释义 |
pantheistic, a.|pænθiːˈɪstɪk| [f. as prec. + -ic: cf. Toland's title Pantheisticon.] 1. Of or pertaining to pantheists, or pantheism.
[1718J. Toland (title) Pantheisticon: sive Formula celebrandæ Sodalitatis Socraticæ.] 1732Waterland Chr. Vind. Charge 44 The Pantheistick System..supposes God and Nature, or God and the whole Universe, to be one and the same Substance, one Universal Being; insomuch that Mens Souls are only Modifications of the divine Substance. 1856Sir B. Brodie Psychol. Inq. I. iv. 118 The pantheistic theory..has descended from the school of Pythagoras to these latter times. †2. = pantheic. Obs. (? an error.)
1842Brande Dict. Sci. etc., Pantheistic,..a term applied to statues and figures. So pantheˈistical a. = sense 1; hence pantheˈistically adv.
1840Thackeray Paris Sk.-bk. (1872) 176 In this work, the lady asserts her pantheistical doctrine. 1848Tait's Mag. XV. 150 The Creator [is never] pantheistically identified with the works. 1870Disraeli Lothair xxx. 151 There is that human reason..which insists on being atheistical, or polytheistical, or pantheistical. |