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"idealistically" Definitions
  1. in a way that shows a strong belief in perfect standards and trying to achieve them, even when this is not realistic
"idealistically" Synonyms
quixotically romantically visionarily utopianly optimistically unrealistically dreamily impracticably impractically starrily abstractedly chimerically naively radically fancifully unworkably unfeasibly impossibly improbably wildly ardently committedly fervently principledly uncompromisingly unswervingly unwaveringly hopefully buoyantly cheerfully sanguinely brightly positively upbeatly confidently sunnily merrily happily assuredly promisingly rosily hopingly roseately cheerily encouragingly sentimentally soppily mushily mawkishly cornily sloppily schmaltzily cloyingly drippily maudlinly saccharinely slushily sugarily sappily soupily cheesily emotionally cutesily syrupily sicklily blissfully divinely heavenlily idyllically sublimely perfectly ideally immaterially paradisiacally paradisaically grandiosely loftily supremely transcendentally ultimately unconvincingly insubstantially feebly flimsily shakily incorporeally unsoundly vaguely high-mindedly morally ethically goodly honorably(US) honourably(UK) uprightly worthily honestly nobly righteously virtuously decently fairly purely right-mindedly magnanimously conscientiously innocently unsophisticatedly greenly simply ingenuously inexperiencedly unsuspiciously unsuspectingly unwarily immaturely rawly guilelessly naifly artlessly unknowingly credulously callowly uncritically simplemindedly astrally excellently fantastically gently imaginarily intangibly introspectively marvellously(UK) marvelously(US) mistily musingly mythically nightmarishly pensively phantasmagorically aggressively ambitiously challengingly audaciously boldly difficultly hardly demandingly monumentally toughly daringly extravagantly formidably exigently impressively onerously brashly altruistically benevolently compassionately charitably humanely beneficently generously eleemosynarily mercifully philanthropically unselfishly benignantly kindly sympathetically caringly kindlily easily exploitably gullably gullibly susceptibly sinlessly greatly celebratedly eminently gloriously grandly importantly majorly prominently augustly capitally chiefly dignifiedly distinguishedly exaltedly famously illustriously influentially leadingly More

67 Sentences With "idealistically"

How to use idealistically in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "idealistically" and check conjugation/comparative form for "idealistically". Mastering all the usages of "idealistically" from sentence examples published by news publications.

This is not the same as idealistically believing someone can have it all.
Enjoy your partnerships today, but realize that people are speaking idealistically, not practically.
Young people idealistically coming down here and being willing to challenge an unjust system.
He spoke more idealistically about the need to "uplift and civilize" the Filipino people.
Asking any company to idealistically act against those interests is risky, although sometimes it works.
That too was an idealistically pro-market book, unconcerned with the feasibility of its proposals.
Simply put, Democrats can no longer idealistically rely on the empathy of the average American.
Kaiser appears in various guises, which vary from idealistically naive to stupid, from knowing to manipulative.
And like Brandt he is blunt, approachable, emotional, idealistically European in outlook and palpably hungry for power.
The Americans demonstrates the important shift that is meant to happen — idealistically, anyhow — when belief systems collide in a pluralist world.
Idealistically, philosophically, in terms of the magic of life on this planet, it's so reduced because of the plague of our species.
There are plenty of other reasons why Wednesday's turnout wasn't as super-sized as some of us idealistically hoped it would be.
According to their investigations, the hospice system, which began idealistically in the 1970s, is stretched thin and falling short of its original mission.
Through my employment of surrealism, I try to correct the world idealistically and depict the savage animal as a conscious human, and vice-versa.
Also, and perhaps more idealistically, taking care of people's most basic needs will give them the freedom to be more creative and productive, supporters posit.
They tend to share a belief, either idealistically or naïvely, depending on who is judging, that corporations can be a force for social good and change.
"We thought we'd do this concert, idealistically believing that it was the right thing to do, and laws would be passed protecting people," Mellencamp, 21, tells PEOPLE exclusively.
Finally, and most idealistically, I like the idea of supporting projects like these speakers simply because they aim at pushing technology forward in a pure and uncompromised way.
But more than that, as a global studies major, she was drawn to social issues and — perhaps idealistically — fixing large-scale problems like lack of access to affordable food.
