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"individualist" Definitions
  1. a person who is different from other people and does things in their own way
  2. a person who believes that individual people in society should have the right to make their own decisions, etc, rather than be controlled by the government

142 Sentences With "individualist"

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

If trust in a central authority could be replaced with trust in computer code and mathematics, users could cut out the middleman and deal directly with each other, rugged individualist to rugged individualist.
The North American style is more of an individualist game.
This rigidly individualist understanding of rights is a bipartisan phenomenon.
That is, you can be a conservative and an individualist.
As the work develops, each viola breaks into increasingly individualist flights.
For conservatives, it was sacrilege, an offense against the individualist ethic.
"Hopper is this rugged, masculine individualist in the first season," recalls Harbour.
It's part of the paradigm of this society to be an individualist.
But it will demand the kind of solidarity our individualist ethos denies.
He was an individualist but much of his music is hauntingly beautiful.
One thoroughly worldly individualist was Mariana Sadovska, a Ukrainian musician based in Germany.
Do you think our hyper-individualist culture has set us up for disappointment?
More precisely, prosocial attitudes predict depression, which is in contrast to individualist attitudes.
The individualist West had always been me-focused, but this was something new.
But this frame of change as arising out of my own individualist workaholic perfectionism?
According to Raeburn: Chick's an individualist, a loner protesting even Protestant forms of organization.
The story he tells is resolutely individualist, a tragedy centered on a great man.
This individualist attitude toward picking the "best" school for kids also reproduces racial inequality.
The nation's culture began its steady journey from a communal to an individualist culture.
But I can't quite shake the individualist inclinations my American upbringing instilled in me.
The individualist culture is about being creative and striving for success on your own.
Delegate more instead of being the rugged individualist who goes at it alone.3.
So basically, the person emerges from an individualist vision and acquires a vaster conscience.
If Trump is a narcissist, he's a hyper-individualist who also speaks for the mob.
Mr. King's individualist attitude extends to renting clothes, which he said he would never do.
It sounds silly, but what she actually means is true if you are an arch-individualist.
"It's a very individualist personal quest, which is much more of a Hollywood thing," he said.
Freelancers are 2020's rugged individualist frontiersmen, living off the fat of corporations, owing nobody anything.
Both individualist and collective harmony cultures evolved out of the honor culture, which is essentially tribal.
I'm an individualist, I don't need the government to give me healthcare, I'll go earn it!
Then again, being Brian Clough, he was a paradox, and in many ways a raging individualist himself.
Any game with a player who affects the world, must, by definition, be individualist in some degree.
There is no place for the individualist who makes a variety of bets at his own discretion.
But they need to address these constraints as a means to an individualist rather than a collectivist end.
Where the individualist thinking might help you recognize mistakes, it doesn't help you model how things should be.
That an observation so banal could generate so much controversy speaks to how deep the individualist ethos goes.
Unlike many, this approach to free improvisation is not individualist or strident or perhaps even consciously avant-garde.
The American as individualist frontiersman, the cowboy forever riding the range—that's the NRA's take on American exceptionalism.
" He also talks through his love for Amy Winehouse, telling Flanagan that "she was the last real individualist around.
People feel a little better as a result, because loneliness, abandonment, is the great fear in our individualist age.
This is purposeful; it helps the individualist connotations of the mechanics portrayed to be reflected in the contextual narrative.
America has always been a strongly individualist country, and self-reliance has always figured strongly into our national myth.
" The Times's Lawrence J. Quirk quoted him approvingly and wrote: "Dillman is an individualist and a breaker of rules.
A dyed-in-the-wool libertarian might use Mr Sunkara's nostrum as a justification for an individualist worldview instead.
The problem is individualist workaholic perfectionism I mean, at first I liked these books, their peppy exhortations to try harder.
For Omidian, community care is an especially powerful form of care in marginalized communities that are more collectivist than individualist.
They reflect the rugged individualism of a very individualist candidate, and point to the fundamental paradox of the Cruz candidacy.
