67 examples of individualistic in sentences
Woman, it was expected, would display more than her proverbial lack of logic by embracing with enthusiasm state direction and at the same time remain an exemplar of individualistic performance.
Women have passed in aspiration, and to some extent in action, out of the ultra-individualistic stage of civilization.
It may be the truest devotion to our Allies to challenge the individualistic rôle recommended by Adam to mother, for it will hinder, not help, the feeding of the world to put women back under eighteenth century conditions.
They are asking, since labor is very scarce, whether the extreme individualistic direction of their labor-power is permissible.
The Adamistic theory requires individualistic action, and disapproves specialization in Eve.
The farmer's wife can attract no one from city life, where so much cooperation is enjoyed, to her extreme individualistic surroundings.
The new "rights" were exclusively individualistic, in practice, though in the minds of the idealists who formulated them, they had their social aspect.
Sure, we all have the shared desire for the core canon of literature, but each of us want to complete that collection with different texts that are as distinctive and individualistic as fingerprints.
As Strauss went over from Hegelianism to pantheism, so Ludwig Feuerbach (1804-72), a son of the great jurist, Anselm Feuerbach, after he had for a short time moved in the same direction, took the opposite, the individualistic course, only, like Strauss, to end at last in materialism.
He was not thinking, however, of dictatorship; he was an individualistic anarchist, believing that if there were no active government all men would be happy.
But beyond these established frameworks they have been individualistic and highly idiosyncratic at all times.
Individualistic and segregated domestic circles give rise to tax evasions, feuds, and moonshining, plots and the growth of strong men.
His latest argument in the premises is as follows: Man, who is by nature dispersively individualistic, is brought into industrial coordination only by coercion.
It would have required a European bureaucracy to keep such laws fully effective; the individualistic South was incapable of the task.
It is a necessary consequence of the individualistic competition of modern life.
The common voter, the small individualist has less constructive imaginationis more individualistic, that is, than the big individualist.
The truth is that athletics, like all other things, especially modern, are insanely individualistic.
There could have been no passionate individualistic defiance of law in her case, however.
There are reasons for believing that she was somewhat touched in her youth with the individualistic theories of the time, which made so many men and women of genius reject the restraints imposed by society, as in the case of Goethe, Heine, George Sand, Shelley and many another; yet she does not appear to have been to more than a very limited extent influenced by such considerations in regard to her own marriage.
The matter for surprise is, that one who regarded all human traditions, ceremonies and social obligations as sacred, should have consented to act in so individualistic a manner.
That she was not overcome by the German individualistic and social tendencies may be seen in the article on "Weimar and its Celebrities," in the Westminster Review, where, in writing of Wieland as an educator, she says that the tone of his books was not "immaculate," and that it was "strangely at variance, with that sound and lofty morality which ought to form the basis of every education."
Mr. Bradlaugh's Radicalism had an individualistic flavour.
However individualistic in feature, as working through the conscience, it yet relates itself to the whole moral world, and however it may express itself, it beats in accord with the pulse of eternity.
Immermann, following Baron von Stein, believed that the health and future of society, endangered by the corrupt and dissipated nobility, rested, on the sturdy, self-reliant, individualistic yet severely moral and patriotic, small peasant.
He was perhaps the most considerable representative of the literary "Epigones" intervening between the esthetic individualistic humanism of the eighteenth, and the economic-coöperative humanism of the nineteenth century.