The company routinely ignores or downplays the worst-case scenarios, idealistically building products without the necessary safeguards, and then drags its feet to admit the extent of the problems.
"Perhaps too idealistically, I have always believed that if you and I set a standard for acceptable behavior in our organization, all others would follow," Meyer wrote in the email.
Yet the latter two were used in dystopian societies with totalitarian regimes, while Oval, idealistically, is "merely" designed to activate a response of generosity in the brain to combat income inequality.
New presidents with little experience in the executive branch often idealistically believe they can use the Cabinet better than their predecessors, either through greater delegation or by relying on it as an advisory body.
But however idealistically different, the two billionaires share a mastery of one thing: A mass psychology effect that has been studied for decades by researchers and is now being retested through the online laboratory of Twitter.
But it's also indicative of what Romeo sees in a community he once idealistically thought he could change—instead, it's become a town of indiscriminate vandalism, where "knowing a guy" makes every bureaucratic obstacle much easier to navigate.
"One thing that's come up in our conversations, and has been transmitted into the narrative of the album, is the fact that we need to try to imagine what the future can hold idealistically," Mr. Hutchings said from London in a phone interview.
Lily Allen and Charlotte Church have been routinely humiliated and ridiculed for trying to use their platforms—however idealistically—for the good and betterment of mankind, while Ewan McGregor cancelled his appearance on Good Morning Britain in solidarity with women only to be called a "paedophile-loving hypocrite" in a national newspaper by fecal matter in a flesh sock Piers Morgan.
Despite what police administrators might idealistically envision, America is looking at a new shift in policing that will include military-style "force protection" tactics; enhanced protection vehicles; sniper over-watch; more heavily-armed officers responding to high-risk calls; call perimeter security and less time if any negotiating with barricaded armed shooting suspects intent upon making a political statement by killing officers; rather than demands.
As Zoller Seitz writes in The Oliver Stone Experience, in JFK the Kennedy assassination is, incredibly, mere means to Stone's larger end: to warn the viewer that since the end of World War II, the United States has not truly been a democracy, in the sense that school textbooks idealistically claim, but a whey-faced dictatorship run by the military-industrial complex—a loose consortium of interests linked by the desire to acquire and hold power by generating public fear of "enemies" within and without, then generate profits by selling arms and munitions to the U.S. military in order to defend against those same enemies.
Francis Fukayama, if rather more complaisantly and idealistically, has responded to the same perception.
While he had loved Janet intensely, Perry told Postiglione, she had been portrayed somewhat idealistically in the media since her disappearance.
The film chronicles the life a skilled painter who fails to gain recognition, subsequently gets idealistically inspired to oppose the art of the elite.
Sancho, while sympathetic, refuses to betray his king. When Don Quixote takes to his deathbed, Sancho tries to cheer him. Sancho idealistically proposes they become pastoral shepherds and thus becomes 'Quixotized'.
During her first term in office, Looney introduced 28 bills. On December 10, 1923, while in office, Looney was admitted to the Oklahoma Bar Association. Looney was idealistically practical and was always searching for ways to save taxpayer's money.
During his stay in Baghdad, al- Arsuzi tried, idealistically, to enlighten Iraqis with his thoughts of Arab nationalism, but returned to Syria disappointed in 1940.Curtis, 1971, p. 135. On 29 November 1940Rabinovich, 1972, p. 7. al-Arsuzi founded the Arab Ba'ath.
He idealistically settled in Rishon LeZion ("First to Zion") as part of the Hovevei Zion ("Lovers of Zion") movement. Rishon LeZion was established, 1882, as a Jewish agricultural cooperative on baren, empty land. The land was purchased from two brothers, Musa and Mustafa el Dagani.
In examining Furedi's The Subway, critics and other observers have found much to say. The painting was said to be cheerful and the artist's interest to be sympathetic. It was seen as vibrant, bright, and optimistic. Its scene was said to be playful, clean, and decorous and its design elements as idealistically deployed.
Een onderzoek naar enkele beginselen van de 'Nieuwe Gids'-school. Amsterdam, 1920. Despite this ideal, he would still be called ‘the Johannes Baptista of modern literature' by Willem Kloos, who was one of the leading figures of the 1880s.De Nieuwe Gids, 1888 Emants kept a sober style and a subject which was idealistically pessimistic.