Or a rugged individualist who follows the beat of their own heart and is willing to live off the grid.
I think we need to step back from our individualist ways of thinking and ask if they're working for us.
Simultaneously individualist and collectivist, as well as both sober and psychedelic, it was cultural, economic, sexual, hedonistic, spiritual, and transcendental.
I've always been such an individualist, and learning to have roots is something that's coming to me later in life.
And yet, unlike many conservatives, he's not that much of an individualist because he's very much rooted in black communalist traditions.
Different sorts of Brexit lay the foundations for different national futures: open or closed, free-market or protectionist, individualist or paternalist.
Marçal is fully convincing when she argues that centuries of individualist thinkers have worked from a limited understanding of human beings.
In other words, Bitcoin is filled with people who believe in individualist, market-led solutions to collective problems of public import.
Judge Thomas was an apostle of individualist self-help — blacks could advance only by pulling themselves up from their own bootstraps.
William John Henry Boetcker, a religious leader in the early 1900s whose conservative, individualist philosophies were in line with Reagan's worldview.
In the book, I argue that the West is basically an individualist culture, and that causes us all sorts of problems.
The study found that almost everyone cares about preserving more lives than fewer, but that people in individualist cultures value this more.
As Mr. Vance notes, even that ultra-free-market, anti-big-government individualist Friedrich Hayek understood that government had health care obligations.
Because of the traditional "rugged individualist" sensibility among ecologists, researchers often developed their own ways of studying a species or habitat, Hampton said.
Between Beyoncé's regal glow and Hannah's realness there is a lot of inspiration to channel feminine divinity and make practical, individualist choices, too.
Yet even Scalia, in backing the individualist version of the right to bear arms, noted at length that the right is not unlimited.
The dual teamkill is the natural antidote to the individualist fantasy that one person is carrying or losing a game for a team.
Naismith himself liked the maneuver, but others in his Muscularly Christian cohort found the move ostentatious and thought it encouraged rough, individualist play.
Instead, Lady Bird's path to growing up and self-acceptance runs right through the most atomized, individualist understanding of one's relationship to the world.
If ever there was a rugged individualist, if ever there was someone who embodied everything good about Texas and feminism both — If that's possible!
He is a rugged individualist with a wild temper and a host of demons, a charismatic storyteller, a former artist, and a depressive alcoholic.
The survey found that members of the individualist group reached the optimal solution more often than the constant collaborators, but had a poorer average result.
Several NGO groups, whose work is often a lifeline for migrants, urged activists not to take individualist radical actions or partake in illegal border crossings.
So although Hong Kong lost some of its most productive people, it ended up with an increasingly independent, individualist, confident yet potentially restive middle class.
The capitalist, individualist narrative of "personal responsibility" as a defining feature of the American cultural ethos is one that underpins nearly every American cultural institution.
That is the individualist code of Western capitalism, as it was preached by the philosopher Adam Smith (1723-1790), the father of free-market economics.
As the commune culture in Taos began to fall apart in the 1980s it was replaced by individualist, off-the-grid experimental spaces, he said.
He has demystified the very concept of a hero, as well as the individualist fantasies video games eagerly offer to their players on silver platters.
The culture of individualist parenting makes clear: Parents have a duty to exercise choice to the bounds of their resources, even at the expense of others.
It is a very individualist and deeply ingrained cultural desire, this need to capture the entire world in a book, to straddle it with one's words.
Blight concedes that Douglass held many individualist views, but argues that the Sandefur interpretation fails to acknowledge the many ways in which he went beyond individualism.
That second part is crucial, he said, because typography tends to be an individualist and hypercritical field in which peers regularly try to outwit one another.
Frederick's spurning of the family business helped fuel the disappointment that Fred Chase Koch, a self-made man and rugged individualist, felt toward his oldest son.
I think, even though everyone around me is clapping, I will give this celebration an individualist touch, and send a hearty thumbs-up in his direction.
Fundamentally, this is a clash between the rugged individualist view of self-sufficiency and a collaborative view of the responsibility of the group for shared objectives.
