Absolutism
the principle or the exercise of complete and unrestricted power in government.
any theory holding that values, principles, etc., are and not relative, dependent, or changeable.
contemporary examples
in this new climate anything less than anti-abortion absolutism is unacceptable.
gop gr-ssroots furious at romney over akin, abortion rape exception mich-lle goldberg august 22, 2012
the russian revolution summed everything up in an instant: in place of dynastic rule, absolutism of a different kind.
can we divorce our elites? james poulos april 12, 2014
what are some great works of literature that you admire for their ability to combat dictatorship and absolutism?
ismail kadare: how i write noah charney january 30, 2013
historical examples
but beneath was the continual struggle for absolutism on the part of the monarch and emanc-p-tion on the part of the people.
little books about old furniture. volume ii. the period of queen anne j. p. blake
if romanism is to be the religion of the state, let it be allied with absolutism.
diary and notes of horace templeton, esq. charles james lever
they prepared to undo the work of absolutism by the hand of absolutism.
lectures on the french revolution john emerich edward dalberg-acton
on the other hand, they marked the approach of france to absolutism.
the life of napoleon bonaparte william milligan sloane
this explains his detestation of all forms of absolutism on the one hand, and what he always called “the revolution” on the other.
the history of freedom john emerich edward dalberg-acton
absolutism may thrive without a g-d, for it needs only slaves.
atheism among the people alphonse de lamartine
he must have had some experience with the absolutism of both good and evil.
preaching and paganism albert parker fitch
noun
the principle or practice of a political system in which unrestricted power is vested in a monarch, dictator, etc; despotism
(philosophy)
any theory which holds that truth or moral or aesthetic value is absolute and universal and not relative to individual or social differences compare relativism
the doctrine that reality is unitary and unchanging and that change and diversity are mere illusion see also monism (sense 2), pluralism (sense 5b)
(christianity) an uncompromising form of the doctrine of predestination
n.
1753 in theology; 1830 in politics, in which sense it was first used by british reformer and parliamentarian maj. gen. thomas perronet thompson (1783-1869). see absolute and -ism.
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- Absolutive
noting or pertaining to the grammatical case or inflectional form of the subject of an intransitive verb and the direct object of a transitive verb in an ergative language such as inuit. an absolutive form of a word in an ergative language. the absolutive case.
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