He maintains that librarians must pass on their best values to future information professionals. # Service : According to Gorman, an ethic of service should permeate all library policies and practices. Gorman stresses the duty of librarians to serve individuals, communities and societies is best fulfilled through a combination of professional skills, empathy and personal dedication. He argues that librarians need to act idealistically in a materialistic age.
The former prisoners are bitterly angry at Maia for betraying them at the Valderra, which she had idealistically considered an attempt to save their lives. Nevertheless, they agree to return with her to Suba or Terekenalt. Maia and her companions recover on a remote farm, then travel for a time with rebel freebooters. Meris, always a troublemaker, gets herself killed by one of them.
Due largely to the sociocultural context in which Follow Through was born, planners deliberately structured the program to minimize the involvement of federal officials in the implementation effort. The more Follow Through could be perceived as a locally controlled effort, the better. OEO hoped "idealistically" that Follow Through could satisfy both empirical and social action purposes. It seems doubtful that any form of experiment could realistically and faithfully serve both aims.
Many countries have switched off most of their MW transmitters due to cost-cutting and low usage of MW by the listeners. Among those are Germany, France, Russia, Poland, Sweden, the Benelux, Austria, Switzerland, and most of the Balkans. Large networks of transmitters are remaining in the UK, Spain, Romania and Italy. In the Netherlands and Scandinavia, some new idealistically driven stations have launched low power services on the former high power frequencies.
That said, he was (in later life) certainly not party political. His aim was - perhaps idealistically - to apply the values of the Kingdom of God to everyday life and issues. That caused him to stray into the political arena, whether he intended to or not; something for which he never apologized. His clergy - whether or not they agreed with him on particular issues - tended to regard him as a good man, a warm-hearted pastor and an engaging personality.
These artists, beginning with Katsukawa Shunshō, depicted actors elaborately and idealistically, but with the realistic details of individualized faces. Individual actors, such as Ichikawa Danjūrō V, can now be recognized across roles and even as depicted by different artists. Torii Kiyonobu (1664–1729) was likely one of the first to produce actor prints in the mainstream ukiyo-e style. An artist from the Torii school which painted theater signboards, Kiyonobu was no stranger to the theater or to artistic depictions of it.
From 1910 to 1912, he lived with his mother in Geneva after his parents had separated. After returning to Berdychiv in 1912, he moved to Kiev in 1914 where, while living with his father, he attended secondary school and later the Kiev Higher Institute of Soviet Education. Young Vasily Grossman idealistically supported the hope of the Russian Revolution of 1917. In January 1928, Grossman married Anna Petrovna Matsuk; his daughter, named Yekaterina after his mother, was born two years later.
The professor is caught between the worldviews of Tom Outland and Louie Marsellus. He is resistant to change, idealistically holding onto Tom’s memory and an Emersonian ideality that impugnes material acquisitiveness. As Outland’s good friend and mentor, St. Peter feels it is his responsibility to make sure Tom’s will is properly executed. In this endeavor, he is torn between his love for Tom and his love for his daughter Rosamond, both of whom, the professor believes, have different views on how the money should be spent.
A former member of the Civil Rights Movement and the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, as well as being co-founder of the National Endowment for Democracy, Palmer was idealistically motivated to help bring about democracy in the Eastern Bloc nations. In 1988 and 1989 he had already initiated friendly visits between five NATO nations and five Warsaw Pact nations, which impressed both sides with their spirit of conviviality. These experiences were building confidence in amicable partnership. Both sides were learning that they did not need to be enemies.
Smonny seeks vengeance for having to leave Cadwal, even though it was her own laziness that caused her to fail to achieve Agency status. The other faction is the Life, Peace and Freedom party (LPF), led by Dame Clytie Vergence. Initially the LPFers idealistically sought to free the Yips from their sorry state, but now their goal is to create large country estates for themselves, keeping some of the Yips as servants. Egon Tamm, the Conservator, announces that the old Charter governing Cadwal has been superseded by a new, somewhat stricter one.
