Not exact matches
Hitchens never found religion but did evolve beyond his youthful devotion to Trotsky, though he retained a
dogmatism that
made him seem an ideologue without an ideology.
They may be called the dogmatic and the pragmatic; or the a priori and the empirical; or the theological and the sociological; or, as one speaker defined them, a
dogmatism which
makes an absolute separation between the world and God and refuses to let the church be held responsible for anything that happens in the world, and a «pseudo-religious activism» which would
make the church the servant of every benevolent or reforming impulse.
It is backward looking, a kind of longing quest to rediscover tradition, to
make life simple, and (for this reason) it probably shares an «elective affinity» with
dogmatism, bigotry, and political conservatism of other kinds.
They defend old theories and promote accompanying policy prescriptions with a strident rigidity and
dogmatism that would
make the most fundamentalist religious zealot blush.
No still doesn't
make sense, I think that your usage is inconsistent, sometimes you use dogma for
dogmatism and sometimes not.