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meliorism
[ meel-yuh-riz-uhm, mee-lee-uh- ]
noun
- the doctrine that the world tends to become better or may be made better by human effort.
meliorism
/ ˈmiːlɪəˌrɪzəm /
noun
- the notion that the world can be improved by human effort
Derived Forms
- ˌmelioˈristic, adjective
- ˈmeliorist, adjectivenoun
Other Words From
- melio·rist noun adjective
- melio·ristic adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of meliorism1
Word History and Origins
Origin of meliorism1
Example Sentences
He explained, “In the spirit of American meliorism, the criticism is to make things better, not necessarily because I didn’t like it.”
What if the real way forward weren’t a great leap but grinding, tedious, unglamorously incremental change—what George Eliot called “meliorism”?
For some realists, “global meliorism” — the belief that U.S. foreign policy can and should try to make a better world — is a dirty word.
The world-view of Judaism, which regards the entire economy of life as the realization of the all-encompassing plan of an all-wise Creator, is accordingly an energizing optimism, or, more precisely, meliorism.
In the midst of a futile meliorism which deceives the more, the more it soothes, he stands out like some sinister skeleton at the feast, regarding the festivities with a flickering and impenetrable grin.
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