Jake del Mundo (Gerald Anderson) is a handsome boy who comes from a privileged background. After years as a carefree bachelor, he thinks he is now ready to settle down. On the night that he proposes marriage to his long-time girlfriend, Tracy, she finally has had enough of him and dumps him for another man. At the same time, Kristina "Tintin" Paraiso (Arci Muñoz) a make-up artist, idealistically dreams of a nearly "perfect" relationship and believes that the guy she's going out with is about to ask her to marry him.
Before this, most superheroes were idealistically perfect people with no serious, lasting problems.Noted comic-book writer Alan Moore described the significance of this new approach in a radio interview on the BBC Four program Chain Reaction, transcribed at : Lee introduced complex, naturalistic characters who could have bad tempers, fits of melancholy, and vanity; they bickered amongst themselves, worried about paying their bills and impressing girlfriends, got bored or were even sometimes physically ill. The first superheroes Lee and artist Jack Kirby created together were the Fantastic Four. The team's immediate popularityDeFalco, Tom "1960s" in Gilbert (2008), p.
She explained that the story "holds its own over two episodes and it's really exciting because Duffy's out in Cambodia idealistically setting up a free clinic for people living on the poverty line in a very impoverished country, so that's quite a challenge." On-screen Duffy is in the country on a medical mission and Charlie, alongside his colleagues Comfort Jones (Martina Laird), Abs Denham (James Redmond) and Guppy Sandhu (Elyes Gabel), come out to help her. The cast and crew travelled to the country to film at various locations spots. They were forced to contend with high temperatures and rainy weather that became dangerous.
Simon London, "Lunch with the FT – Milton Friedman," Financial Times (7 June 2003) "The use of quantity of money as a target has not been a success ... I'm not sure I would as of today push it as hard as I once did." Idealistically, Friedman actually favored the principles of the 1930s Chicago plan, which would have ended fractional reserve banking and, thus, private money creation. It would force banks to have 100% reserves backing deposits, and instead place money creation powers solely in the hands of the US Government. This would make targeting money growth more possible, as endogenous money created by fractional reserve lending would no longer be a major issue.
The Testament of Judah is primarily concerned with courage, monetary greed, and fornication. It begins by portraying Judah as idealistically courageous, involving bravery in front of wild beasts, as well as successful military expeditions, sometimes basing the narrative on acts that the canonical bible attributes to Jacob. However, it goes on to present a xenophobic focus, criticising his marriage to a non-Israelite, as well as his sexual activity with Tamar, his daughter-in-law who at that time was pretending to be a prostitute. The narrative argues that Judah had sex with Tamar and his wife due to drunkenness, and that he bribed his wife's father in order to be allowed to marry her.
Occidental Eschatology By Jacob Taubes, p.86 Rather than the Kingdom of Heaven being present in society, it is established subjectively for the individual.Occidental Eschatology By Jacob Taubes, p.132 F. D. Maurice interpreted the Kingdom of Heaven idealistically as a symbol representing society's general improvement, instead of a physical and political kingdom. Karl Barth interprets eschatology as representing existential truths that bring the individual hope, rather than history or future-history.Encyclopedia of time By Samuel L. Macey, p.186-187 Barth's ideas provided fuel for the Social Gospel philosophy in America, which saw social change not as performing "required" good works, but because the individuals involved felt that Christians could not simply ignore society's problems with future dreams.
Dina tells the group that the next bus does not arrive until the next day. One of the band members looks for a phone to contact the Egyptian embassy, but Dina tells him that the only pay phone in town is guarded over, every night, by a man who obsessively waits for his girlfriend to call him, even though it has been months. Dina offers the band a meal and a place to stay for the night, and Tewfiq reluctantly agrees. In her kitchen, Tewfiq asks her about her background, and she tells how she was once married, and nothing in real life went as she had idealistically and naively thought ("It Is What It Is").
For instance, United States leaders known for their idealism include presidents Theodore Roosevelt, Ronald Reagan, and Barack Obama, while European officials similarly known for such ethical attitudes include Konrad Adenauer, Prime Minister of Germany, Charles de Gaulle, Prime Minister of France and senior general, and Vaclav Havel, dissident and President of Czechoslovakia. Juan Manuel Santos of Colombia has gained attention in terms of the central and south Americas. Private individuals known for their prominent ideals include Fred Rogers, U.S. television personality, and Terry Fox, Canadian athlete and charity advocate. Multiple idealistically optimistic characters have been featured in prominent creative media, the Star Trek franchise centered around space exploration being a well-known instance of fictional idealism.
