Skip to main content

collectivism

/kuh-lek-tuh-viz-uhm/US // kəˈlɛk təˌvɪz əm //UK // (kəˈlɛktɪˌvɪzəm) //

集体主义

Related Words

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : the political principle of centralized social and economic control, especially of all means of production.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • The first one measures the level of individualism in a given culture, versus collectivism.

  • His late father was a social psychologist who devised a system to rank countries on several dimensions — including their level of individualism versus collectivism.

  • Within the same large nation, regions with higher collectivism had higher mask usage.

  • Parents living in countries with a culture of collectivism, meanwhile, can rely on extended family and friends, even acquaintances, to share in child rearing.

  • This is Russian culture, and in Communist times it became more powerful, this idea of collectivism.

  • Meerson traces this scarcity of one-man performers back to a culture of collectivism that predates even the Communist revolution.

  • The conflict between collectivism and individualism has always been overstated.

  • But anarchism is a logical outgrowth of the anti-intellectual side of collectivism.

  • It represents a philosophic consistency that rejects the collectivism of social conservatives and public sector unions alike.

  • We can neglect, too, much of his attack on the economic side of collectivism, which he never really understood.

  • Against this competitive struggle now there has grown up a counter-crowd ideal of collectivism.

  • But when it means the first step on the road to collectivism, I'll take any Franco who comes along to put an end to it.

  • This is the state of things to which Collectivism puts an end.

  • Well may Mr. Hobson inquire, "Now, what provision is made for generating the motor power of progress in Collectivism?"