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free-thinking

ADJECTIVE
  1. unwilling to accept authority or dogma (especially in religion)

How To Use free-thinking In A Sentence

  • Though Schopenhauer's view is colored heavily by his own personal unhappiness, still it is difficult to deny the inbuilt despair in the life of every self-conscious, free-thinking individual.
  • Although Barker is larger than life, the character at the core of the narrative is Pele, an exceptionally gifted, free-thinking child.
  • It is mere coincidence that David Aaronovitch (that free-thinking independent journalist) used the same stinking ninth category jab in the Observer blog?
  • Rodia, an untrained construction worker and a free-thinking anarchist, died in 1965.
  • But, because they knew and loved the lama, because he was an old man, because he sought the Way, because he was their guest, and because he collogued long of nights with the head-priest — as free-thinking a metaphysician as ever split one hair into seventy — they murmured assent. Kim
  • No, it is only fair to my own interests to go graveward a little more openmindedly than do these nature myths, since I lack the requisite credulity to become a free-thinking materialist. Jurgen A Comedy of Justice
  • Way, because he was their guest, and because he collogued long of nights with the head-priest -- as free-thinking a metaphysician as ever split one hair into seventy -- they murmured assent. Kim
  • This has caused critics to grumble that despite their professed free-thinking, Apple aficionados are actually suffused with groupthink. It's an interesting irony.
  • And all these misbelievers, these small professors of free-thinking, are usually grossly ignorant and stupid, and without exception, the most abandoned and vicious people of the place.
  • And it is a good spirit: at its best, America is the most open-hearted, free-thinking, generous society in the world.
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