English

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Etymology

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Humorous alteration of dogma.

Noun

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catma (plural catmas)

  1. A tenet of belief for adherents of Discordianism.
    • 2002, Dennis McNally, A Long Strange Trip, page 105:
      Garcia particularly cherished catma as a concept; it is a delicious pun.
    • 2003, Robert Anton Wilson (foreword), The Prankster and the Conspiracy, p. 11:
      In my ministry I have added a rider promising that if you repeat this catma 666 times you will achieve Supreme Enlightenment, in some sense.
    • 2012, John Higgs, The KLF, Weidenfeld & Nicolson, published 2013, page 31:
      Discordians understand that every catma may one day be discarded on the grounds that it is nonsense. Until that day comes, it should be accepted and respected.