Sentences with phrase «social idealism»

Social idealism refers to the belief or idea that society can be made better by pursuing certain values and principles. It involves having an optimistic view that societies can be improved by promoting equality, justice, and the common good. It encompasses the notion that we can strive for a fairer and more just society by working together towards these goals. Full definition
All that remains is the impulse of social idealism in politics [«Religion in the Sixties,» Social Research (Autumn 1971), pp. 459 - 60].
But Underwood found his spiritual authority more in the academic ideology of rationalism than in the dark mystery of a crucified Messiah; his final vision is a rather flat social idealism in which the academic world is adulated.
While acknowledging that it could be «a moment of great peril to the fine fabric of social idealism which has painfully been woven in the consciousness of modern Christianity,» they chose to offer cautious support to the new Republican president, suggesting that they believed his promises to create some substitute for the League.
Comprising five musical scores, four large drawings, and a video installation, the epic work is a meditation on social idealism.
The intense Ab - Ex bursts of psychic joy or pain may have been a refreshing change from the discredited social idealism and oppressive realities of the previous two decades.
And often the most entrancing visions of social idealism have been accompanied, especially in modern times, by the annihilation of millions of individuals who do not seem to have fit into the plans of the new societies.
Hence the supreme manifestation of religion was to be found not in personal ethics or in social idealism but in the cultus regarded as an end in itself.
8:15 am — TCM — Meet John Doe Not one of Frank Capra's best takes on social idealism, but it definitely has its moments — and Barbara Stanwyck, what more do you really need?
8:00 pm — TCM — Meet John Doe Not one of Frank Capra's best takes on social idealism, but it definitely has its moments — and Barbara Stanwyck, what more do you really need?
In the process of relentlessly investigating our cultural history, McElheny has accumulated unique insights and an ability to intuitively deconstruct heightened moments of social idealism.
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