From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishuncriticalun‧crit‧i‧cal /ʌnˈkrɪtɪkəl/ adjectiveCRITICIZEunable or unwilling to see faults in something or someone – used to show disapprovaluncritical of
John’s mother is totally uncritical of his behaviour. —uncritically /-kli/ adverbExamples from the Corpusuncritical• In this context self-observation must always be uncritical.• an uncriticalattitude toward new technologies• He observes, Those of us socialized in modern societies generally maintain an irrationally uncritical attitude toward new technologies.• Clearly, an unreflective or uncriticalcitizenry would be highly undesirable as well as, strictly speaking, a contradiction in terms.• X-rays were greeted with uncriticalenthusiasm.• It is, in short, uncritical in the sense of failing to site Debord's films within an adequatetheoreticaldiscourse.• The mutualdependencyexpressed here can be seen in an almost completely uncritical reading experience.• Kuhn argues that scienceeducation is characterized by an uncriticalteaching of the dominantparadigm within a subject.• Later on, many pentecostals would accept these very values in a surprisingly uncritical way.