Ash Ketchum, Misty and Brock, the holy trinity of Pokémon characters, exhibit an individualist way of life appreciated by many today through a love of lone travelling.
In addition to his solution, which has been adopted by teen label Abercrombie & Fitch, retailers are using several tactics to serve a more individualist shopper with lower risk.
Ultimately he will have about six acres, just about the size that Mr. Lambert, a fierce individualist, and his life and business partner, Rosalind Hall, can farm themselves.
Tender and affable though the sendup was, the myth being evoked — that of the rugged individualist galloping to the world's rescue — remains as politically potent as any in America.
Peter Dunning is the grizzled, 70-year-old, fiercely individualist owner of Mile Hill Farm, a 187-acre organic farm in Vermont where he raises livestock and lives alone.
It sticks, especially in France, to define a political-social culture: in favour of free markets and trade, liberal in matters of speech and publication, individualist rather than communitarian.
Silvia Venturini Fendi has been an individualist for far longer than it has been popular, following her own offbeat course wherever it may lead her and her men's wear.
In her long history of liberalism, Rosenblatt's treatment of the twentieth century remains more or less restricted to showing the triumph of laissez-faire and individualist liberalism in America.
If you were raised in hard-assed individualist United States versus East Asia's collectivist culture, that may produce different ideas about cooperation and how you interact with a crowd.
It is founded on the belief that people are inherently good and are at their best when they are self-reliant and individualist, free from the corruption of society.
I once had a friendly debate with a peer, an individualist type who loves Merle Haggard, straight shooting, and driving long distances over the out-west neo-dust bowl.
We at Weave — and all of us — need to illuminate their example, synthesize their values so we understand what it means to be a relationalist and not an individualist.
In Young Ahmed, if the correctional facility fails in rehabilitation, it is through the individualist terms of the drama, as exemplified by a conversation between the state psychologist and Ahmed.
He was an absurdly talented forward, an unerringly lethal finisher whenever a chance presented itself, but also an economical player who was as notable for industrious teamwork as individualist magic.
The things we deride as being "thirsty" are the things that lack value in the eyes of the macho, leather-faced American individualist, so they invite macho, stone-faced derision.
This leads back to my open question: Can we foster a culture in which veracity is more valuable than one's cultural identity as a liberal or libertarian, group hugger or individualist…?
In America, individualist anarchists like Benjamin Tucker explicitly identified themselves as socialists even as they advocated "a perfectly free market," in which only force or fraud would be out of bounds.
The individual — the individual customer, the individual garment, the individualist look rather than the one dictated by a fashion designer or a fashion magazine — is at the root of their success.
Its early intellectual prophets, such as Ralph Waldo Emerson and Unitarian divine William Ellery Channing, pronounced a new individualist gospel of personal transcendence, and profound distrust of conventional forms of social obligation.
Like the Los Angeles Clippers for example, who, for International Women's Day, decided to nominate three of their favorite feminists: Maya Angelou, Anne Frank and everyone's favorite objectivist rationalist individualist, Ayn Rand.
Its hero is both a stubborn individualist and a team player, the quiet central figure in a group portrait of square-jawed, clean-cut guys and their supportive, stoically suffering wives. O.K.?
Riso-Hudson Enneagram Type Indicator The RHETI or Enneagram test is split into eight personality types: the peacemaker, the achiever, the helper, the reformer, the individualist, the investigator, the enthusiast, and the challenger.
Individualist parenting has encouraged mothers to trust their own judgment more than that of experts and believe they can manage their way out of disease risk, even as their choices present risk to others.
Though our culture mythicizes the rugged individualist ethos of the Wild West, about half of all land west of the Great Plains is actually owned by the federal government and controlled by Washington agencies.
For a century and longer, the individualist quality in U.S. workers has been falling away as Americans have moved to the city and labor become more about big companies and playing well in the sandbox.
