Skip to main content

objectivism

/uhb-jek-tuh-viz-uhm/US // əbˈdʒɛk təˌvɪz əm //UK // (əbˈdʒɛktɪˌvɪzəm) //

客观主义,客觀主義

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1
    • : a tendency to lay stress on the objective or external elements of cognition.
    • : the tendency, as of a writer, to deal with things external to the mind rather than with thoughts or feelings.
    • : a doctrine characterized by this tendency.

Examples

  • In the abstract, these harsh truths steer the soul perilously close to selfishness or, worse, Objectivism.

  • They are lower than any pragmatists, and what they hold against Objectivism is morality.

  • Any objectivity about the founder of Objectivism is impossible.

  • There are also undeniable hints of Objectivism in fashions that celebrated the profligacy of the 1980s and of the pre-bust 2000s.

  • Religious objectivism has two passives, two modes in which God is thought.

  • Seen at different angles, it is now dualism, now objectivism, now agnosticism.

  • A purely mechanical procedure is the inevitable, the natural and necessary method of a pure objectivism.

  • Objectivism in its absolutist and abstract forms assumes a standard—nature, essence, law—independent of process.

  • On the other hand, the objectivism of his point of view brought a new element into my too concentrated habit of thought.