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Definition of Personalism
1. n. The quality or state of being personal; personality.
Definition of Personalism
1. Noun. (philosophy) A doctrine of subjective idealism that regards personality as the means of interpreting reality. ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Personalism
1. [n -S]
Lexicographical Neighbors of Personalism
Literary usage of Personalism
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Freedom and Authority in Religion by Edgar Young Mullins (1913)
"Borden P. Bowne, in his work entitled " personalism," comes much closer to the
facts of experience in his general view than Hof- ding or Caird. ..."
2. The Persistent Problems of Philosophy: An Introduction to Metaphysics by Mary Whiton Calkins (1912)
"PERSONAL IDEALISM (personalism) Personal, or spiritual, idealism shares with
phenomenalism the doctrine that all ..."
3. American Painters: With One Hundred and Four Examples of Their Work Engraved by George William Sheldon (1880)
"... entertains unusually courageous notions on the subject of landscape- painting,
and these invest with interest his vigorous personalism. ..."
4. Idola Theatri: A Criticism of Oxford Thought and Thinkers from the by Henry Cecil Sturt (1906)
"Perhaps the most glaring fault of Hegel is his anti-personalism, a way of thinking
that has no lack of followers in English universities. It is, of course, ..."
5. Bergson and Personal Realism by Ralph Tyler Flewelling (1920)
"CHAPTER XI personalism AND THE GROUND OF BEING PERSONALITY ASSUMED OR IMPLIED is
THE BASIS OF EXPLANATION IN CURRENT THEORIES BECAUSE the law of the ..."
6. The Philosophy of Religion in England and America by Alfred Caldecott (1901)
"personalism Reason, Feeling, Will; so modern analysis gives the fundamentals of
the life of ... personalism."
7. The Philosophy of Religion in England and America by Alfred Caldecott (1901)
"personalism Reason, Feeling, Will; so modern analysis gives the fundamentals of
the life of the soul of man. In the Types of Belief delineated so far we ..."
8. The Philosophy of Religion in England and America by Alfred Caldecott (1901)
"personalism Reason, Feeling, Will; so modern analysis gives the fundamentals of the
... personalism."