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Meaning of reflectionism | Babel Free

Noun CEFR C1

Definitions

  1. The view that cultural phenomena (literature, art, etc.) simply mirror the ideology of the dominant economic patterns of society.
    countable, uncountable
  2. The belief that we apprehend the world by copying or reflecting it within the mind; the idea that thought is a reflection of reality, rather than something created by the mind.
    countable, uncountable
  3. The belief that judgement is intuitive and that reflection and reason are subsequently applied to justify judgements.
    countable, uncountable
  4. The use of reflection to examine and critique aspects of society.
    countable, uncountable

Examples

“Economic determinism is the central tenet of political theory and "naive" reflectionism is the basic premise of cultural theory.”
“Reflectionism is the other side of the coin of normative realism .”
“Aesthetically, such a position locates the genre of hip hop within the orthodox Marxist theory of representation that is commonly known as reflectionism, and associated with Marxist theorist and literary critic, Georg Lukács.”
“This “reflectionism” (together with the “images of women” approach) has led to an impasse—and not only because medieval authors had little stake in representing the living reality of women, but rather because it failed to acknowledge the complicated relations between literature and history. Reflectionism and its demand for "authenticity," argues Toril Moi, undermined the autonomy of literature to create its own fictional universes, be they "according to oppressive and objectionable ideological assumptions."”
“Doesn't reflectionism itself imply that ontology is somehow prior?”
“That such reflectionism — the required subservience of language to reality — lies at the heart of what comes across as a radical resistance against Communist ideology is something profoundly disturbing. Translated into political terms, this reflectionism becomes the subservience to a higher object that characterizes the relation that Chinese intellectuals have to the authoritarian state.”
“Reflectionism is a philosophy that paradoxically accepts both monistic and dualistic views. This amounts to "having your cake and eating it too."”
“Murray Rothbard, by contrast, takes a priori categories to be features of extramental reality that we discover, not something we impose – a position Smith calls “reflectionism” (Rothbard 1997, pp. 64, 105).”
“I hope by now to have shown that there is good reason to think that ethical reflectionism is a framework of moral inquiry which is far more common than it may appear.”
“(see title)”
“In Audi's view, the method of reflectionism is and deserves to be our basic method for justifying ethical judgments' (1993, 208)”
“Reflectionism allows society to confront itself or to see its own absurdity.”
“The successor to surrealism, from which it borrows its pictorial vocabulary and has assimilated all inflow, reflectionism seeks first and foremost to develop and extend the freedom of the real function of thought.”
“Reflectionism employs the tactic of appropriating tools of authoritative organizations and resituating those tools in a disorienting manner toward undercutting the privilege of the organization, in essence leveling (or attempting to level) the surveillance hierarchy (Mann, Nollman, and Wellmqan 2003: 333)”

CEFR level

C1
Advanced
This word is part of the CEFR C1 vocabulary — advanced level.

See also

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