counterdogmatic

English

Etymology

From counter- +‎ dogmatic.

Adjective

counterdogmatic (comparative more counterdogmatic, superlative most counterdogmatic)

  1. Synonym of antidogmatic.
    • 2022, James Brabazon, Albert Schweitzer: A Biography, Second Edition[1], Syracuse University Press, →ISBN, page 32:
      She and Mrs. Ostier were the first of a long line of women whose help and approval he was to enjoy and rely upon throughout his life—a humanizing, counterdogmatic influence that mattered a great deal to him. Not that he was sexually precocious—far from it. At puberty he began to worship an occasional schoolgirl from afar, like most middle-class boys. But it was older women whose company he sought. He could learn from them, and he found them easy to get on with.