heresy
Noun
-
Any opinions or doctrines at variance with the official or orthodox position (synset 106222157)
is a type of: orientation - an integrated set of attitudes and beliefssubtypes:
- iconoclasm - the orientation of an iconoclast
- nonconformance, nonconformism, nonconformity - a lack of orthodoxy in thoughts or beliefs
same as: heterodoxy, unorthodoxy -
A belief that rejects the orthodox tenets of a religion (synset 105989297)
is a type of: cognitive content, content, mental object - the sum or range of what has been perceived, discovered, or learnedsubtypes:
- arianism - heretical doctrine taught by Arius that asserted the radical primacy of the Father over the Son
- marcionism - the Christian heresy of the 2nd and 3rd centuries that rejected the Old Testament and denied the incarnation of God in Jesus as a human
- monophysitism - a Christian heresy of the 5th and 6th centuries that challenged the orthodox definition of the two natures (human and divine) in Jesus and instead believed there was a single divine nature
- monothelitism - the theological doctrine that Christ had only one will even though he had two natures (human and divine); condemned as heretical in the Third Council of Constantinople
- nestorianism - the theological doctrine (named after Nestorius) that Christ is both the son of God and the man Jesus (which is opposed to Roman Catholic doctrine that Christ is fully God)
- pelagianism - the theological doctrine put forward by Pelagius which denied original sin and affirmed the ability of humans to be righteous; condemned as heresy by the Council of Ephesus in 431
- docetism - the heretical doctrine (associated with the Gnostics) that Jesus had no human body and his sufferings and death on the cross were apparent rather than real
- gnosticism - a religious orientation advocating gnosis as the way to release a person's spiritual element; considered heresy by Christian churches
- tritheism - (Christianity) the heretical belief that the Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit are three separate gods
- albigensianism, catharism - a Christian movement considered to be a medieval descendant of Manichaeism in southern France in the 12th and 13th centuries; characterized by dualism (asserted the coexistence of two mutually opposed principles, one good and one evil); was exterminated for heresy during the Inquisition
- zurvanism - a heretical Zoroastrian doctrine holding that Zurvan was the ultimate source of the universe and that both Ahura Mazda and Ahriman were Zurvan's offspring
same as: unorthodoxy
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