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How to pronounce subjectivist in English?

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Type Words
Type of intellect, intellectual
Derivation subjectivism

Examples of subjectivist

subjectivist
Historically, many romantic artists were philosophically subjectivist.
From the en.wikipedia.org
In short, my concern over the spread of subjectivist thinking is both intellectual and political.
From the en.wikipedia.org
This is the sense in which Kant's meta-ethical position is objectivist rather than subjectivist.
From the en.wikipedia.org
Finally, adversary and client-centered studies are based on a subjectivist epistemology from a mass perspective.
From the en.wikipedia.org
Most relativist theories are forms of moral subjectivism, though not all subjectivist theories are relativistic.
From the en.wikipedia.org
One possible extension of subjectivist thought is that conscious experience is available to all objectively perceivable substrates.
From the en.wikipedia.org
Following this rule would render Darwinism a subjectivist theory, rather than objective historical explanation about how life came to be how it is.
From the evangelicaloutpost.com
If this strikes you as somehow subjectivist or collectivist or imperialist, then ask me about it, because I think that you are just mistaken.
From the en.wikipedia.org
An ethical subjectivist might propose, for example, that what it means for something to be morally right is just for it to be approved of.
From the en.wikipedia.org
More examples
  • A person who subscribes to subjectivism
  • (subjectivism) (philosophy) the doctrine that knowledge and value are dependent on and limited by your subjective experience
  • (SUBJECTIVISM) This is a philosophy which, through its denial of the existence of "absolutes," seeks to absolve the practitioner of all responsibility for his or her actions and allows subjectivist bureaucrats (a redundancy, that) to make laws and regulations that they are able to "interpret" in ...
  • (SUBJECTIVISM) Because knowledge is confined to ideas in the mind of the knower, it is impossible to get beyond these ideas to an objective or material reality separate from and independent of the knower. See Axiological subjectivism
  • (SUBJECTIVISM) the view that truth or morality is a matter of the individual's personal feelings or attitudes and do not have an objective nature
  • (Subjectivism) The teaching that the individual is the source and judge of all religious knowledge based upon his own knowledge and experience.
  • (subjectivism) In ethics, the view that ethical views are matters of feeling and not reason. Ethical subjectivism is usually a form of ethical relativism, since ethical subjectivists assume that people may feel differently about different things, and thus not be able to come to rational ...
  • (subjectivism) asserting a proposition as true simply because one wishes it to be true.
  • Subjectivism refers to extreme emphasis on the significance of the individual subject in cognition (as for example in the Second Positivism). In Ethics, subjectivism claims that no moral truths are possible, they are entirely relative to the person. ...