The phrase
"social prestige" refers to the reputation or high regard that a person or group of people have in society. It is based on their social standing, accomplishments, or influence, which can often lead to respect or admiration from others.
Full definition
For we begin to be Christians living in the grace of God only if we are honest even when it is no longer the best policy, and we exercise our true apostolate precisely when we appear to be stupid and without
much social prestige.
Neidhart concludes that as long as confirmation is «closely connected
with social prestige, this period of life is certainly not the most favorable for a public declaration of faith and the ceremony related to it should rather remain without a vow.»
In addition, there are in nearly every congregation employers who have alcoholics in their businesses or plants, workers who know of untreated alcoholics in their unions, professional people with alcoholics among their clients or patients, public schoolteachers and opinion molders who
through social prestige, political leadership, or involvement in the mass media help to create new images of public problems.
I was just pondering to myself if it would be possible to research and quantitatively identify value attributed to properties of the material
vs social prestige.
But is the desirability of gold for decorative purposes not driven
by social prestige derived from its extrinsic value?
The conversation now reaches beyond the obvious juxtapositions
of social prestige and into ideas about the American fetishization of the exotic and especially the less - than, as he discussed at his lecture at the Getty.
In the process old psycho - social themes are firmly embedded —
social prestige, identification patterns — but powerful new themes emerge which are utopian in nature.
For Horatio Alger wealth and
social prestige were hardly the marrow of salvation.
Our Lord wages constant war on those who would substitute or tone down the demands of the Kingdom for the sake of bodily comforts or
social prestige.
But during the eighteenth century Friends combined the gains of the Counting House with the quiet piety of the Meeting House and found themselves in the possession of material prosperity,
social prestige, and political power that at least equaled that of Anglicans, Presbyterians and Congregationalists.80
In addition, satisfaction of time spent together, satisfaction with physical appearance, and
social prestige are all lower in marriages containing either sociopaths or narcissists.
He is captivated by her beauty, and what she represents — a way of life different from his own, dedicated to principles nobler than
social prestige and worldly pleasures.
This commercial strategy, geared toward adolescents of all ages, resembles the Democratic party's political manipulation of black Americans, targeting that audience through its insecurities about heritage,
social prestige, and empowerment.
Social prestige may be something you love or hate and Brooklyn is currently experiencing a rise in its name.