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Перевод: collectivism speek collectivism


[существительное]
коллективизм


Тезаурус:

  1. In Sweden, however, approval for the welfare and economic interventionist aspects of collectivism has remained high.
  2. All of this has a distinctly Diceyesque ring, for in the introduction to the 1913 edition of his Law and Public Opinion Dicey portrayed any extension of state activity as "socialist", and denounced the welfare collectivism of the "new liberalism" as an attempt to "bribe" the electorate with state benefits.
  3. This is not to say that they thought the movement could solve the boy labour problem, or the youth problem in general, but its ideas and its personnel would be useful in sustaining scientific collectivism.
  4. Sidney and Beatrice Webb, who wrote the syllabus for British socialism and the Labour party, explained that the social theory of collectivism required the state to ensure that only the fittest survived.
  5. The roots of all this, it was agreed, lay deep in British history - perhaps in the moral nihilism of the 1960s, perhaps in the collectivism of the 1940s, perhaps in the decline of the entrepreneurial spirit in the late Victorian period, perhaps even in the many centuries of geographical isolation and freedom from foreign occupation behind the barrier of sea power.
  6. In many ways Dostoevsky (1821-;1881) had predicted the spiritual bankruptcy of the new collectivism in his novel The Devils (1872) (a novel, incidentally, still banned in the Soviet Union).
  7. Although it is often taken to imply that the citizen is entitled to "social rights", it does not immediately conjure up a picture of socialist collectivism which would alienate those on the right.
  8. Contemporaries noted the continuation of the voluntary tradition within the developing framework of Edwardian collectivism, and probably nowhere was this more obvious than in the realm of child and adolescent welfare.
  9. As often happens, this younger generation of "Tractarians" who were leading the crusade on the side of "collectivism" joined forces with the older generation like J. A. Macfadyen who had remained Calvinist in their views and "deplored the modern nondenominational spirit, the temper of indifference to questions of church order", the spirit which saw local churches as "mere voluntary associations for religious purposes, with power to determine their own polity and prescribe their own sphere of action".
  10. Thus Fforde describes Thatcherism as a revolt against a "culture of Collectivism" and quotes uncritically Sir Keith Joseph's remark about the need to clear away "the vast bulk of the accumulating detritus of Socialism".
  11. The 1901 President of the National Free Church Council was only pointing to the obvious when he told his audience that there was throughout the country and Empire "an irresistible movement towards co-operation, combination, collectivism, solidarity, centralisation
  12. This is all logical enough given Fforde's conviction that collectivism comes from "areas other than the British Conservative party", but Fforde seems to forget that the Conservatives were in power for fifty-five of the 100 years from the dawn of collectivism to the edge of Thatcherism, and must, therefore, have been at least partly responsible for some of Keith Joseph's "detritus".
  13. Modernity, then, is incurably materialistic but it can look towards either collectivism or individualism.

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