He argues, somewhat confusingly, that as Americans become more individualistic they also have less liberty. |
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For one thing, this overlap reminds us that a holistic spirituality should be neither individualistic nor spiritualized. |
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The historical roots of American feminism are overwhelmingly individualistic. |
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The individualistic credo grants each of us sovereignty over what we choose as the best kind of life. |
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So what would provoke an exceedingly individualistic, sufficiently unbeholden band to pledge such slavish devotion to a classic rock titan? |
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I must stress that I do not mean to suggest that all or even most theories that are founded upon rights are individualistic or atomistic. |
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What are the major features of the individualistic, traditionalistic, and moralistic political cultures? |
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So it's every mum for herself in an individualistic, market-driven world, desperate to keep one baby yoga class ahead of the Joneses. |
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That seems like the outcome of an individualistic rather than a collective period. |
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Moralistic states have a higher percentage of women serving in their state legislatures than both individualistic and traditionalistic states. |
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Industry was full of individualistic entrepreneurs who weren't thrilled about the new regulations. |
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The warm, fuzzy rhetoric of the sisterhood is completely at odds with our brutal, individualistic, competitive society. |
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Allocentric and idiocentric personality orientations can be found in either collectivistic or individualistic cultures. |
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Teams that had developed collectivist rather than individualistic values were found to have cooperative goals. |
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For the rest, the theology is rationalistic, individualistic, and politically somewhere between extreme libertarian and nonviolent anarchist. |
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We can all choose our own individualistic styles, scornfully ignoring the dictates of Paris and fashion magazines. |
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Nietzsche was perhaps the most colorful of the irreligious critics of the modern hopes for an individualistic morality that is applicable to all. |
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He also reminds us that being human entails a capacity for individualistic expression. |
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Unlike the Baby Boomers, who are largely individualistic and anti-establishment, the Millennials are good team players. |
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Were southern millhands docile or individualistic, or some special blend of the two? |
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Even our intelligence, prized in our individualistic culture as a symbol of innate uniqueness, turns out to be a social gift. |
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Does the historic episcopate imply or necessitate a conciliar way of decision-making, rather than an individualistic one? |
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His childhood was happy, although he was always a bit mischievous, individualistic and anti-establishment. |
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Libertarian, or individualistic, anarchism is grounded in the laissez-faire theory of the capitalist economy. |
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Over the long haul, individualistic objectives cannot be achieved through collectivist means. |
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Kraynak's hostility toward skeptical and individualistic liberalism inclines him to overlook the virtues of democracy. |
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Whatever divergences and antagonisms exist between individualistic liberalism and collectivistic liberalism are superficial and incidental. |
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The kennel owner should find out how these guests feel at his home as they are highly individualistic. |
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Instead the papers are permeated with a modernistic and very individualistic notion of gender. |
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Thirdly, English witchcraft beliefs made the suspects very individualistic. |
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Spontaneous dialogue delivery interspersed with humour and the individualistic use of dance and music make this art form impressive. |
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In recent years a number of artists have worked from a more individualistic perspective. |
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While this may seem somewhat alien to us individualistic Westerners, it creates some very fine fellowships. |
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Globalization depends on an ideology of accumulating wealth, personal glory, or individualistic freedom, she said. |
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When I got to Union in New York, the culture was elitist, Eurocentric, competitive and individualistic. |
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They had left the feudal system of Scotland for a more individualistic way of life. |
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The concept of self differs significantly for people from individualistic versus collectivistic cultures. |
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Do alien rites of passage enrich familial bonds within an individualistic society? |
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It does, however, underscore the challenge of changing reward systems to meet quality requirements within an individualistic society. |
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The individualistic orientation, however, is more likely to advocate privileged treatment for oneself. |
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We all listened together to the Word of God because our listening is communitarian rather than individualistic. |
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He has suggested that such communities preserve a residue of traditional Gemeinschaft amid the more individualistic and impersonal Gesellschaft of modernity. |
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The individualistic philosophy of privatization and the market are prevailing over a collective, democratic, and solidaritybased philosophy. |
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They pointed him out as a model for his peers in a society that is frequently individualistic and egoistical, even with regard to immigrants. |
