philosophical doctrine

NOUN
  1. a doctrine accepted by adherents to a philosophy
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How To Use philosophical doctrine In A Sentence

  • The philosophical doctrine that every event, act, and decision is the inevitable consequence of antecedents that are independent of the human will.
  • The philosophical doctrine that every event, act, and decision is the inevitable consequence of antecedents that are independent of the human will.
  • However, relativism is a philosophical doctrine that goes far beyond such obvious facts.
  • Philosophical behaviourism has long been rejected; what was worth keeping has been appropriated by the philosophical doctrine of functionalism, which is the most widely accepted view in philosophy of mind today. Gilbert Ryle
  • the philosophical doctrine of pluralism.
  • A variety of philosophical doctrine, are subordinate to certain social classes created by the people, these people's consciousness, but also historically been a certain degree of social life to be.
  • the philosophical doctrine of pluralism.
  • A variety of philosophical doctrine, are subordinate to certain social classes created by the people, these people's consciousness, but also historically been a certain degree of social life to be.
  • A religious-philosophical doctrine that originated in Persia in the third century and reappeared throughout the next 1300 years.
  • Tantra set out ritual practices, religious proscriptions, yogic techniques, and philosophical doctrine.
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