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atheism Reference library
Robert Christopher Towneley Parker
The Oxford Classical Dictionary (4 ed.)
atheism Quick reference
World Encyclopedia
Philosophical denial of the existence of God or any supernatural or spiritual being. Early Christians were called atheists because they
atheism Reference library
The Continuum Encyclopedia of British Philosophy
The normal modern meaning of ‘atheism’ is the belief that there is no God. However, historically, both in its English
atheism Quick reference
A Dictionary of Hinduism
When used in a pejorative sense, the equivalent of nāstika, but otherwise a factually descriptive adjective applied to the completely orthodox (...
atheism and agnosticism Reference library
George I. Mavrodes
The Oxford Companion to Philosophy (2 ed.)
Atheism Quick reference
A Concise Companion to the Jewish Religion
The attitude that affirms there is no God. Until the Middle Ages, when the philosophers, Jewish, Christian, and Muslim, who
Atheism Reference library
Encyclopedia of the Enlightenment
European thinkers of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries used the term atheist in a great many ways. Most educated minds
Atheism and Agnosticism Reference library
Stephen Wagley
The Oxford Encyclopedia of the Modern World
Atheism Reference library
The Concise Oxford Dictionary of World Religions
Disbelief in the existence of God; to be distinguished from agnosticism, which professes uncertainty on the question. Modern atheists
atheism Quick reference
The Oxford Dictionary of Phrase and Fable (2 ed.)
the theory or belief that God does not exist. The word comes (in the late 16th century, via French) from Greek ...