The doubts of the agnostic were only the dogmas of the monist.
2
The race collectively is agnostic, whatever may be the case with individuals.
3
The agnostic attitude is not yet dead in the piano playing world.
4
After February, it will use CBS's browser- and operating system-agnostic streaming system.
5
As a provider of merchant services, Elavon is currency agnostic, he says.
Ús de gnostic en anglès
1
Ralph seemed to have become, in a somewhat gnostic manner, a full-fledged financier.
2
Eternal life, not eternal knowledge, as the Alexandrian gnostic said.
3
She reads some gnostic texts about goddesses and gods and the Christ within each of us.
4
The capitalist narrative is replaced by that of the communist; the religious fundamentalist's replaced by the gnostic's.
5
Shivering Wisdom publish in High Kettai: philosophy and science and ancient texts, gnostic mechonomy and the like.
6
My library is gnostic, oecumenic and spiritual.
7
The following gnostic and praxic alterations can be explained by lesions in the association areas of the neocortex.
8
The play ranged with nearly random abandon over mythology, current events, conspiracy theories and fragments of gnostic knowledge.
9
To their external scientific socialism these Masons added mystic concepts which were thought to be "gnostic" in origin.
10
Mythology succeeded animism, and has in turn yielded to many curious and vanished theories, polytheistic, gnostic, pantheistic, and the rest.
11
It is perfectly orthodox, but full of the most ludicrous tricks of gnostic fancy-thewish to find the New Testament in the Old.
12
It is worth noting that the richest modern find of gnostic literature, from Nag Hammadi, came from a Christian monastic community of fourth-century date.
13
It kind of sounds like a horrifyingly dark branch of gnostic theology that none of us could accept with without going stark raving mad.
14
We further note that there is no trace of false asceticism or of gnostic contempt for the body in its designation as 'of our humiliation.'
15
The term of "gnostic," which was at first so honourable, signifying "learned," "enlightened," "pure," became a term of horror and scorn, a reproach of heresy.
16
To the early Christian anchorites and to the gnostics they were familiar.