
(de, a privative; Gr. anthropos, man, and morphe, form) The philosophic tendency, first cynically applied by Xenophanes ('if cattle and lions had hands to paint . . .') and since then by rationalists and addicts of enlightenment, to get rid of an understandable, if primitive, desire to endow phenomena and the hypostatized objects of man's thought ....
Found on
https://www.encyclo.co.uk/local/21203

the ridding of philosophy or religion of anthropomorphic beliefs and doctrines.
Found on
https://www.infoplease.com/dictionary/deanthropomorphism
No exact match found.