95 The British historian Louise Atherton wrote that Lloyd was: "Idealistically, almost mystically, devoted to the British Empire, he advocated the use of force, if necessary, to maintain British control". He completed his term as governor in 1923 and was made a Privy Counsellor and GCSI. He returned to Parliament again for Eastbourne in 1924, serving until 1925, when he was made Baron Lloyd, of Dolobran in the County of Montgomery, called after his Welsh ancestral home. Following his ennoblement, he was appointed High Commissioner to Egypt, serving until his resignation was forced upon him by Labour Foreign Secretary Arthur Henderson in 1929. His views and experience formed the background of a self-justifying two-volume book, Egypt Since Cromer (published 1933–34).
" Randall Roberts of the Los Angeles Times stated, "Run the Jewels is the team of two indie titans, El-P and Killer Mike, who have upended convention by remaining idealistically true, artistically adventurous and creatively emboldened well into their second decade as rapper-producers. The pair's second album, released as a free download last week, proves it 11 times over." Al Horner of NME said, "Cranking the urgency and confrontation of last year's self-titled debut to neck- breaking levels of intensity, RTJ2 is an urgent, paranoid album for a violent, panicked time. It's a bleak future Run The Jewels envision for America, but as long as Mike and El-P are collaborating, at least the future of hip-hop is in safe hands.
On April 2, 1917, Wilson asked a special joint session of Congress to declare war on the German Empire, stating, "We have no selfish ends to serve".for detailed coverage of the speech see NY Times main headline, April 2, 1917, President Calls for War Declaration, Stronger Navy, New Army of 500,000 Men, Full Cooperation With Germany's Foes To make the conflict seem like a better idea, he painted the conflict idealistically, stating that the war would "make the world safe for democracy" and later that it would be a "war to end war". The United States had a moral responsibility to enter the war, Wilson proclaimed. The future of the world was being determined on the battlefield, and American national interest demanded a voice.
Occidental Eschatology By Jacob Taubes, p.86 Rather than the Kingdom of Heaven manifesting itself in society, it is seen as established subjectively for the individual.Occidental Eschatology By Jacob Taubes, p.132 F. D. Maurice (1805-1872) interpreted the Kingdom of Heaven idealistically as a symbol representing society's general improvement, instead of as a physical and political kingdom. Karl Barth (1886-1968) interpreted eschatology as representing existential truths that bring the individual hope, rather than as history or as future-history.Encyclopedia of time By Samuel L. Macey, p.186-187 Barth's ideas provided fuel for the Social Gospel philosophy in America, which saw social change not as performing "required" good works, but because the individuals involved felt that Christians could not simply ignore society's problems with future dreams.
One of the Committee’s recommendations called for the establishment within the National Security Council structure of an Operations Coordinating Board, whose chief function would be to coordinate the formulation by government agencies of detailed operational plans to carry out national security policies. At the same time the Committee recommended that the Psychological Strategy Board, created in 1951, be abolished because that Board had apparently been founded on the notion that psychological activities and strategy existed apart from official policies and actions, a concept repudiated by the Committee. Instead, it assumed that every diplomatic, economic and military action of the United States Government had a psychological aspect or implication. The Committee also idealistically urged that the terms "cold war" and "psychological warfare" be discarded in favor of others which better described the United States’ true goals.
Emily Yellin, Our Mothers' War, p 98 Songs on armed forces request programs were not about Rosie the Riveter, but of the girls who were waiting for the soldiers to return.John Costello, Virtue Under Fire p 125 Many such songs were also popular at the home front.William L. O'Neill, A Democracy At War: America's Fight At Home and Abroad in World War II, p 262 Themes of love, loneliness and separation were given more poignancy by the war.Robert Heide and John Gilman, Home Front America: Popular Culture of the World War II Era p 116 German intelligence officers, interrogating American prisoners, mistakenly concluded that the Americans notions of why they were fighting were for such vague concepts, such as "Mom's apple pie," and concluded that American servicemen were idealistically soft and could be convinced to desert their allies.
