ‘make happy’ the remaining tenth’.
  • Nay, I am no cold-blooded theorist, no thick-hided dogmatist; nor am I a chastely simple young man mooning in virginal innocence. The Kempton-Wace Letters
  • Only the convinced dogmatist could fail to grasp this point. Sociology and Religion: A Collection of Readings
  • While the academy is not free of dogmatists, it nonetheless rejects dogmatism because it represents the end of thinking.
  • He is justifiably harsh on the regulatory failures that hastened the crisis, but he is no dogmatist. Times, Sunday Times
  • As he puts it in discussing the Sextus 'attitude to the external world, “His own deep skepticism leaves him in a state of epochê, not only as to whether there are any such things as ˜external objects', but even as to whether these terms of the Dogmatists have any intelligible meaning at all.” Ancient Skepticism
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