stultificatory, a.
(ˌstʌltɪfɪˈkeɪtərɪ)
[f. stultification: see -ory2.]
= stultifying ppl. a.
| 1931 Times Lit. Suppl. 21 May 400/2 Further penetration into the processes of the universe is self-stultificatory. 1972 D. Bell in Cox & Dyson 20th-Cent. Mind I. vi. 180 A transcendental and intuitionist philosophy which Mill saw as internally inconsistent, obscurantist, and stultificatory of the progress of both science and philosophy. |