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As for the general debate about euthanasia, assisted suicide and mercy killing, political support has been tepid and individualistic. |
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I have an individualistic mind to botch the 'product' mentality, and I am not out to further myself in a spotlight that knows no favorites. |
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Countries differ dramatically in the extent to which teaching is a private, individualistic as opposed to a collective and collegial practice. |
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An individualistic, isolationist approach is replaced by a school team approach. |
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Americans were mindless, mediocre, soulless, vulgar, uncultivated, philistine, individualistic. |
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Call me a cynic, but this is an individualistic, give-stuff-to-voters-who-vote sort of policy. |
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They do not usually dress in an individualistic way but according to rules and fads that sweep through their subculture. |
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And talent in this field, even in Asia, tends to reside in the same sort of pony-tailed, geeky and individualistic people as in California. |
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ReprintsAnd so, according to the conventional wisdom, we live in an individualistic time. |
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Unfortunately this spirit is often overwhelmed or suppressed by ethical and cultural considerations of an individualistic and utilitarian nature. |
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After all, the individualistic spirit exuded by this report has very negative implications for the future of our societies. |
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In particular they propose an alternative model of coexistence to that of a standardized or individualistic society. |
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If Professor Cohen is right, how then can we achieve this individualistic approach? |
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Families and family values are the major alternative to a selfish, individualistic mentality. |
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In this sense, social learning is used to broaden the meaning of learning in relation to its normally very individualistic meaning. |
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Most induction programs have no curriculum and mentoring is a highly individualistic process. |
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This individualistic secularism is not only challenged outside western societies but also from within. |
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Here, in fact, individualistic, less ecclesial perspectives and practices have not totally disappeared. |
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Luke is placed in an isolated environment with strict rules, guards, and regimentation and his fiercely individualistic spirit immediately clashes. |
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Given the competitive and individualistic nature of baseball under the profit system, players are under enormous pressure to use steroids in order to gain an extra edge. |
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He demonstrates that first-aid very slowly trickled down to needy Germans and how individualistic attitudes replaced communal ones as the Cold War intensified. |
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The execution may have been a step back from the July performance, but the interpretation was notably different more individualistic and worked-out. |
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He returned to Germany, where he taught in a pottery school and began to make the individualistic, realistic sculptures that would define his career. |
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She is a free spirit who embarrasses her child not by her backwardness but by her progressiveness, her individualistic way of dressing and behaving. |
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In fact, a perfectly individualistic society likely would resemble a Hobbesian state of totally atomized individuals, whose relations are determined solely by self-interest. |
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In an individualistic culture like our own, this potential loss of self seems like the worst possible outcome. |
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For him, understanding the individualistic environmental tolerances and characteristics of species in nature was a fundamental part of any botanical inquiry. |
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For example, the cult of ancestors and tutelary spirits, which extend the community in time and space, contrasts with antisocial individualistic cults. |
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Whether scoring spaghetti westerns or Italian shock, Morricone's trademark seems to be a sound of individualistic spirit, the loner with a distinct purpose. |
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The broad consequence of an endless spotlight on novelty has, of course, been a corresponding neglect of individualistic but non-aligned art and artists. |
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He was steeped in the individualistic waters of evangelical religion. |
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While the American contestants were more serious in their competitiveness, they were wracked with guilt about demonstrating individualistic, competitive qualities. |
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Gestures, of course, are a highly individualistic feature of a personality, and you would look and feel awkward if you tried to suppress them totally. |
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Furthermore, the abovementioned individualistic approach is hardly compatible with recognition of the dignity of the child to be born and with the assurance of her best interests. |
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The way in which the various policies function at the present time shows that practices are still much too individualistic and this constitutes an obstacle to any real cooperation. |
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A few examples will demonstrate the cultural basis of individualistic, greedy, and anticooperative behavior. |
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Can we justify such an individualistic approach? |
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A high falutin' one suggests that, in an individualistic age, young people are much less tribal in their habits, including their political ones, than their parents and grandparents. |
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But this naturally raises the problem of the strict balance between being individualistic and communalistic. |
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This is yet another paradox or dilemma, which stems from our individualistic values and results in a clash between procreation as a right and the rights of those who have been created. |
