existentialist - definição. O que é existentialist. Significado, conceito
Diclib.com
Dicionário ChatGPT
Digite uma palavra ou frase em qualquer idioma 👆
Idioma:

Tradução e análise de palavras por inteligência artificial ChatGPT

Nesta página você pode obter uma análise detalhada de uma palavra ou frase, produzida usando a melhor tecnologia de inteligência artificial até o momento:

  • como a palavra é usada
  • frequência de uso
  • é usado com mais frequência na fala oral ou escrita
  • opções de tradução de palavras
  • exemplos de uso (várias frases com tradução)
  • etimologia

O que (quem) é existentialist - definição

FEMINIST MOVEMENT WHOSE STARTING POINT OF PHILOSOPHICAL THINKING MUST BE THE INDIVIDUAL
Existentialist feminism; Existential feminism

existentialist         
  • French philosopher, novelist, and playwright [[Albert Camus]].
  • alt=A simple book cover in green displays the name of the author and the book
  • [[Adolphe Menjou]] (''left'') and [[Kirk Douglas]] (''right'') in ''[[Paths of Glory]]'' (1957)
  • French philosophers [[Jean-Paul Sartre]] and [[Simone de Beauvoir]].
  • [[Sisyphus]], the symbol of the absurdity of existence, painting by [[Franz Stuck]] (1920).
PHILOSOPHICAL AND LITERARY CURRENT
Existentialist; Existential philosophy; Existential; Educational existentialism; Existential dread; Being for others; Existentialism and Human Emotions; Existentialists; Existential theatre; Urban-existentialism; French Existentialism; Abstract existentialism; Existensialism; Excerstential; Modern thought; Existentialist ethics; Existential angst; Existential thoughts; Existential thought; Philosophy of existence; Existentially; Existentialisms; Existentialist dilemma; "Existential" Angst; Existentalism; Existentialist novel; Existentialist fiction; Existencialism; Existentialist dread; Existential views; French existentialism; History of existentialism; Religious existentialism; Existentialistic; Criticism of existentialism
(existentialists)
1.
An existentialist is a person who agrees with the philosophy of existentialism.
N-COUNT
2.
If you describe a person or their philosophy as existentialist, you mean that their beliefs are based on existentialism.
...existentialist theories.
ADJ
existential         
  • French philosopher, novelist, and playwright [[Albert Camus]].
  • alt=A simple book cover in green displays the name of the author and the book
  • [[Adolphe Menjou]] (''left'') and [[Kirk Douglas]] (''right'') in ''[[Paths of Glory]]'' (1957)
  • French philosophers [[Jean-Paul Sartre]] and [[Simone de Beauvoir]].
  • [[Sisyphus]], the symbol of the absurdity of existence, painting by [[Franz Stuck]] (1920).
PHILOSOPHICAL AND LITERARY CURRENT
Existentialist; Existential philosophy; Existential; Educational existentialism; Existential dread; Being for others; Existentialism and Human Emotions; Existentialists; Existential theatre; Urban-existentialism; French Existentialism; Abstract existentialism; Existensialism; Excerstential; Modern thought; Existentialist ethics; Existential angst; Existential thoughts; Existential thought; Philosophy of existence; Existentially; Existentialisms; Existentialist dilemma; "Existential" Angst; Existentalism; Existentialist novel; Existentialist fiction; Existencialism; Existentialist dread; Existential views; French existentialism; History of existentialism; Religious existentialism; Existentialistic; Criticism of existentialism
1.
Existential means relating to human existence and experience. (FORMAL)
Existential questions requiring religious answers still persist.
ADJ: ADJ n
2.
You use existential to describe fear, anxiety, and other feelings that are caused by thinking about human existence and death. (FORMAL)
'What if there's nothing left at all?' he cries, lost in some intense existential angst.
ADJ: ADJ n
existential         
  • French philosopher, novelist, and playwright [[Albert Camus]].
  • alt=A simple book cover in green displays the name of the author and the book
  • [[Adolphe Menjou]] (''left'') and [[Kirk Douglas]] (''right'') in ''[[Paths of Glory]]'' (1957)
  • French philosophers [[Jean-Paul Sartre]] and [[Simone de Beauvoir]].
  • [[Sisyphus]], the symbol of the absurdity of existence, painting by [[Franz Stuck]] (1920).
PHILOSOPHICAL AND LITERARY CURRENT
Existentialist; Existential philosophy; Existential; Educational existentialism; Existential dread; Being for others; Existentialism and Human Emotions; Existentialists; Existential theatre; Urban-existentialism; French Existentialism; Abstract existentialism; Existensialism; Excerstential; Modern thought; Existentialist ethics; Existential angst; Existential thoughts; Existential thought; Philosophy of existence; Existentially; Existentialisms; Existentialist dilemma; "Existential" Angst; Existentalism; Existentialist novel; Existentialist fiction; Existencialism; Existentialist dread; Existential views; French existentialism; History of existentialism; Religious existentialism; Existentialistic; Criticism of existentialism
[??gz?'st?n?(?)l]
¦ adjective
1. relating to existence.
Logic (of a proposition) affirming or implying the existence of a thing.
2. Philosophy concerned with existentialism.
Derivatives
existentially adverb

Wikipédia

Feminist existentialism

Feminism is a collection of movements aimed at defining, establishing, and defending equal political, economic, and social rights for women. Existentialism is a philosophical and cultural movement which holds that the starting point of philosophical thinking must be the individual and the experiences of the individual, that moral thinking and scientific thinking together are not sufficient for understanding all of human existence, and, therefore, that a further set of categories, governed by the norm of authenticity, is necessary to understand human existence. (Authenticity, in the context of existentialism, is to recognize the responsibility we have for our existence.) This philosophy analyzes relationships between the individual and things, or other human beings, and how they limit or condition choice.

Existentialist feminists emphasize concepts such as freedom, interpersonal relationships, and the experience of living as a human body. They value the capacity for radical change, but recognize that factors such as self-deception and the anxiety caused by the possibility of change can limit it. Many are dedicated to exposing and undermining socially imposed gender roles and cultural constructs limiting women's self-determination, and criticize post-structuralist feminists who deny the intrinsic freedom of individual women. A woman who makes considered choices regarding her way of life and suffers the anxiety associated with that freedom, isolation, or nonconformity, yet remains free, demonstrates the tenets of existentialism. The novels of Kate Chopin, Doris Lessing, Joan Didion, Margaret Atwood, and Margaret Drabble include such existential heroines.

Exemplos do corpo de texto para existentialist
1. For an existentialist hero, he seems very amiable.
2. Core Europe, at least, is experiencing one of its periodic existentialist crises.
3. His existentialist ideas made him an icon for a whole generation of intellectuals.
4. Does this make Ernst Lubitsch, the director of the film, a proto–existentialist?" We think it certainly does.
5. You might be reading the latest novel by Kingsley Amis, or perhaps Colin Wilson‘s existentialist tract The Outsider.