rare. [f. SYSTEMATIC + -IAN, after mathematician.] One who constructs, or who adheres (esp. unduly) to, a system.

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1833.  Baltimore Med. & Surg. Jrnl. & Rev., I. 387. No systematician has ever wanted facts to support his opinion.

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1886.  19th Cent., July, 73. A ‘thought-mathematician,’ a systematician, a slave to the consistent application of his own theories.

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1903.  J. C. Lambert, Sacraments in N. T., ix. 382. He thinks it necessary to apologise for this lack of consistency on the part of the apostle, by reminding us that Paul was ‘no correct systematician.’

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