0 beliefs, ideas, or activities that are different to and oppose generally accepted beliefs or standards:
Despite his heterodoxy, faults, and weaknesses, Clare was a man with a conscience.
It was not until the middle ’eighties that my economic heterodoxy began to take shape.
Ross seems to have muted his theological heterodoxy until after the War.
Living in the intellectual space between orthodoxy and heterodoxy, colonizing the margins of erudition was a difficult and hazardous place to inhabit.
Several non-religious criteria could be invoked as indicators of heterodoxy.
The register is a practice of culture-internal cultural heterodoxy.
He insisted that an aggressive approach toward heterodoxy was counterproductive if not genuinely destructive.
When what goes unspoken is contested, then there emerges "ideology and counterideology" or heterodoxy.