anthropodicy
发音
UK
/ˌænθɹəʊˈpɒdɪsi/
其它
US
/ˌænθɹoʊˈpɑdɪsi/
词形变化
anthropodicies
复数
anthropodicies
释义与例句
n.
-
1.
An attempt, or an argument attempting, to justify that human beings are fundamentally good despite the commission of evil acts by some people.
可数 不可数 宗教 哲学
词源
Blend of anthropo- (prefix meaning ‘human beings, people’) + theodicy (“justification of a deity or of particular attributes of a deity; specifically, a justification of the existence of evil and suffering in the world”). Anthropo- is derived from Ancient Greek ἄνθρωπος (ánthrōpos, “human being, person; all human beings, mankind”), ultimately possibly Pre-Greek; while the -dicy element of theodicy is from Ancient Greek δῐ́κη (dĭ́kē, “justice; judgment, order; law; right”), and ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *deyḱ- (“to point out”).
来源:wiktionary