| 释义 | 
		Definition of absolutism in English: absolutismnoun ˈabsəluːtɪz(ə)mˈæbsəl(j)uˌtɪzəm mass nounThe holding of absolute principles in political, philosophical, or theological matters.  Example sentencesExamples -  Benedict's experience of Nazism led him to a fear not of absolutism but of totalitarianism, in which authority and truth are divorced.
 -  They were opposed by a Conservative party, which supported royal absolutism and bureaucratic centralism.
 -  In the very act of rejecting hierarchies of value, relativism constructs a hierarchy, which values its own relativism above any absolutism.
 -  Yet the German nation did not succeed in shaking off the yoke of absolutism and in establishing democracy and parliamentary government.
 -  At the heart of Schiller's play, written two years before the French Revolution, lies a confrontation between absolutism and liberty.
 -  At its core, this is an argument that absolutism should always be met with absolutism, a notion that I think is wildly mistaken.
 -  This absolutism is wrong in principle, and it's also bad politics.
 -  As Europe basked in the Enlightenment, Popish superstition and its stablemate monarchical absolutism appeared to be receding into the past.
 -  I was raised Catholic and left at an early age, but the Roman church's absolutism and attention to detail stay with one for life.
 -  The linchpin of my argument is the distinction between absolutism, relativism, and pluralism.
 -  Then the region's leaders sided with absolutism during WWI and then Facism during WWII.
 -  Locke's political ideas reflect the alliance of classes that jointly opposed the drive to absolutism in mid and late seventeenth century England.
 -  This arrogant spirit of ontological absolutism pervades his essay.
 -  In other words, modernity has become critical of modernism and of its own utopian absolutism.
 -  Thus papal absolutism and Spanish absolutism, secular and ecclesiastical power, grew ever more complementary and interdependent.
 -  Certainly, there was the occasional despot who aspired to religious absolutism.
 -  It is not moral absolutism but theological relativism we would do well to explore if our real need is for a God with whom we can engage our lives.
 -  Nor should it be thought that Marx's defence of democratic rights only extended to countries in which there was feudal absolutism.
 -  Thus we see evil as being inextricably linked to moral absolutism, by the route of religion, which excludes understanding and is ultimately oppressive.
 -  It seemed as if the military and financial power of absolutism excluded every possibility of a revolution in Russia.
 
    Definition of absolutism in US English: absolutismnounˈæbsəl(j)uˌtɪzəmˈabsəl(y)o͞oˌtizəm The acceptance of or belief in absolute principles in political, philosophical, ethical, or theological matters.  Example sentencesExamples -  Yet the German nation did not succeed in shaking off the yoke of absolutism and in establishing democracy and parliamentary government.
 -  At its core, this is an argument that absolutism should always be met with absolutism, a notion that I think is wildly mistaken.
 -  Thus papal absolutism and Spanish absolutism, secular and ecclesiastical power, grew ever more complementary and interdependent.
 -  This arrogant spirit of ontological absolutism pervades his essay.
 -  Benedict's experience of Nazism led him to a fear not of absolutism but of totalitarianism, in which authority and truth are divorced.
 -  Thus we see evil as being inextricably linked to moral absolutism, by the route of religion, which excludes understanding and is ultimately oppressive.
 -  At the heart of Schiller's play, written two years before the French Revolution, lies a confrontation between absolutism and liberty.
 -  Locke's political ideas reflect the alliance of classes that jointly opposed the drive to absolutism in mid and late seventeenth century England.
 -  The linchpin of my argument is the distinction between absolutism, relativism, and pluralism.
 -  This absolutism is wrong in principle, and it's also bad politics.
 -  I was raised Catholic and left at an early age, but the Roman church's absolutism and attention to detail stay with one for life.
 -  Certainly, there was the occasional despot who aspired to religious absolutism.
 -  In the very act of rejecting hierarchies of value, relativism constructs a hierarchy, which values its own relativism above any absolutism.
 -  It seemed as if the military and financial power of absolutism excluded every possibility of a revolution in Russia.
 -  Then the region's leaders sided with absolutism during WWI and then Facism during WWII.
 -  It is not moral absolutism but theological relativism we would do well to explore if our real need is for a God with whom we can engage our lives.
 -  As Europe basked in the Enlightenment, Popish superstition and its stablemate monarchical absolutism appeared to be receding into the past.
 -  Nor should it be thought that Marx's defence of democratic rights only extended to countries in which there was feudal absolutism.
 -  They were opposed by a Conservative party, which supported royal absolutism and bureaucratic centralism.
 -  In other words, modernity has become critical of modernism and of its own utopian absolutism.
 
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