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Перевод: absolutist
[прилагательное] абсолютист; [существительное] сторонник абсолютизма
Тезаурус:
- Though Stark does not seem to share Scheler's ambitious project completely, he is willing to import the essentialist and absolutist components of Scheler's work, derived from their shared Catholicism (Hamilton 1974: 87).
- In February 1919, Will Chamberlain, a leading absolutist, argued:
- And both movements are in the throes of similar internal debates between those who believe that a step-by-step, incremental approach to reform is the best means to make progress and those who believe in a far more absolutist confrontational approach.
- Centralization and bureaucratization were historically closely linked to the growth of a monetized economy, which provided the fiscal resources for the rise of absolutist states in seventeenth- and eighteenth-century Europe.
- This was predictable, not only because of natural human frailty, but also because, despite Allen's initial hopes, there was in fact little political purpose to be served by adopting the absolutist position.
- In many absolutist states the myth that if only the Tsar or the Fhrer knew about the people's grievances he would act to resolve them was carefully fostered by state propaganda and even more so in Romania by the Securitate's rumour machine.
- Without absolutist faith in the right of the party to rule, East Germany would lose its sole raison d'etre.
- There are no instant fixes, either in terms of an absolutist retreat to the class-based socialism of the past, or in a headlong rush to the classless social democracy that has so often been portrayed as the only future.
- Nine out of ten of the 16,500 conscientious objectors, however, rejected this absolutist stand and accepted alternative service.
- The change in the ways of disciplining has been most evident in the gradual erosion of absolutist, authoritarian and punitive methods of discipline.
- To minds of absolutist temper like Leavis and Winters, this was contemptible; and undoubtedly it is next to impossible to establish criticism as an academic discipline on grounds so sandy and shifting.
- The extent of royal jurisdiction varied enormously: at one extreme lay Roger II, the would-be autocrat, uttering absolutist doctrines out of Justinian; or the English king, who, however tied by custom, had effective control both of the king's court, which retained a wide jurisdiction and was capable, under Henry II, of rapid expansion, and over the old popular courts of the shire and, where they had not fallen into private hands, of the hundred; at the other extreme was the German king, much of whose jurisdiction had been delegated to the ecclesiastical immunities, and equally much was slipping, in the twelfth century, into princely hands; or the French king, who was expected to do high justice to all who came, but received comparatively few callers from outside the royal domain.
- The rhetoric of party politics, particularly at election time, is often adversarial and absolutist in tone.
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