释义 |
Grotian, a.|ˈgrəʊʃ(ɪ)ən| [See -an.] Of or pertaining to the Dutch lawyer, statesman, and theologian Hugo Grotius (1583–1645), who founded the modern science of international law and propounded the ‘governmental’ view of the Atonement. Also as n., an adherent of the tenets or policies of Grotius; ˈGrotianism, the views or teaching of Grotius.
1864W. G. T. Shedd Hist. Chr. Doctr. II. 366 The Grotian soteriology. 1920Expositor May 372 Jonathan Edwards the younger, went over to Grotianism, bag and baggage. Ibid. 373 Johnson had enunciated views of the doctrine [of the Atonement] which one can only characterize as strongly Grotian. 1934J. Laird Hobbes iii. vii. 255 Boëcler, a Grotian, was said to have counted Hobbes a great intellect who had gone astray by neglecting the classics. |