exoteric

ADJECTIVE
  1. suitable for the general public
    writings of an exoteric nature
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How To Use exoteric In A Sentence

  • The numerical majority of Christians -- the Greek and Roman Catholic -- are as much pagans as their ancestors, the ancient Greeks and Romans were exoterically. Percy Bysshe Shelley as a Philosopher and Reformer
  • By contrast with his exoteric presentation at Birkbeck a week ago, his lecture last night - aimed ‘at comrades’ - was a much more focused affair.
  • Bible even exoterically declares that "the woman is the glory of the man. The Woman's Bible
  • The Egyptian theology, or doctrine of the gods, was of two kinds, -- esoteric and exoteric, that is, an interior theology for the initiated, and an exterior theology for the uninitiated. Ten Great Religions An Essay in Comparative Theology
  • Judaism, Christianity, and Islam are all best known as exoteric traditions, each with the full array of formal worship, religious law, sacred books, and codes of morality. Commonweal Magazine
  • The commentator is for explaining the second line exoterically. The Mahabharata of Krishna-Dwaipayana Vyasa, Volume 3 Books 8, 9, 10, 11 and 12
  • The only God of the first Sam [= a] j; is a person; that of the reform is exoterically Nature.] [Footnote 110: But, as will be noticed in the four articles The Religions of India Handbooks on the History of Religions, Volume 1, Edited by Morris Jastrow
  • What we may call the exoteric basis of Numaism was a ritual of many ceremonies connected with home-life and agriculture, and designed to keep alive a feeling for the sacredness of these. The Crest-Wave of Evolution A Course of Lectures in History, Given to the Graduates' Class in the Raja-Yoga College, Point Loma, in the College-Year 1918-19
  • These outdoor talks were called exoteric, and there gradually grew up esoteric lessons, which were for the rich or luxurious and the dainty. Little Journeys to the Homes of the Great Philosophers, Volume 8
  • It should be noted, however, that the Valentinian, Ptolemy, ascribes freedom of will to the psychic (which the pneumatic and hylic lack), and therefore has sketched by way of by-work a theology for the psychical beside that for the pneumatic, which exhibits striking harmonies with the exoteric system of Origen. History of Dogma, Volume 1 (of 7)
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