Definition of Dichotomists

1. Noun. (plural of dichotomist) ¹

¹ Source: wiktionary.com

Definition of Dichotomists

1. dichotomist [n] - See also: dichotomist

Lexicographical Neighbors of Dichotomists

dichords
dichorial
dichorionic diamniotic placenta
dichotic
dichotic listening tests
dichotically
dichotomic
dichotomies
dichotomisation
dichotomise
dichotomised
dichotomises
dichotomising
dichotomist
dichotomists (current term)
dichotomization
dichotomizations
dichotomize
dichotomized
dichotomizes
dichotomizing
dichotomous
dichotomous key
dichotomous keys
dichotomously
dichotomousness
dichotomy
dichroic
dichroiscope

Literary usage of Dichotomists

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1. The Practitioner by Gale Group, ProQuest Information and Learning Company (1896)
"... some time ago made a characteristically outspoken attack on the " dichotomists," as practitioners are called in France, who, as it were, hunt patients ..."

2. Lectures on Clinical Medicine: Delivered at the Hôtel-Dieu, Paris by Armand Trousseau, Pierre Victor Bazire, John Rose Cormack (1870)
"In the simplest catarrh, in whooping-cough, and in asthma, the dichotomists see only bronchial phlegmasia, and do not stop to consider the individual ..."

3. A Manual of the History of Dogmas by Bernard John Otten (1922)
"59 With this definition the others agree, all of them being dichotomists. They emphasize man's freedom of action, and point out that he was created to ..."

4. The Tripartite Nature of Man, Spirit, Soul, and Body: Applied to Illustrate by John Bickford Heard (1875)
"... or our intellectual consciousness of His existence, is the point in dispute between us and dichotomists. They would call this an abstract idea, ..."

5. Encyclopedia of Sacred Theology: Its Principles by Abraham Kuyper (1898)
"With all the Reformed we reject the Trichotomy, at least in so far as it assumes three substances in man. We are dichotomists. Even if the distinction ..."

6. The Epistles to the Thessalonians by George Gillanders Findlay (1898)
"... and the advocates of a twofold division, dichotomists. Amongst the chief expositions of the former view is that given in ..."

7. Leo XIII and Modern Civilization by John Bleecker Miller (1897)
"It follows, therefore, that the Roman Catholics are necessarily dichotomists or believers in the twofold division of man's personality into body and soul ..."

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