collectivist
IPA: kʌɫˈɛktɪvɪst
noun
- An advocate of collectivism.
adjective
- Of or pertaining to collectivism.
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Examples of "collectivist" in Sentences
- Several say he is a collectivist.
- No collectivist would EVER say that.
- It's certainly not collectivist anarchism.
- They are oligarchical collectivist states.
- Bakunin is well known to be a collectivist.
- It had collectivist and individualist elements.
- He is everything but a collectivist or socialist.
- As for collectivist, that isn't a bad thing either.
- In this sense, libertarian socialism is collectivist.
- "A collectivist is a collectivist," Ayn had declared.
- Individualists are the opposite of collectivists by definition.
- The dichotomy between the two was the capitalist and the collectivist mindsets.
- But all my "collectivist" - bashing friends never said why World War II had such a happy economic effect.
- Second, the problems with our existing educational system are symptoms of something bigger, the public goods problem inherent in collectivist arrangements.
- They are not pro-gressives, they are re-gressives and they will take humanity back to the dark days of classist oppression in collectivist Europe if we let them.
- So, get off your sofa and push aside the pizza wrappings and call your collectivist activist block leader and demand a greater share of the fruits of other peoples labour.
- Of course, as is widely known, the last twenty-five years have witnessed a renewed interest in collectivist analyses of liberal society ” though the term ˜collectivist™ is abjured in favor of ˜communitarian™.
- Anthropologist Richard Shweder argues that for so-called collectivist societies there is also a strong "ethics of community" (authority/respect, duty/loyalty); often there is an "ethics of divinity" (purity/sanctity) as well.
- In that struggle, Ryan argued that shifting Social Security which he called a "collectivist system" toward personal investment accounts was not only good policy, but would change the political landscape, according to a recording of the event made by its host, The Atlas Society.
- The debate before us here on the mechanism of planetary scale climatic changes is indicative of the "science" practiced in collectivist societies such as Stalinist Russia and Nazi Germany where advancement and even employment were dependant on adherance to political rather than factual science.
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