Chapter 1 Flashcards
Analysis
Separation of a whole into its component parts. Taking an idea down to component parts in order to understand it more fully.
Centralization
The consolidation of power and authority in a center or central organization
Cynicism
Pessimism, contemptuous distrustfulness.
Empiricism
1: The practice of relying on observation and experiment, especially in the natural sciences 2: a theory that all knowledge originates in experience.
Humanism
1a: a doctrine, attitude, or way of life centered on human interests or values; esp: a philosophy that usually rejects supernaturalism and stresses an individual’s dignity and worth and capacity for self-realization through reason 1b: a system of thought teaching man as the source of truth and ethics.
Incarnate, adjective
1a: invested with bodily and especially human nature and form 1b: made manifest or comprehensible: embodied.
Incarnate, verb
to make incarnate: as a: to give bodily form and substance to b (1): to give a concrete or actual form to : actualize (2): to constitute an embodiment or type of
Materialism
1a: a theory that physical matter is the only or fundamental reality and that all being and processes and phenomena can be explained as manifestations or results of matter 1b: a doctrine that the only or the highest values or objectives lie in material well-being and in the furtherance of material progress 1c: a doctrine that economic or social change is materially cased 2: a preoccupation with or stress upon material rather than intellectual or spiritual things.
Presupposition
The underlying assumptions on which a philosophical system is built.
Reform
1a: to chance into an improved form or condition 1b: to amend or improve by change of form or removal of faults or abuses 2: to put an end to (an evil) by enforcing or introducing a better method or course of action 3: to induce or cause to abandon evil ways.
Skepticism
1: an attitude of doubt or a disposition to incredulity either in general or toward a particular object 2a: the doctrine that rue knowledge or knowledge in a particular area is uncertain 2b: the method of suspended judgment, systematic doubt, or criticism characteristic of skeptics 3: doubt concerning basic religious principles (as immorality, providence, and revelation)