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单词 scholasticism
释义

scholasticismn.

Brit. /skə(ʊ)ˈlastᵻsɪz(ə)m/, /skɒˈlastᵻsɪz(ə)m/, U.S. /skəˈlæstəˌsɪzəm/
Origin: Formed within English, by derivation. Etymons: scholastic adj., -ism suffix.
Etymology: < scholastic adj. + -ism suffix.
1. The predominant theological and philosophical teaching of medieval academic institutions or the ‘schools’ (school n.1 12a), based upon the authority of the Bible and Christian Fathers and the logic and philosophy of Aristotle and his commentators; the methods of learning used in medieval academic institutions, characterized by dialectical reasoning, subtle argument, and disputation; the doctrines and teaching methods of the schoolmen (schoolman n. 3). Scholasticism attempted to use dialectic and reasoned argument to find rational proof of Christian doctrine, to systematize Christian theology by bringing conflicting doctrinal sources into harmony, and to reconcile Christian theology with ancient classical philosophy (esp. the works of Aristotle). Scholasticism dominated European philosophy from the 11th to the 15th cent., reaching its height during the 13th and early 14th cent., when the leading scholastic philosophers included Thomas Aquinas, Duns Scotus, and William of Ockham. By the 15th cent., humanists and reformers had begun to criticize the teaching of the medieval philosophers and the terms scholastic and scholastical were used with depreciative connotations by Renaissance humanists, who ridiculed the doctrines and methods of the medieval ‘schools’ for a perceived dependence upon quibbling argument and needless distinctions. In early use, therefore, there is some overlap between this sense and the depreciative use at sense 2.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > philosophy > scholasticism > [noun]
scholasticism1693
society > faith > aspects of faith > theology > systems of theology > [noun] > Scholastic
school divinityc1454
scholasticism1693
1693 S. R. tr. A. Baillet Life M. Des Cartes 129 Insomuch, that being accustomed by a long habit not to esteem what he did not understand, and not understanding in Philosophy whatsoever was not comprehended within the limits of trivial Scholasticism [Fr. la Scholastique triviale], one might have pardoned him the little relish and aversion that he had had at first sight for Monsieur Des Cartes his Works.
1706 R. Brocklesby Explic. Gospel-theism Pref. sig. av They are Aliens from Scholasticism, and consequently our Theology of the Godhead and the Persons thereof ought to be of another kind and Character than Scholastic.
1756 J. Warton Ess. on Pope I. vi. 300 But the talents of Abelard were not confined to theology, jurisprudence, philosophy, and the thorny paths of scholasticism.
1854 H. H. Milman Hist. Lat. Christianity III. vi. ii. 22 Erigena..the parent of scholasticism..as a free, discursive, speculative science, before it had been bound up with rigid orthodoxy.
a1871 G. S. Morris tr. F. Ueberweg Hist. Philos. (1872) I. 454 Scotism is..like Thomism, one of the doctrines in which Scholasticism culminates.
1915 Pop. Sci. Monthly Sept. 274 We have been taught to call medieval learning scholasticism, and to think of it as concerned almost exclusively with logic, metaphysics and theology.
2004 Sci. Amer. (U.K. ed.) May 27/1 Rejecting both the unempirical tradition of scholasticism and the Renaissance quest to recover and preserve ancient wisdom, Bacon sought a blend of sensory data and reasoned theory.
2. Rigid or narrow-minded adherence to traditional doctrines and academic methods; dependence or insistence on the traditional methods and practices of the universities, esp. preoccupation with formal precision, subtle argument, and fine distinctions; pedantry, sophistry. Frequently somewhat depreciative.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > pedantry > [noun]
scholarism1588
pedantism1592
pedantry1612
scholasticism1797
bluestockingism1812
donnishness1835
donnism1859
pragmaticism1865
usherism1869
pragmatism1895
mandarinism1976
society > education > teaching > [noun] > pedantic teaching
scholasticism1797
gerund-grinding1826
grammar-grinding1898
1797 J. Berington Let. to John Douglas 3 I, therefore, resolved to relinquish all scholasticism and subtle disputation, to state our doctrines in the plain language of the day.
1821 New Monthly Mag. 2 424 The melancholy reader, who is possessed with a feeling directly hostile to all scholasticism and pedantic wit.
1879 F. W. Farrar Life & Work St. Paul I. ii. vii. 127 Contact with the world had..enabled them so far to raise their heads out of the heavy fog of Jewish scholasticism as to distinguish between that which was of eternal and that which was but of transient significance.
1884 D. Hunter tr. E. Reuss Hist. Canon xvii. 341 The unattractive form of the works it produced has in general the stamp of a dull, dry scholasticism.
1948 P. Kavanagh Tarry Flynn i. 11 He..was full of a pedantic scholasticism which he somehow managed to relate to the needs of the people.
2005 Tikkun Mar. 21/2 Those intellectuals who slipped into a kind of professional somnambulism in which matters of theory have less to do with a conscious challenge to politics, power, and injustice than with either a deadening scholasticism or a kind of arcane cleverness.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2019; most recently modified version published online June 2022).
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n.1693
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