English edit

 
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Etymology 1 edit

From Middle English sophim, from Old French soffime, sofime, sofisme, sophisme, from Latin sophisma (fallacy, sophism), from Ancient Greek σόφῐσμᾰ (sóphisma), from σοφίζω (sophízō) + -μα (-ma).

Noun edit

sophism (countable and uncountable, plural sophisms)

  1. (uncountable, historical) The school of the sophists in antiquity; their beliefs and method of teaching philosophy and rhetoric.
    Synonym: sophistic
    • 1958, Sophie Trenkner, The Greek Novella in the Classical Period, page 15:
      Within the framework of democracy a new ideology, born of sophism, took root and proclaimed the rights of the individual in all spheres, political as well as moral.
    • 2003, Murray Leaf, “Ethnography and Pragmatism”, in Alfonso Morales, editor, Renascent Pragmatism: Studies in Law and Social Science, →ISBN, page 92:
      Empiricism has its roots in Greek and Roman sophism and skepticism, and continues through Kant and American pragmatism.
    • 2009, Richard M. Berthold, Dare to Struggle: The History and Society of Greece, →ISBN, page 75:
      Sophistic teachers did not, in general, consciously aim at corrupting the young or turning them against their parents, but the radical skepticism and moral relativism of later sophism indirectly achieved something like this.
  2. (countable) A flawed argument, superficially correct in its reasoning, usually designed to deceive.
    Synonym: sophistry
  3. (countable) An intentional fallacy.
  4. (uncountable) Sophistic, fallacious reasoning or argumentation.
    Synonym: sophistry
    • 1779, David Hume, Dialogues Concerning Natural Religion:
      What! No demonstration of the Being of God! No abstract arguments! No proofs a priori! Are these, which have hitherto been so much insisted on by philosophers, all fallacy, all sophism? Can we reach no further in this subject than experience and probability?
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Etymology 2 edit

Noun edit

sophism (uncountable)

  1. Archaic spelling of Sufism.[1]

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