The branding of the Hollywood conservative as a rugged individualist has been used to great advantage by Hollywood's most famous conservatives, including John Wayne, Ronald Reagan, Charlton Heston, Dennis Hopper, Jon Voight, and Clint Eastwood.
They interpret the transformation of the European world as the fall of an ancient religious order and, depending who tells the tale, as the rise of a soulless individualist materialism, or something of the kind.
The story that Gerwig's film wants us to own — the story that so many redemptive, individualist readings of the novel push us toward — is the one where there are survivors, singular women who somehow escape.
And the smooth, impersonal and lucrative amiability shown on the face Switzerland turns to the world in these matters has been backed up by a dead-eyed animus towards any individualist rocking the boats at home.
The New Health Care The basic structure of the American health care system, in which most people have private insurance through their jobs, might seem historically inevitable, consistent with the capitalistic, individualist ethos of the nation.
This kind of individualist attitude has become a template from which generations of artists have looked to for guidance, from underground heroes like Broken Social Scene and Califone to mainstream breakthroughs like Radiohead and No Doubt.
I believe their decisions are less about how informed they are and more about the culture of what I term individualist parenting — one that insists parents are personally responsible for their own children, but not other children.
Sadly, the very thing that makes Demeny voting desirable — the political and cultural weakness of the family in an aging and individualist society — makes it hard to imagine how it could ever get off the ground politically.
The Sophocles tale not only comes out of the Western canon but its notion of the headstrong individualist who probes and questions and tempts fate is convenient shorthand for the would-be tradition-killers of Western modernity.
It transforms a stolen history into a portrait of sci-fi heroism through a character whose superhero mantle is not a thematic externalization of psychosis disconnected from "real identity," as is the case with most superheroes in the Western individualist paradigm.
Now admittedly, The Outer Worlds is using the mask-off avarice of corporate management in that period to tell a story about class relations in an era when most of us have been conditioned to think in reflexively individualist terms.
In Feminism for the 99%: A Manifesto, authors Cinzia Arruzza, Tithi Bhattacharya, and Nancy Fraser argue that liberal feminism—a version of feminism that encourages women to pursue equality with men through individualist and often careerist endeavors—is in decline.
Take the ride-sharing application Uber, which is characterized by a strongly individualist but very exarkic philosophy — Uber drivers rely on the network to function, yet compete fiercely against one another (and against unionized taxi drivers) to make their living.
First, there is a divide between an individualist attitude, which places a premium on individual autonomy, and a communitarian attitude, in which the community or nation is in this together and sometimes needs to make individual sacrifices for the greater good.
It was the pain of also being caught up in a visibly unequal and brutally success-oriented world, of being told to strive for roles and lives that they knew, in their child's hearts, were lonely and disconnected, punishingly individualist and heartbreaking.
There might be some truth to that: Although Trump's name is never mentioned in the play, Angels in America's dissection of the Republican Party — its isolationist, individualist policies and strong personalities — provides a sort of road map toward our current political moment.
Liz Lemon is the kind of individualist feminist who likes to stick it to the man while playing it safe, who knows that being a woman is "the worst" because of "society," but does not seem concerned with making that society better for anyone else.
This group updated and extended many of the core tenets of post-New Deal liberalism, especially the emphasis on technocratic expertise, individualist solutions to structural problems, growth over redistribution, and development of strong partnerships between public and private sectors, particularly nonprofits, businesses, and foundations.
Whatever its other legacies may prove to be, classical liberalism—the public philosophy that organizes social relations around the principles of individualist market exchange—is looking more and more like a recipe for environmental catastrophe, as reports of accelerating climate change become steadily more dire.
Australians often remark on the American love affair with individual rights over the collective (it's what explains American gun laws, they correctly note), and on my trip home, I again saw how much of American life continues to be shaped by that individualist ethos.
"The first act of revolution is to get together with others because the system wants you alone, it wants you to be an individualist," said Cristian Diaz, one of roughly 2000,000 people who gathered on a balmy afternoon on Saturday in the Yungay neighborhood in central Santiago.