A few years later, in 1851, she published a piece based on these sketches entitled "Eine Republikanerin" in a literary journal called "Deutescher Zuschauer". By this time her own involvement in the "Heckerzug" (uprising) and subsequent actions meant that she, too, was becoming something of a celebrity in revolutionary circles. As soon as she was released from the prison-fort in Freiburg, Amalie Struve returned to agitating for an insurrection. By this time the cause for the revolutionaries had become the "Reichsverfassungskampagne" ("Imperial Constitution campaign"), now that the "Frankfurt Constitution" put together by the democratically elected Frankfurt Parliament had been rejected by the two most powerful German states, Prussia and Austria, and the idealistically driven optimism that had characterised the outbreak of the March Revolution just over a year earlier had turned out to be misplaced.
Scot Bruce argues that: :More recently, prominent historians such as Thomas J. Knock, Arthur Walworth, and John Milton Cooper, among others, shied away from condemning Wilson and his peacemakers for extensive diplomatic failures in Paris. Instead, they framed Wilsonian progressivism, articulated through the League of Nations, as a comparatively enlightened framework tragically undermined by British and French machinations at the peace conference. ... Historian Margaret MacMillan, continued this analytical trend in her prize-winning book, Paris, 1919: Six Months That Changed the World (2001), which characterized Wilson as the frustrated idealist, unable to secure his progressive vision due to opposition from old-guard imperialists in his midst. While realists like Lloyd E. Ambrosius questioned the merits of defining Wilsonian progressivism too idealistically, the idea has persisted that well-intentioned U.S. delegates encountered staunch opposition to Wilson's proposals in Paris, and therefore compromised under pressure.
The hero of the film is Atossa who is the sister of the dying brother making two idealistically rare and odd and strange and hopeful promises. She sets out to travel to Berlin, Germany to first find the grave of Hitler who all believe does not exist and then to make the situation more round she continues with the second promise that remains a mystery until the final moment of the film. Atossa is passionate, sincere, daring, powerful and a well trained fighter (we see her fighting masterfully in a training in the first moments of the film where another fighting trainee tells her about the grave situation of her brother's fate). She encounters many unfortunate typical encounters on the streets of Berlin to finally finding the Rabbi (played by Vadim Glowna) who suggests to her a sight where Hitler could be buried under.
Scot Bruce argues that: :More recently, prominent historians such as Thomas J. Knock, Arthur Walworth, and John Milton Cooper, among others, shied away from condemning Wilson and his peacemakers for extensive diplomatic failures in Paris. Instead, they framed Wilsonian progressivism, articulated through the League of Nations, as a comparatively enlightened framework tragically undermined by British and French machinations at the peace conference....Historian Margaret MacMillan, continued this analytical trend in her prize-winning book, Paris, 1919: Six Months That Changed the World (2001), which characterized Wilson as the frustrated idealist, unable to secure his progressive vision due to opposition from old-guard imperialists in his midst. While realists like Lloyd E. Ambrosius questioned the merits of defining Wilsonian progressivism too idealistically, the idea has persisted that well-intentioned U.S. delegates encountered staunch opposition to Wilson's proposals in Paris, and therefore compromised under pressure. Even the great Wilson scholar, Arthur S. Link, subscribed to a version of this narrative.
Political naturalism is a minor political ideology and legal system which believes that there is a natural law, just and obvious to all, that crosses ideologies, faiths and personal thinking, that naturally guaranties justice. It is inspired by sociological naturalism, and scientific naturalism's belief that the precision of natural sciences can be applied to social sciences, and hence to practical social activities like politics and law. It may be seen as a natural law-based version of legalism/constitutionalism (especially of prescriptive constitutionalism, in the way it tries, idealistically, to make a constitution how it should justly be), and it bears relation with many constitutional monarchies (as in that system they too believe in rule of the law and in certain things who are naturally correct (like monarchy, monarchic institutions and traditions. The roots of this legal political ideology may be found in positive visions of natural law (like John Locke's and Rousseau's, and even in the Founding Fathers of the United States.

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