n
An artist who uses aleatoricism in the creation of art.
adj
Alternative form of alethic [(logic) Of or pertaining to the various modalities of truth, such as the possibility or impossibility of something being true.]
adj
(literature) Of or relating to an antinovel.
adj
Of or relating to Averroism.
adj
Relating to casuistry (attempts to solve moral dilemmas by applying general rules).
n
(literature) A 16th- and 17th-century literary movement in Spain associated with Francisco de Quevedo and characterized by a rapid rhythm, directness, wordplay, and witty metaphors.
adj
Of, pertaining to, or supporting contextualism
n
A moral philosophy regarding the future of artificial intelligence, based on the writings of Hugo de Garis (born 1947).
n
(often capitalized) An artistic movement in the early 20th Century characterized by the depiction of natural forms as geometric structures of planes.
n
Alternative form of dataism [The belief that all knowledge consists of data and that scientific theories should only be the simplest systematizations of that data.]
n
One who or that which demythologizes.
n
(Hegelianism) Someone skilled in dialectical idealism: someone able to arrive at historical conclusions through consideration of contradictions.
adj
Of or relating to dialogism.
n
(philosophy) The science or logic of speed.
adj
Of or relating to eisegesis.
adj
Alternative spelling of Elistic [Containing reference to the Semitic god ʔil.]
adj
Alternative form of encomiastic [Of or relating to an encomiast.]
n
Someone who practices or upholds euhemerism, a person who believes all or most myths and legends arose from historical origins.
n
alternative form of exegete. A person who undertakes the exegesis of a work or body of work, particularly an apologist for a given religion. [A person skilled in exegesis; an interpreter of texts, signs, the words of an oracle, and similar obscure or esoteric sources.]
n
The science of interpretation or exegesis.
n
A writer on the lives of the saints; a hagiographer.
n
one who writes about heresies
n
(philosophy) A practitioner of hermeneutics: someone who interprets a text.
adj
Of or pertaining to hermeneutics, the study or theory of the methodical interpretation of text, especially holy texts.
n
The study or theory of the methodical interpretation of text, especially holy texts.
n
One versed in hermeneutics.
n
One who writes or studies herstory.
adj
(rare, feminism) Pertaining to herstory.
n
(theology) A method of interpretation in Christian eschatology which attempts to associate Biblical prophecies with actual historical events and symbolic beings with historical persons or societies.
adj
Of or relating to historicism.
adj
Relating to history and religion.
adj
Relating to history and philosophy.
adj
Relating to historiosophy.
n
a hypothesis suggesting that certain historical technologies or ideas can be traced back to a single source
n
The belief in, participation in, or sanction of destroying religious icons and other symbols or monuments, usually with religious or political motives.
n
The veneration of religious icons.
adj
Engaging in iconolatry; worshipping images.
n
A love of icons, or religious images.
n
One who creates images, idols, or symbols, typically as opposed to an iconoclast who destroys them.
n
One given to fanciful ideas or theories; someone who theorizes or speculates.
n
(according to Arjun Appadurai) The global flow of ideologies.
n
(literature) One of the Russian poets belonging to the imaginism movement.
adj
Of or relating to inductivism.
adj
Of or pertaining to instructology
adj
Alternative form of leviratical [Of, relating to, or in accordance with levirate marriage.]
n
A person who studies or teaches logic.
adj
Alternative form of Masoretic [Of or relating to the Masorah, or to its authors.]
adj
Alternative form of medievalistic [Having a medieval style, though not actually from that era.]
adj
Of or relating to megahistory.
adj
Relating to the Menologium.
n
A theologian whose speciality is metatheology
n
One who, or that which, mythologizes.
n
(obsolete) The holding of novel or rational religious views.
n
A school of literary theory developed in the 1980s, aiming simultaneously to understand a work through its cultural context and to understand intellectual history through literature.
adj
Of or relating to onomancy.
adj
Of or pertaining to the nature of being or existence.
adj
Of or relating to ontologism.
adj
Alternative form of oratorical [of, or relating to oratory or an orator.]
n
The name given by Aristotle's followers to his six works on logic.
n
One versed in pantology.
n
A systematic view of all branches of human knowledge or a work of universal information
n
A person devoted to studying and producing written works.
n
A person devoted to general learning and literature.
adj
Having a love of learning or letters.
adj
Relating to philosophy and history.
n
Someone gifted or learned to a great extent or in multiple disciplines; a great scholar.
n
(rare) A person who studies proverbs.
adj
Having certain historical elements.
adj
(philosophy) Of or relating to quodlibet; of a question, posed extemporaneously.
n
Alternative letter-case form of Retardlican.
adj
Alternative letter-case form of Rolandic [Characteristic of Italian anatomist Luigi Rolando]
adj
Alternative form of skaldic [Of or relating to the skalds (Norse poets).]
n
(now only theology) The fact of knowing something; knowledge or understanding of a truth.
adj
Relating to the technological singularity theory.
n
The providing of a solution or solutions to a customer or client (sometimes before a problem has been identified).
n
(historiography) The study and writing of history with a particular focus on the experiences and perspectives of common people, rather than that of political leaders or the elite.
n
A follower of systematism; one who reduces things to a system.
adj
Of or relating to terminism.
adj
(historical) Of or relating to a theme (“subdivision of the Byzantine empire”).
n
The name of a god or goddess.
adj
Transmitted or transmissible from parent to child, or from older to younger, by oral communication; traditional.
n
(theology, philosophy) The interpretation of scripture or other work in order to educe moral or figurative meaning; a treatise of such interpretation.
n
(religion) The doctrine of Scripture types or figures.
adj
Pertaining to uchronia; painting an idealised or semi-fictional view of the past.
adj
Of or pertaining to versions.
n
(UK, education, historical) A school exercise in which pupils are tasked with writing a short piece of Greek or Latin verse on a given subject.
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