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In February 1952, both in the wake of the book and amid Wisconsin Senator Joseph McCarthy’s attacks on educators, a committee of Yale alumni responded with an investigation into communism, irreligion, and academic freedom at the institution.—Claire Potter, The New Republic, 28 June 2023 Mencken's irreligion is widely known, but less so his Old Right politics which prefigured post-World War 2 libertarianism.—Razib Khan, Discover Magazine, 17 Oct. 2012 Thus, Western irreligion defines a society whose members are unable to approach or wonder about God and the truth about themselves because religion and faith don’t seem real or possible.—Richard M. Reinsch Ii, National Review, 17 Feb. 2022 Epstein’s ascent aligns with an uptick in irreligion across the US and at Harvard over the past several decades.—BostonGlobe.com, 27 Aug. 2021 The price of being able to advocate your beliefs and practice your religion, or your irreligion, is that people with starkly incompatible beliefs and gods are able to do the same.—Steve Chapman Chicago Tribune, Star Tribune, 20 Dec. 2020
Word History
Etymology
Middle French or Late Latin; Middle French, from Late Latin irreligion-, irreligio, from Latin in- + religion-, religio religion
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