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14 Νοε 2017 · ideology. (n.) 1796, "science of ideas," originally "philosophy of the mind which derives knowledge from the senses" (as opposed to metaphysics), from French idéologie "study or science of ideas," coined by French philosopher Destutt de Tracy (1754-1836) from idéo- "of ideas," from Greek idea (see idea) + -logie (see -logy).
- Français (French)
Signification de ideology: idéologie; En 1796, « science des...
- Deutsch (German)
ideology (n.) 1796 wurde der Begriff "Wissenschaft der...
- 한국어 (Korean)
ideology 뜻: 관념론; 1796년, "아이디어의 과학", 원래 "감각으로부터 지식을 얻는 마음의...
- Ides
ides. (n.) "middle day of a Roman month," early 14c., from...
- Cosmopolitan
cosmopolitan. (adj.). 1815, "free from local, provincial, or...
- Ideological
Entries linking to ideological. ideology (n.) 1796, "science...
- Français (French)
28 Σεπ 2017 · Entries linking to ideological. ideology (n.) 1796, "science of ideas," originally "philosophy of the mind which derives knowledge from the senses" (as opposed to metaphysics), from French idéologie "study or science of ideas," coined by French philosopher Destutt de Tracy (1754-1836) from idéo- "of ideas," from Greek idea (see idea) + -logie ...
4 ημέρες πριν · Ideology, a form of social or political philosophy, or a system of ideas, that aspires both to explain the world and to change it. The word was introduced in the 18th century by the French philosopher A.-L.-C. Destutt de Tracy as a short name for what he called his ‘science of ideas.’
Antoine Destutt de Tracy coined the term ideology. The term ideology originates from French idéologie, itself deriving from combining Greek: idéā (ἰδέα, 'notion, pattern'; close to the Lockean sense of idea) and -logíā (-λογῐ́ᾱ, 'the study of').
The chapter discusses the conceptual origins of ideology as a term that described ideology as positive science, which analysed thoughts and ideas, ideology in analogy to sociology, the science of ideas, and the science of society respectively.
8 Ιαν 2022 · The history of ideology traces itself back to 1796, when Destutt de Tracy used the term as meaning a “science of ideas” (Kennedy 1979; Lichtheim 1965). Napoleon, and later Marx, took the term as a pejorative descriptor against his opponents as ideologues (Drucker 1972).
Science and Ideology. This article illustrates some of the relationships between science and ideologies. It discusses how science has been enlisted to support particular ideologies and how ideologies have influenced the processes and interpretations of scientific inquiry. An example from the biological sciences illustrates this.