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单词 rationalism
释义

rationalismn.

Brit. /ˈraʃn̩əlɪz(ə)m/, /ˈraʃn̩l̩ɪz(ə)m/, /ˈraʃənl̩ɪz(ə)m/, /ˈraʃ(ə)nəlɪz(ə)m/, U.S. /ˈræʃənlˌɪz(ə)m/, /ˈræʃnəˌlɪz(ə)m/
Forms: also with capital initial.
Origin: Formed within English, by derivation. Etymons: rational adj., -ism suffix.
Etymology: < rational adj. + -ism suffix. In sense 2 after German †Rationalism (1796 (in the passage translated in quot. 1797 at sense 2a) or earlier; now Rationalismus ). In sense 4 after German Rationalismus (1902 or earlier in the source translated in quots. 19151, 19152 at sense 4). Compare French rationalisme (1801, earliest in sense 2a). Compare earlier rationalist n.
1.
a. Theology. The practice of treating reason as the ultimate authority in religion; (also) the practice of explaining supernatural or miraculous events on a rational basis.
ΘΚΠ
society > faith > aspects of faith > theology > systems of theology > [noun] > Rationalistic
new light1649
rationalisma1732
neologism1827
neology1830
neologianism1846
modernism1878
neo-modernism1973
society > faith > aspects of faith > spirituality > mysticism > [noun] > rationalism
rationalisma1732
nominalism1836
a1732 T. Boston Memoirs (1776) xi. 380 Through the prevalence of their passions and prejudices: the gospel of Christ is by this time, with many, especially of the younger sort of divines, exchanged for rationalism.
1827 C. H. Sack in E. B. Pusey Hist. Enq. (1828) p. xii Common rationalism, which the theological faculty of Berlin has..for more than fifteen years imparted to theological study.
1845 J. H. Newman Ess. Devel. Christian Doctr. (1846) v. §3. 311 Its spirit was rationalizing, and had the qualities which go with rationalism.
1884 J. Parker Larger Ministry 28 Rationalism does not more distinctly recognise human reason than it is recognised by evangelical philosophy.
1962 C. C. Goen Revivalism & Separatism New Eng. i. 33 Opponents of the revival by contrast were known as ‘Old Lights’, which soon became synonymous with rationalism in theology and with the substitution of morality for religion.
1994 Latin Mass Jan. 27/1 Who apply rationalism to Biblical exegesis.
2000 A. Dulles in A. Hastings et al. Oxf. Compan. Christian Thought 231/2 This view of faith was canonized for Catholics in the teaching of Vatican I. A few theologians, reacting against rationalism, spoke as though faith were contrary to reason, but the council discountenanced this extreme position.
b. Philosophy. The doctrine or belief that reason should be the only guiding principle in life, obviating the need for reliance on, or adherence to, any form of religious belief. Cf. reason n.1
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > philosophy > rationalism > [noun] > as regards human progress
rationalism1782
1782 B. N. Turner Candid Suggestions vi. 119 If otherwise, such a declaration surely ill-becomes an opposer of Rationalism, and a proffered champion of the christian faith!
1848 R. I. Wilberforce Doctr. Incarnation (1852) i. 10 Rationalism makes the individual the starting-point for all improvement, whereas the Church's starting-point is Christ.
1897 Agnostic Ann. 1 18 In my progress from Rome to Rationalism many other considerations have influenced me.
1923 J. S. Huxley Ess. Biologist 231 It is the task of Rationalism to see that religion, this fundamental and important activity of man, shall neither be allowed to continue in false or inadequate forms, nor be stifled or starved, but be made to help humanity in a vigorous growth that is based on truth and in constant contact with reality.
1968 A. J. Ayer Humanist Outlook 3 A broader movement of Rationalism or Free Thought, which was not merely anti-clerical but hostile to any form of religious belief.
