Definitionadj. marked by or expressing individuality
Last update: September 1, 2015
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It was highly individualistic music. [Please select]
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He differs from Schopenhauer in making salvation by the "negation of the Will-to-live" depend on a collective social effort and not on individualistic asceticism. [Please select]
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Those individualistic tendencies growing out of periodic changes of the environment may be called _environmental_ instincts. [Please select]
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Much of literature and art depict those actions of man which grew out of these individualistic aspects of his nature. [Please select]
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But the socialistic tendencies are not, in general, as strong as are the individualistic ones. [Please select]
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The deep and narrow, the intense, religious, individualistic seventeenth century is gone. [Please select]
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A strongly individualistic people, they were already commencing to think nationally. [Please select]
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As may well be imagined, this uniquely individualistic view of the law made interesting legal history. [Please select]
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In all these cases the Crown was either Catholic or disposed to become Catholic, and the recalcitrant nobles found their individualistic disposition tending to a Protestant formula. [Please select]
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Christianity, looked at from a certain viewpoint,--and I think the proper viewpoint,--is the most individualistic of religions, since its basic principle is the development of the individual into an autonomous being. [Please select]
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