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affective individualism

  • 1 affective individualism

    эмоциональный индивидуализм; абсолютизация индивидом романтической привязанности как основы для вступления в брак.
    * * *
    эмоциональный индивидуализм; абсолютизация индивидом романтической привязанности как основы для вступления в брак.

    Англо-русский словарь по социологии > affective individualism

  • 2 individualism

    n
    индивидуализм; тип мировоззрения, этическое учение, в основе которого лежит признание абсолютности прав личности, ее свободы и независимости от общества и государства.
    * * *
    сущ.
    1) индивидуализм;
    2) тип мировоззрения, этическое учение, в основе которого лежит признание абсолютности прав личности, ее свободы и независимости от общества и государства.

    Англо-русский словарь по социологии > individualism

  • 3 individualism, affective

    эмоциональный индивидуализм; абсолютизация индивидом романтической привязанности как основы для вступления в брак.

    Англо-русский словарь по социологии > individualism, affective

См. также в других словарях:

  • affective individualism — An alleged (though controversial) change in family life, said to have accompanied the demographic, industrial, and capitalist revolutions which occurred in eighteenth century England, and since experienced widely in other modernized and… …   Dictionary of sociology

  • АФФЕКТИВНЫЙ ИНДИВИДУАЛИЗМ — (AFFECTIVE INDIVIDUALISM) Представители исторической социологии утверждают, что изменения в отношениях между семьей и экономикой привели к тому, что основания для заключения брака перестали сводиться к одному лишь экономическому договору.… …   Социологический словарь

  • affect — affect, affective, affectivity An affect is an emotion. In sociology the use of the term generally implies that an action is being or has been carried out for emotional gratification. For example, in their discussion of Class Awareness in the… …   Dictionary of sociology

  • family, nuclear — The term nuclear family is used to refer to a unit consisting of spouses and their dependent children. Early accounts of the family emphasized the biological imperative underpinning the nuclear family. Anthropological studies reinforce the… …   Dictionary of sociology

  • Cicely Jordan Farrar — Cicely Jordan Ferrar  was an early settler and Ancient Planter of colonial Jamestown. She came to the colony as a child, in 1611.[1] Nothing is known of her origins, or who she traveled with. She married three times, and died sometime… …   Wikipedia

  • family, sociology of — The family is an intimate domestic group made up of people related to one another by bonds of blood, sexual mating, or legal ties. It has been a very resilient social unit that has survived and adapted through time. Yet, on both sides of the… …   Dictionary of sociology

  • marriage — is traditionally conceived to be a legally recognized relationship, between an adult male and female, that carries certain rights and obligations. However, in contemporary societies, marriage is sometimes interpreted more liberally and the phrase …   Dictionary of sociology

  • Christianity — /kris chee an i tee/, n., pl. Christianities. 1. the Christian religion, including the Catholic, Protestant, and Eastern Orthodox churches. 2. Christian beliefs or practices; Christian quality or character: Christianity mixed with pagan elements; …   Universalium

  • Hypostatic model of personality — Concepts Personality aspect (hypostasis) Personality dimension Personality axis Intrapersonal relation Interpersonal relation Originators Charles Sanders Peirce William James Aaron Rosanoff …   Wikipedia

  • politics + ecology —    by Rosi Braidotti   Adapting Baruch Spinoza s monism to an ecosophy of transcendental empiricism, Deleuze constructs the concept of immanence : incorporating strains of vitalism and yet still bypassing essentialism. Choosing to move beyond the …   The Deleuze dictionary

  • politics + ecology —    by Rosi Braidotti   Adapting Baruch Spinoza s monism to an ecosophy of transcendental empiricism, Deleuze constructs the concept of immanence : incorporating strains of vitalism and yet still bypassing essentialism. Choosing to move beyond the …   The Deleuze dictionary

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