Definition of Propounders. Meaning of Propounders. Synonyms of Propounders

Here you will find one or more explanations in English for the word Propounders. Also in the bottom left of the page several parts of wikipedia pages related to the word Propounders and, of course, Propounders synonyms and on the right images related to the word Propounders.

Definition of Propounders

Propounder
Propounder Pro*pound"er, n. One who propounds, proposes, or offers for consideration. --Chillingworth.

Meaning of Propounders from wikipedia

-  'Oneness of God') or Divine Faith, was a short lived syncretic religion propounded by the Mughal emperor Akbar in 1582. According to Iqtidar Alam Khan, it...
- is the owner. By contrast, the classic civil law approach to property, propounded by Friedrich Carl von Savigny, is that it is a right good against the...
- later sources would consistently refer to them as niyati-vādins, or 'the propounders of the doctrine of destiny'. Leaman, Oliver, ed. (1999). "Fatalism"....
- first emerged in classical Greece with the theory of four elements as propounded definitively by Aristotle stating that fire, air, earth and water were...
- Trusteeship is a socio-economic philosophy that was propounded by Mahatma Gandhi. It provides a means by which the wealthy people would be the trustees...
- Recently many of our best naturalists have recurred to the view first propounded by Linnaeus, so remarkable for his sagacity, and have placed man in the...
- the medieval Islamic world. In 499 CE, the Indian astronomer Aryabhata propounded a planetary model that explicitly incorporated Earth's rotation about...
- In the 20th and 21st centuries, some individuals and institutions have propounded changing the method of calculating the date for Easter, the most prominent...
- a body – does not propound the existence of a supreme being, but it qualifies as a religion under the broad definition propounded by the Supreme Court...
- and invention contrasted with Malthus, Ricardo, and Karl Marx in their propounding a rigid subsistence–wage theory of labour supply. Joseph Schumpeter criticised...