activism | (noun) a policy of taking direct action to achieve a political or social goal | - |
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atavism | (noun) a reappearance of an earlier characteristic | Synonyms: reversion, throwback |
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collectivism | (noun) a political theory that the people should own the means of production | - |
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(noun) Soviet communism | Synonyms: Bolshevism, sovietism |
conservativism | (noun) a political or theological orientation advocating the preservation of the best in society and opposing radical changes | Synonyms: conservatism |
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constructivism | (noun) an abstractionist artistic movement in Russia after World War I; industrial materials were used to construct nonrepresentational objects | - |
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deconstructivism | (noun) a school of architecture based on the philosophical theory of deconstruction | - |
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descriptivism | (noun) (linguistics) a doctrine supporting or promoting descriptive linguistics | - |
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(noun) (ethics) a doctrine holding that moral statements have a truth value | - |
fauvism | (noun) an art movement launched in 1905 whose work was characterized by bright and nonnatural colors and simple forms; influenced the expressionists | - |
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favism | (noun) anemia resulting from eating fava beans; victims have an inherited blood abnormality and enzyme deficiency | - |
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nativism | (noun) (philosophy) the philosophical theory that some ideas are innate | - |
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(noun) the policy of perpetuating native cultures (in opposition to acculturation) | - |
negativism | (noun) characterized by habitual skepticism and a disagreeable tendency to deny or oppose or resist suggestions or commands | Synonyms: negativeness, negativity |
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nervism | (noun) the philosophical position adopted by Pavlov that all behavioral and physiological processes are regulated by the nervous system. | - |
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passivism | (noun) the doctrine that all violence is unjustifiable | Synonyms: pacificism, pacifism |
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permissivism | (noun) lenience toward or indulgence of a wide variety of social behavior. | - |
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positivism | (noun) a quality or state characterized by certainty or acceptance or affirmation and dogmatic assertiveness | Synonyms: positiveness, positivity |
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(noun) the form of empiricism that bases all knowledge on perceptual experience (not on intuition or revelation) | Synonyms: logical positivism |
prescriptivism | (noun) (linguistics) a doctrine supporting or promoting prescriptive linguistics | - |
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(noun) (ethics) a doctrine holding that moral statements prescribe appropriate attitudes and behavior | - |
primitivism | (noun) a genre characteristic of (or imitative of) primitive artists or children | - |
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(noun) a wild or unrefined state | Synonyms: crudeness, crudity, primitiveness, rudeness |
progressivism | (noun) the political orientation of those who favor progress toward better conditions in government and society | - |
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recidivism | (noun) habitual relapse into crime | - |
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reductivism | (noun) an art movement in sculpture and painting that began in the 1950s and emphasized extreme simplification of form and color | Synonyms: minimal art, minimalism |
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relativism | (noun) (philosophy) the philosophical doctrine that all criteria of judgment are relative to the individuals and situations involved | - |
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subjectivism | (noun) the quality of being subjective | - |
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(noun) (philosophy) the doctrine that knowledge and value are dependent on and limited by your subjective experience | - |