1973 C. Campbell in Rationalism in 1970s 81 If the aim of rationalism is merely to attack and demolish the myths that we and others hold then there is more than enough work to keep us busy for a very long time.
1992 Amer. Scholar Autumn 481/1 (advt.) This fascination is largely the result of the failure of secular substitutes for religion (such as positivism, rationalism, hedonism, consumerism, technological utopianism).
2.
a. Philosophy. The doctrine or theory that emphasizes the role of reason in knowledge, or claims that reason rather than sense experience is the foundation of certainty in knowledge. Frequently contrasted with empiricism. Cf. sensationalism n.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > philosophy > rationalism > [noun]
rationalism1797
rationalisticism1865
1797 in tr. J. S. Beck Princ. Crit. Philos. §328 The empiricism or the rationalism [Ger. Rationalism].
1803 Edinb. Rev. 1 257 Made acquainted with the division of empiricism and rationalism.
1831 Edinb. Rev. Sept. 247 The fundamental principles of Rationalism we take to be these:—That human reason, or the reasoning faculty, is the sole arbiter as to what is to be received as truth, and what is to be regarded as error, by the human mind; that facts recognized by sense or consciousness form the materials on which the reasoning faculty is to be exercised.
1857 W. Fleming Vocab. Philos. 419 According to rationalism, reason furnishes certain elements, without which, experience is not possible.
1895 A. C. Armstrong tr. R. Falckenberg Hist. Mod. Philos. (new ed.) 81 Under [Wolff] rationalism stiffens into a scholastic dogmatism, soon to run out into a popular eclecticism.
1936 A. J. Ayer Lang., Truth & Logic iv. 93 For the fundamental tenet of rationalism is that thought is an independent source of knowledge, and is moreover a more trustworthy source of knowledge than experience, indeed some rationalists have gone so far as to say that thought is the only source of knowledge.
1967 Encycl. Philos. VII. 69/1 The philosophical outlook..which stresses the power of a priori reason to grasp substantial truths about the world and correspondingly tends to regard natural science as a basically a priori exercise... The spirit of rationalism in this sense is particularly associated with..Descartes, Spinoza, and Leibnitz.
2002 P. Baines & A. Haslam Type & Typogr. v. 104 These activities share common roots in rationalism, in the examination and dissection of data, and in the understanding of the whole through an analysis of the parts.
b. Medicine. The application of this doctrine in medicine; esp. the principles of the rational school of physicians (see rational adj. 6). Now historical.
ΘΚΠ
the world > health and disease > healing > art or science of medicine > medical theories or doctrines > [noun] > other theories or doctrines
Galenism1728
Hippocratism1779
Ayurveda1789
rationalism1800
solidism1832
pneumatism1838
Arabism1847
organicism1853
Thomsonianism1853
physiatrics1858
unicity1861
stoicheiology1875
contrastimulism1881
pangermism1887
nihilism1900
naturopathy1901
physiatry1947
orgonomy1949
bioethics1970
1800 Med. & Physical Jrnl. 3 283 Absolute rationalism does not, and cannot, exist in medicine.
1800 Med. & Physical Jrnl. 3 283 The excellent analysis of this rule is accompanied with a remark on medical empiricism and rationalism.
1849 Lancet 6 Jan. 3/1 Pure à priori Rationalism, in applying itself to therapeutics, starts from two postulates.
1917 Lancet 24 Mar. 458/1 He describes organotherapy as opening up avenues of thought to a new conception of medicine which will satisfy the longing for logical reasoning and rationalism.
1962 Isis 53 248/1 Most of those who approved medicine as an art given by God..seem to have sided with ‘dogmatic’ medicine, that doctrine of rationalism and empiricism symbolized by the names of Hippocrates and Galen.
1990 Osiris 6 25 In discussing the ancient medical sects, he [sc. Isidore] portrayed empiricism not as a learned reaction against rationalism, but as a primitive form of medicina whose exponents were ignorant of causal reasoning.
