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perfectibility

American  
[per-fekt-uh-bil-i-tee] / pərˌfɛkt əˈbɪl ɪ ti /

noun

  1. the quality or state of being able to be made perfect or free of defects.

  2. the quality or state of being able to be improved.


Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

Johnson’s faith in human perfectibility, he told me, inspired him to work to regain his strength.

From Los Angeles Times • Feb. 5, 2024

Technology holds out the promise of human perfectibility, but, as far as Ishiguro is concerned, it is a promise we must resist.

From New York Times • Feb. 23, 2021

Perhaps most important, middle-class faith in freedom and perfectibility would inspire hopes for local and national reform, and feed opposition to freedom’s greatest enemy—human slavery.

From Textbooks • Jan. 18, 2018

Both believe in the perfectibility, if not of man, then of the international system.

From Washington Post • May 26, 2016

Encoded in that molecule were the loci of human perfectibility and vulnerability: once we learned to manipulate this chemical, we would rewrite our nature.

From "The Gene" by Siddhartha Mukherjee