sophistic
Appearance
See also: Sophistic
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Learned borrowing from Latin sophisticus, itself a borrowing from Ancient Greek σοφιστικός (sophistikós); morphologically, from sophist + -ic.
Adjective
[edit]sophistic (comparative more sophistic, superlative most sophistic)
- Pertaining to the ancient sophists.
- 2004, Brian Leiter, “The Hermeneutics of Suspicion: Recovering Marx, Nietzsche, and Freud”, in Brian Leiter, editor, The Future for Philosophy, →ISBN, page 84:
- […] he is simply translating into Marxian terms the Sophistic view “that the more powerful will always take advantage of the weaker, and will give the name of law and justice to whatever they lay down in their own interests.”
- Sophistical.
Noun
[edit]sophistic
- (historical, philosophy) The sophists of antiquity, in general or of a specific period; their beliefs and method.
- Synonym: sophism
- 1896, Wilmer Cave Wright, The Emperor Julian’s Relation to the New Sophistic and Neo-Platonism: With a Study of His Style, page 19:
- But when we consider his wish to reconcile Philosophy and Rhetoric, it must be remembered that, if the new Sophistic differed in most of its essential features from the Sophistic of Plato’s contemporaries, it was Philosophy as conceived by Isocrates rather than Plato that Themistius had in mind.
- 2005, Tim Whitmarsh, The Second Sophistic, →ISBN, page 4:
- The luminaries of the ‘first sophistic’—Philostratus cites Gorgias, Critias, and others—treated, we are told, abstract philosophical themes.
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- English terms borrowed from Latin
- English learned borrowings from Latin
- English terms derived from Latin
- English terms derived from Ancient Greek
- English terms suffixed with -ic
- English lemmas
- English adjectives
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- English nouns
- English countable nouns
- English nouns with unknown or uncertain plurals
- English terms with historical senses
- en:Philosophy