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The symbol of a polluted, bloated, even individualistic city, the car and its place in urban environments reveal much about what urbanites are willing to do. |
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And finally, in an attempt to understand the individualistic nature of various shiftworking environments, I have worked alongside shiftworkers on three continents as they went about their work on the night shift. |
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For example, the author suggests that an individualistic Western society will more easily resort to litigation, whereas the collectivist ethos and emphasis on social harmony in China discourages it as the very last resort. |
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Others take on a more individualistic orientation and emphasize the notions of individual agency, citizenship, values and participation, using econometric and social network approaches in analyzing civil society. |
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American Romanticism was just as multifaceted and individualistic as it was in Europe. |
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The effect was akin to the individualistic trends present in Europe during the Protestant Reformation. |
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More than that, it reveals a one-sidely individualistic view of our humanity. |
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The revolutionariness of St. Francis's individualistic approach is especially evident in the historical context within which it developed. |
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And they had this cult following, a bizarre assortment of art-school freaks and weirdos, that was highly individualistic. |
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This individualistic secularism is, in many ways, too parochial to have widespread acceptability and is increasingly being challenged outside Western societies as well as within them. |
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The fact that none of their people maintaining the blogs are professional communicators, implies that the tone of voice which is being used is very individualistic and also very true. |
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The second offers respondents a choice of two options representing, in one case, individualistic values, and in the other, values of a more social nature. |
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It represents an obstacle for achieving the common good, because it is based on individualistic criteria of selfish cynicism and illicit special interests. |
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While the state society reinforces its bonds of graft through smokescreen solidarity and prebendalism, the civil society weakens its stance through the pursuit of individualistic crumbs. |
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In this period art, pressed into service at the courts of the various rulers, took on a celebrative character, individualistic and highly decorative, developing in various genres. |
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Georgia O'Keeffe, Marsden Hartley, and others experimented with new, individualistic styles. |
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It took more than the spinning jenny or the steam engine to transform local, agrarian, family-based communities into national, urban, individualistic ones. |
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In a globalised world where there is an overload of information, most of it very infotainment-oriented and individualistic in nature, PSB has a particular part to play in examining sources and serving as a reference point. |
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Highly individualistic and averse to regimentation, the artists are nevertheless united in their absolute need of freedom and the trust they place in their dealer. |
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Money was the instrument through which later societies unshackled themselves from preordained social orders and became individualistic. With money came speculation, bringing in turn those endemic financial crises. |
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Sometimes we may ignore a component of humanity or not allow its full scope because that contradicts our individualistic world-view or perhaps because we ourselves are victims or strugglers in one of these fields. |
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Marx's notion of communist society and human freedom is thus radically individualistic. |
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While these neo-pagans draw on a variety of traditions to create an eclectic and individualistic spirituality. |
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He charges Freudianism with presenting humans in an inherently false, individualistic, asocial, and ahistorial setting. |
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The bishops first heard from Alain Giguère, president of the CROP polling firm, who described the values held by young Canadians between the ages of 15 and 24 as very individualistic and non-conformist. |
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Somehow it does not easily mesh with the dominantly individualistic and impartialist tradition of moral theory. |
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Our society is said to be individualistic. We can only be surprised to then see a growing number of volunteer networks, even in poorest countries. |
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Food, real food, not nut cutlets then, and not too many women, as a consequence, of this highly individualistic life style. The idea of being a yoghurt knitter had no appeal. |
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Their emphasis on the sense of dynamics and ensemble arrangement has been seen as producing an individualistic style that transcends any single music genre. |
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Most of them have highly individualistic cultures, and have worked to balance the interests of urban development, recreation, and the environment. |
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After an introductory chapter, the second chapter of the book is devoted to the comparison of people's preferences for individualistic or collectivistic values in Europe. |
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The press saw its lofty role to be the advancement of civic republicanism based on public service, and downplayed the liberal, individualistic goal of making a profit. |
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In more contemporary times there has been increasing discussion on national flags and a desire by some Oceanians to display their distinguishable and individualistic identity. |
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A parallel project of social and cultural protest reigns in the arts, at first individualistic in Dadaism and Surrealism, and more recently collectivist. |
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