But in America, at least, libertarianism is more associated with the right, partly because the whole idea of limited government has played into the hands of conservatives who are less interested in the much-debated individualist philosophy of small-l libertarianism than in perpetuating their own power.
A 213-year-old dreadlocked American who went by the name John Galton—a reference to the individualist hero of Ayn Rand's Atlas Shrugged—was gunned down at the gate of a home he'd rented in a rough neighborhood high above Acapulco on the first day of February.
By doing that, the Moms have not only shown how society's deepest conceptions of what it means to be a "good mother" are always anchored to the presumption of material and racial privileges; they have also revealed (and rejected) the harmful prescriptions of capitalism's rugged-individualist model of motherhood.
It's such a seductive idea that it's become the rallying cry of what Cabanas and Illouz refer to as the "personal society"—therapeutic, individualist, and atomized—over a more collectivist one—the sort in which we're supposed to care about the people we spend our time with, too.
As Mr. Tuccille (pronounced too-CHILLY) told the tale in "It Usually Begins With Ayn Rand: A Libertarian Odyssey" (21989), he was a disaffected Roman Catholic looking for a new faith when he discovered the writings of Ayn Rand and her radically individualist philosophy, which she called objectivism.
In 2010, when Facebook COO Sheryl Sandberg launched the Lean In franchise, her individualist handbook of corporate success, with a viral TED talk, she was mainly offering C-suite variations on what was by then a generation's worth of self-healing feminist counsel aimed at getting ahead and staying there.
As a result, the end of this movie ties everything up in knots, first seeming like a relatively straightforward denunciation of collectivist economics, then switching over to a satire of individualist systems, before ultimately landing on the idea that Jesus Christ himself was, at the very least, a bit of a socialist.
" Nonetheless, Jean Seaton, a professor of media history at the University of Westminster and director of the Orwell Prize for political writing, said, "It's quite paradoxical that Marx, the anti-individualist, the great generator of collectivist ideas in which you sacrifice the individual to the greater good, has to be protected so much himself.
" He references his newfound individualist politics with the line "Not worried about some image that I gotta keep up," something he's been talking about publicly on Twitter: "And any fan of me wants Ye to be Ye even when they don't agree because I represent the fact that they can be themselves even when people don't agree with them.
When Barack Obama said in 2012 that everyone owes their success to others and that "if you've got a business, you didn't build that," it became one of his most famous (and infamous) remarks because there's no greater insult to a proud individualist than the idea that their lives are more the product of circumstance than sweat.
With particular attention to the technologically intrusive surveillance-state aspects of Taiwan's response—notably, its real-time integration of national health care databases with customs and travel records and its use of government-issued cell phones to remotely monitor quarantine orders—we keep seeing the culturally embedded assumption that East Asian-style state social control just won't fly in the good old, individualist, government-wary, freedom-loving United States.
Had the British won, we might now be taught about a fight between brave British emancipators and indigenous slaveholders, with the black slaves who defected to the British-loyalist side seen as self-emancipators, as the blacks who defected to the Union Army are now, and with Washington's and Jefferson's rhetoric of liberty shown the same disdain we have for the not-very-different libertarian and individualist rhetoric of their heirs in the Confederacy.
Even before Lasch's book, Ronald Reagan, during his first run for president, held up an actual career criminal — a con woman, identity thief and suspected kidnapper believed to have bilked the government of untold thousands of dollars — as a symbol of excess, conjuring around her a world of fantastical "welfare queens": enemies of the bootstrapping individualist spirit of America, coddled and demanding and overly dependent on programs they were, in fact, legally entitled to use.
" In the wide-ranging interview, Dylan also touched on his admiration for the late Amy Winehouse, calling her "The last real individualist around"; his and George Harrison's abortive bid years ago to record with Elvis Presley, ("He (Elvis) did show up; it was us that didn't"); and the power of early rock and roll music, ("Rock and roll was a dangerous weapon, chrome plated, it exploded like the speed of light, it reflected the times, and especially the presence of the atomic bomb, which had preceded it by several years.

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