3. The wearing, or advocacy of the wearing, of rational dress (see rational adj. and adv. Compounds). Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > textiles and clothing > clothing > providing with clothing > [noun] > in specific way > with specific clothing > adoption of rational dress
rationalism1897
1897 Westm. Gaz. 6 Sept. 1/3 The triumphs of Rationalism..in the domain of dress.
4. Chiefly Economics. The principle or practice of using reasoning and calculation as a basis for analysis, planning, etc., esp. in social and economic organization. Cf. rational adj. 3b.
ΘΚΠ
society > trade and finance > management of money > management of national resources > [noun] > political economy > specific theories or doctrines
Ricardianism1827
protectionism1846
physiocracy1856
Smithianism1880
quantity theory1885
physiocratism1890
fiscalism1892
tariffism1903
cameralism1909
marginalism1912
rationalism1915
consumerism1921
Kondratieff1935
Keynesian economics1940
Keynesianism1942
Walras' law1942
Chicago school1949
Paretanism1949
neo-Keynesianism1961
Okun's Law1962
structuralism1962
monetarism1967
market fundamentalism1984
1915 M. Epstein tr. W. Sombart Quintessence of Capitalism xii. 182 Absolute rationalism is the first [principle]. Economic activities are ruled by cold reason, by thought.
1915 M. Epstein tr. W. Sombart Quintessence of Capitalism xxv. 325 Economic rationalism owes much of its growth to technical rationalism.
1930 R. H. Tawney in T. Parsons tr. M. Weber Protestant Ethic 1 (e) The word ‘rationalism’ is used by Weber..to describe an economic system based..on the deliberate and systematic adjustment of economic means to the attainment of the objective of pecuniary profit.
1935 Encycl. Social Sci. XIII. 114/1 In social and historical life the power of rationalism derives from the confidence which individuals and societies place in reason.
1958 G. Myrdal Value in Social Theory vii. 135 Basic to the eagerness in trying to drive valuations underground is the rationalism of our Western culture.
1993 J. Kay Found. Corporate Success vii. xxi. 354 Rationalism is in retreat, but by no means routed, principally because of the absence of equally well-articulated alternative frameworks.
5. Architecture. A theory or style based on the application of rationalist principles to architecture, characterized by a rejection of ornament and an emphasis on geometrical simplicity and functionalism.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > visual arts > architecture > style of architecture > [noun] > other styles
transition1730
pasticcio1750
symmetrophobia1809
rococo1835
flamboyantism1846
collegiate Gothic1851
vernacular architecture1857
Neo-Grec1867
modernism1879
wedding-cake1879
Queen Anne1883
Colonial Revival1889
Chicago school1893
Dutch colonial1894
English colonial1894
monumentalism1897
vernacular1910
international style1911
Churrigueresque1913
postmodernism1914
prairie style1914
rationalism1918
lavatory style1919
functionalism1924
Mudéjar1927
façadism1933
open plan1938
Wrenaissance1942
pseudo1945
brutalism1953
open planning1958
neo-Liberty1959
Queen Annery1966
Jugendstil1967
moderne1968
strip architecture1976
high-tech1978
1918 F. M. Kimball & G. H. Edgell Hist. Archit. xiii. 565 In his Church of the Unity at Oak Park..he [sc. Frank Lloyd Wright] has evolved a monumental and characteristic house of worship for disciples of modern rationalism.
1951 M. L. Wolf Dict. Arts 571 Rationalism.., modern, progressive style;..the practice of granting primary consideration to function in design.
1977 Progressive Archit. May 82/1 The theory of rationalism is a reductionist one. It searches for essences—of building types, or urban spaces, even of the alienation produced by the city.
2003 Archit. Rev. Jan. 40/2 The contrast with newly re-gridded Berlin and the Rationalism of the leading local architects could scarcely be starker.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2008; most recently modified version published online March 2022).
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