释义 |
humanismhu‧man‧is‧m /ˈhjuːmənɪzəm/ noun [uncountable] - Avignon was undoubtedly the starting-point of humanism and, with it, the Renaissance.
- I suggest that it is humanism - both religious and secular - that is the dominant philosophical adversary.
- I would regard Fanon's humanism otherwise.
- It is nothing less than the crisis of humanism as a religion being played out in economic life.
- It is the irreconcilable contradiction inevitable in humanism because of its false assumptions in constructing a world-view.
- Renaissance humanism preached respect for the greatness of the human being as an individual: it stressed personal intelligence and ability.
- Renaissance humanism was marked by such reading, such continual conversation.
- This context is essential to the understanding of humanism, one of the fundamental aspects of Western thought.
► Philosophycausation, nouncosmogony, noundeconstruction, noundeterminism, noundialectic, nounexistentialism, nounfree will, nounhumanism, nounhypothesis, nounidealism, nouninduction, nouninductive, adjectivelateral thinking, nounMarxism, nounmaterialism, nounmetaphysical, adjectivemetaphysics, nounnihilism, nounontology, nounphilosopher, nounphilosophical, adjectivephilosophize, verbpositivism, nounpostulate, nounprecept, nounsolipsism, nounsyllogism, nounTao, nounTaoism, nounthinker, nounthought, nountranscendentalism, nounutilitarian, adjectiveutilitarianism, nounyang, nounyin, nounyin and yang, noun ADJECTIVE► secular· The problem of wife abuse is not one of feminism, secular humanism or a lack of headship in the home.· By this I mean the secular humanism that has allowed the flowering of civil society in the West. nounhumanhumanismhumanity ≠ inhumanityhumanitarianhumanitarianismhumankindhumanoidadjectivehuman ≠ inhumansuperhumansubhumanhumane ≠ inhumanehumanitarianhumanoidadverbhumanly ≠ inhumanlyhumanely ≠ inhumanelyverbhumanize 1the belief that human problems can be solved through science rather than religion2 Humanism the study during the Renaissance of the ideas of the ancient Greeks and Romans—humanist noun [countable]—humanistic /ˌhjuːməˈnɪstɪk◂/ adjective |