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Origin and history of doctrine


doctrine(n.)

late 14c., "the body of principles, dogmas, etc., in a religion or field of knowledge," from Old French doctrine (12c.) "teaching, doctrine" and directly from Latin doctrina "a teaching, body of teachings, learning," from doctor "teacher" (see doctor (n.)) + -ina, fem. of -inus, suffix forming fem. abstract nouns (see -ine (1)).

The notion is "whatever is taught or laid down as true by a master or instructor," hence "any set of principles held as true." In Middle English, it could be used generally for "learning, instruction, education." In U.S. history, the Monroe doctrine was put forward in a message to Congress Dec. 2, 1823; the exact phrase is attested by 1848.

also from late 14c.

Entries linking to doctrine


doctor(n.)

c. 1300, doctour, "Church father," from Old French doctour and directly from Medieval Latin doctor "religious teacher, adviser, scholar," in classical Latin "teacher," agent noun from docere "to show, teach, cause to know," originally "make to appear right," causative of decere "be seemly, fitting" (reconstructed to be from PIE root *dek- "to take, accept").

The meaning "holder of the highest degree in a university, one who has passed all the degrees of a faculty and is thereby empowered to teach the subjects included in it" is from late 14c. Hence "teacher, instructor, learned man; one skilled in a learned profession" (late 14c.).

The sense of "medical professional, person duly licensed to practice medicine" (replacing native leech (n.2)) grew gradually out of this from c. 1400, though this use of the word was not common until late 16c. The transitional stage is exemplified in Chaucer's Doctor of phesike (Latin physica came to be used extensively in Medieval Latin for medicina).

That no man ... practyse in Fisyk ... but he be Bacheler or Doctour of Fisyk, havynge Lettres testimonyalx sufficeantz of on of those degrees of the Universite. [Rolls of Parliament, 1421]

Middle English also used medicin for "a medical doctor" (mid-15c.), from French. Similar usage of the equivalent of doctor is colloquial in most European languages: Italian dottore, French docteur, German Doktor, Lithuanian daktaras, though these typically are not the main word in those languages for a medical healer.

For similar evolution, compare Sanskrit vaidya- "medical doctor," literally "one versed in science." German Arzt, Dutch arts are from Late Latin archiater, from Greek arkhiatros "chief healer," hence "court physician." French médecin is a back-formation from médicine, replacing Old French miege, from Latin medicus.

The sense of "scholar, teacher" is preserved in related words such as doctrine. Blount's "Glossographia" (1656) also has doctible "apt to be taught," doctibility, doctiloquent "that speaks learnedly."

Phrase what the doctor ordered "just the thing" is attested by 1914.

doctrinaire(n.)

"one who theorizes without sufficient regard to practical considerations; one who explains things by one narrow set of theories, disregarding all other forces at work," 1820, from French doctrinaire "impractical person," originally "adherent of doctrines" (14c.), from Latin doctrina "teaching, body of teachings, learning" (see doctrine).

At first used in the context of French politics, the French word having been contemptuously applied by rival factions to those who tried to reconcile liberty with royal authority after 1815. Hence, anyone who applies doctrine without making allowance for practical considerations (1831). As an adjective, "characteristic of an impractical theorist, insisting upon the exclusive importance of one narrow theory," from 1834. Related: Doctrinairism.

  • doctrinal
  • indoctrinate
  • -ine
  • *dek-
  • See All Related Words (6)
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More to explore


indoctrinate
formerly also endoctrinate, 1620s, "to teach," formed as if from Latin (but there seems to have been no word *indoctrinare), perhaps modeled on French endoctriner or extended from earlier (now obsolete) verb indoctrine, endoctrine, "to instruct" (mid-15c.); see in- (2) "in" + doc
philosophy
c. 1300, philosophie, "knowledge, learning, scholarship, scholarly works, body of knowledge," from Old French filosofie "philosophy, knowledge" (12c., Modern French philosophie) and directly from Latin philosophia, from Greek philosophia "love of knowledge, pursuit of wisdom; sys
determinism
1846, introduced by William Hamilton for "doctrine of the necessitarian philosophers" (who hold that human action is not...imply materialism, atheism, or a denial of moral responsibility; while it is in direct opposition to fatalism and to the doctrine...[Century Dictionary]  From 1876 in general sense of "doctrine that everything happens is determined by a necessary...
heretic
"one who holds a doctrine at variance with established or dominant standards," mid-14c., from Old French eretique (14c.,...[T]he heretic is not an unbeliever (far from it) but rather a man who emphasizes some point of doctrine too strongly and...
fatalism
1670s as a philosophical doctrine that all things are determined by fate, from fatal + -ism....Fatalism is a doctrine which does not recognize the determination of all events by causes, in the ordinary sense; holding...
hedonism
The doctrine of Aristippus and the Cyrenaic school of Greek philosophers, that the pleasure of the moment is the only possible...and that a man should in the interest of pleasure govern his pleasures and not be governed by them; hence, that ethical doctrine...
realism
"the doctrine of a realist," in any sense of that word, 1794, originally in philosophy, from real (adj.) + -ism; after French...In reference to scholastic doctrine of Thomas Aquinas (opposed to nominalism), it is recorded in English from 1826....
creationism
1847, originally a Christian theological position that God immediately created out of nothing a soul for each person born; from creation + -ism. As "science teaching based on a fundamentalist interpretation of the Book of Genesis, the scientific theory attributing the origin of m
animism
"attribution of living souls to inanimate objects," 1866, reintroduced by English anthropologist Sir Edward Burnett Taylor (1832-1917), who defined it (1871) as the "theory of the universal animation of nature," from Latin anima "life, breath, soul" (from PIE root *ane- "to breat
democracy
"government by the people, system of government in which the sovereign power is vested in the people as a whole exercising power directly or by elected officials; a state so governed," 1570s, from French démocratie (14c.), from Medieval Latin democratia (13c.), from Greek dēmokra

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Dictionary entries near doctrine

  • Doctor Martens
  • doctoral
  • doctorate
  • doctrinaire
  • doctrinal
  • doctrine
  • docudrama
  • document
  • documentary
  • documentation
  • dodder
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