Socialists emphasized a social, as opposed to an individualist, approach to life, especially economic organization. |
|
He is 20 th-century's music's most unregenerate individualist, his teacher, Messiaen, not excluded. |
|
Always an idiosyncratic individualist, he seems to have introduced his own pronunciations for the names of players. |
|
Tribal societies, unlike detribalized, fragmented cultures with their stress on individualist values, are extremely austere morally. |
|
Our individualist culture tends to think almost exclusively of great advances in science or philosophy as the product of great lone geniuses. |
|
My mother was in turns warm and distant, yielding in me both a confused sense of worth and an independent individualist streak. |
|
In his most prominent works, he dismissed much of the American individualist tradition in economics. |
|
Of course, if asked, these guys might say, as any good American individualist would, that beauty is in the eye of the beholder. |
|
He is a rugged individualist, who loves his kin but hates even more passionately. |
|
It influenced the Romantic movement in the arts by releasing the more individualist attitudes in which this movement was based. |
|
Those who characterize liberalism as excessively individualist often also complain that Americans are exceedingly concerned with their rights. |
|
His unconventional and highly individualist style may be forgiven, as well as his occasional overriding of the composers' instructions. |
|
Perhaps the greatest attribute of our student body is the individualist attitude of so many students. |
|
The male characters are Paul, a successful doctor, Garvey, a rugged individualist adventurer, and Jerry, a small time con man. |
|
His argument that churches are caught in the great conflict between individualist and communal constructions of the world is persuasive. |
|
The figure of the cowboy became the West's protagonist, a self-reliant individualist with a virtuous sense of fair play. |
|
She's in tune with trends, but she's a confident individualist when it comes to style. |
|
Wilde's remarkable essay exemplified the links between aestheticism and individualist socialism. |
|
By contrast, post-Cartesian epistemology is individualist because it is subjectivist. |
|
He had already gained a reputation as a fierce individualist who refused to work well with studios. |
|
|
The argument was directed at the individualist ontology of existentialism in favour of a more communitarian one. |
|
Possessing a romantic streak, he saw himself a Byronic man, an individualist and poet with deep sympathy for the oppressed. |
|
He was an extreme individualist who described himself as the last of the true Tories. |
|
The individualist anarchists attacked him for his supposed Malthusianism. |
|
For from this source, as from a poisoned spring, have originated and spread all the errors of individualist economic teaching. |
|
Individualism is strength, so a true individualist is strong enough to tolerate the habits and opinions of people who differ from him. |
|
Just as in individualist law, the preterlegal right of the individual takes precedence over the letter of the law, so in Fascist law does the authoritatively determined collective purpose. |
|
He argued that the typical Australian frontiersman was not a small, individualist farmer but a shearer or drover, and that his outlook was not individualist but collectivist. |
|
Sandy was a rugged individualist, who followed his heart and not the opinions of others. |
|
How about someone a little more international, like G4S? Or, for the rugged individualist, Eddie Stobart? |
|
Though I'm not a rugged individualist in the Thoreau mold, I'd want to head off the grid in the Via to a place I'd have all to myself. |
|
In the 1830s feminism as a self-conscious movement grew around abolitionism, particularly around the individualist anarchist William Lloyd Garrison. |
|
Wilde had to make equality the material precondition of freedom, and later Wildeans have insisted that Wilde was a socialist because he was so deeply an individualist. |
|
And the people became more prosperous, more assertive, more individualist. |
|
He argued that his outlook was not individualist but collectivist. |
|
The integrating theme behind individualist anarchism was the primacy of the individual and the commitment to rid society of all but defensive force. |
|
She is opportunistic, an individualist, ambitious risk-taker. |
|
This nation of immigrants is more go-getting and individualist than their European counterparts. |
|
The social revolution that was to produce the sexually liberated, individualist and networked generation of today had begun. |
|
One of the absolute worst aspects of life in an individualist culture is the notion that we're in it alone. |
|
|
The day of the passionate individualist may be over, but the day of the passionate individual is coming to pass. |
|
Benedict himself suggests that a conversion from our present individualist, utilitarian culture is required to enter into this holistic vision. |
|
The individualist position that so many artists adopt today, tirelessly employing the same old tricks, interests me less and less. |
|
Canada, on the other hand, is a Western and individualist culture and its norms are often less prescriptive. |
|
A unique property for the discerning nature loving individualist! Here you can be the painter or writer, you always wanted to be! |
|
Are you an individualist or simply a conformist in disguise? |
|
Cultural differences at the individual psychological level would improve if we designate persons with individualist characteristics as idiocentric. |
|
This quote is supposed to confirm Thatcher as an anti-social radical individualist of the Ayn Rand distemper. |
|
The individualist anarchists saw land economics differently. |
|
An individualist does not ponder ways to bring people together in an organised fashion, which is the seed of the mental process required to think up a new game. |
|
The United States, which is famous for having a more individualist outlook with less solidarity, spends nearly 9 000 million dollars a year on distributing foods to schoolchildren, i.e. 100 times more than the European Union. |
|
Decision makers are now well aware of the limitations of growth which relies on an increase of tourists and a totally individualist management of the tourist activity. |
|
Definitions of empowerment are in essentially individualist terms with the ultimate aim being the expansion of individual choice or capacity for self-reliance. |
|
The Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms that is enshrined in the Canadian constitution is of individualist inspiration and says nothing about the social and democratic rights or the existence of the people of Quebec. |
|
Furthermore, the postal services' capacity to enhance social and territorial cohesion is fundamental in an enlarged and increasingly individualist Europe. |
|
Their pursuits are individualist, and many seek to be expatriates. |
|
This process is ethically individualist and politically collectivist. |
|
I am myself a thoroughgoing individualist, writing for those who are, like myself, irrevocably committed to the modern experiment. |
|
Bernays was a passionate individualist who wrote voluminously about the need to defeat communism by manipulating the opinion of the masses through the skilful use of propaganda. |
|
Each of these pairs may also be individualist or communalist. |
|
|
Always the rugged individualist, Madonna decided on basic black. |
|
The stereotypical American male is a rugged individualist. |
|
Ward says that Locke's liberal Whiggism rested on a radically individualist theory of natural rights and limited government. |
|
A true individualist respects the individuality of everyone else. |
|
Globalization also brings on an individualist mindset, so that each group is tempted to claim its own specific rights, making sectarianism increasingly prevalent. |
|
For the rugged individualist, it is the ultimate rush. |
|
Although each APIA group has its own language, culture, and history, there is literature suggesting that APIA cultures are more collectivist than individualist. |
|
Subsidiarity, on the other hand, is popularly understood as inclining toward the individualist, let-the-locals-take-care-of-things end of the scale. |
|