conceptualism

English

Etymology

From conceptual +‎ -ism.

Noun

conceptualism (countable and uncountable, plural conceptualisms)

  1. The art movement towards conceptual art.
  2. (philosophy) A theory, intermediate between realism and nominalism, that the mind has the power of forming for itself general conceptions of individual or single objects; the doctrine that universals have an existence in the mind apart from any concrete embodiment.
    • 1853, Victor Cousin, Lectures on the True, the Beautiful, and the Good:
      We have thus returned, then, to that conceptualism of the middle age, which, concentrating truth within the human intelligence, makes the nature of things a phantom of intelligence projecting itself everywhere out of itself []

Derived terms

Translations

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Romanian

Etymology

Borrowed from French conceptualisme. By surface analysis, conceptual +‎ -ism.

Noun

conceptualism n (uncountable)

  1. conceptualism

Declension

Declension of conceptualism
singular only indefinite definite
nominative-accusative conceptualism conceptualismul
genitive-dative conceptualism conceptualismului
vocative conceptualismule