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词汇 universalize
释义

Definition of universalize in English:

universalize

(British universalise)
verb juːnɪˈvəːs(ə)lʌɪzˌjunəˈvərsəlaɪz
[with object]
  • 1Give a universal character or application to (something, especially something abstract)

    使(尤指抽象事物)一般化(或普遍化);使通用化

    theories that universalize experience

    使经验有普遍价值的理论。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • When we generalize from our ability to make the latter sort of decisions, we must value not only the ability to weigh options and universalize them but also the ability to engage the right affect, emotion, etc.
    • The question to be pressed, though, is whether those experiences can be universalized.
    • Trying to universalise this example hits a bit of a bump though.
    • Rather, I think it is intrinsic for humans to try to universalize experience into a form, because we are social creatures.
    • But gender relations cannot be universalized, and race relations also lack transhistorical necessity, so neither the standpoint of women nor of black women can claim epistemic privilege.
    • Can I universalize this, willing it to govern people in general?
    • I think your question is completely irrelevant unless we define some terms and desist from universalising the experiences of ‘us’ ‘here’ as something important or even philosophically interesting.
    • Here likenesses are employed by Van Helsing to severely diminish the assimilative potential of an Eastern culture, seen as incapable of the abstractions that universalize Western knowledge.
    • Our own historical moment offers any number of cases where the product of history is universalized as the human condition.
    • Phenomenology tends to universalise spatial constructs which a materialist history of spatial production such as Henri Lefebvre's The Production of Space would identify with a specific epoch and mode of production.
    • The discussion invokes the ethics of impartiality; those who believe in a universal code of ethics argue that a self-serving action that cannot be universalized is immoral.
    • Miller's attempt to universalize Quentin's guilt by comparing it to post-war Germany's guilt over the Holocaust seems unbelievably self-aggrandizing.
    • The collection offers a refreshing view of the stories of ‘strangers in the tower’; that is, it pulls from a variety of scholars without universalizing the experience of any.
    • The categorical imperative supports active euthanasia since no one would willfully universalize a rule which condemns people to unbearable pain before death.
    • As Wilson readily conceded, there was no attempt to universalize the principle of self-determination to apply, for example, to the Allies' dependent territories.
    • This article does not seek to universalize the Japanese experience, but neither does it attempt to pigeonhole the case as representing a unique set of properties that are attributable to the specificities of Japanese political economy.
    • Within the space of this typology, which objectifies and universalizes the sublime experience, there is a discontinuity between the first-person spectator and the third-person protagonist.
    • It universalises all our human experience of grief.
    • The use of the third person throughout each piece universalizes the experience in itself; there is no need for a conclusion that seems to deviate from the rest of the piece.
    • One can speak of a general hesitation before universalizing discourses as characteristic of the late-modern anxiety about narratives and systems of value.
    Synonyms
    give currency to, spread, propagate, give credence to, generalize
    1. 1.1 Bring into universal use; make available for all.
      使世界化;使普遍化
      attempts to universalize basic education

      使基础教育普及化的尝试。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • It has been shown through research the world over that there are huge social benefits from universalizing elementary education.
      • Kalam announced that a cess would be proposed on all central taxes to finance the commitment to universalise access to basic education.
      • Suppose you tried to universalize college education - how many people would actually go for it?

Derivatives

  • universalizability

  • nounjuːnɪˌvəːs(ə)lʌɪzəˈbɪlɪti
    • Viewed in this light, the emotions in general lack that property of universalizability which many philosophers have regarded as a sine qua non of the ethical.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Stevens argues that in Marxist theory, the transhistorical necessity of relations of production, and the universalizability of these relations, grounds the epistemic privilege of workers as the future universal class.
      • There's no mention of important ethical notions such as the distinction between hypothetical and categorical imperatives (crucial to much of what goes on in the book), or the criterion of universalisability.
  • universalization

  • noun juːnɪvəːs(ə)lʌɪˈzeɪʃ(ə)n
    • If it were not for universalization of letterforms through type, we wouldn't have the sort of conversations like this that the Internet, and bitmap, digital type, makes possible.
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Looked at from the standpoint of oppressed identities, the Marxist insistence upon the universality of the working class appeared, in the firmament of the 1960s, as no more than the false universalization of one particular interest.
      • The ideological characteristic of the model is manifested in various ways, mainly through the use of the three devices: normalization, universalization, and the language of power and authority.
      • In that interventionary spirit, then, I would like to offer some cautionary remarks regarding these critics' hasty and problematic celebration and universalization of disjuncture, postnationalism, and hybridity.
      • He does that through the employment of various ideological devices, mainly through normalization, universalization and twisted conceptualizations.

Definition of universalize in US English:

universalize

(British universalise)
verbˌyo͞onəˈvərsəlīzˌjunəˈvərsəlaɪz
[with object]
  • 1Give a universal character or application to (something, especially something abstract)

    使(尤指抽象事物)一般化(或普遍化);使通用化

    theories that universalize experience

    使经验有普遍价值的理论。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Miller's attempt to universalize Quentin's guilt by comparing it to post-war Germany's guilt over the Holocaust seems unbelievably self-aggrandizing.
    • Rather, I think it is intrinsic for humans to try to universalize experience into a form, because we are social creatures.
    • As Wilson readily conceded, there was no attempt to universalize the principle of self-determination to apply, for example, to the Allies' dependent territories.
    • Trying to universalise this example hits a bit of a bump though.
    • One can speak of a general hesitation before universalizing discourses as characteristic of the late-modern anxiety about narratives and systems of value.
    • The collection offers a refreshing view of the stories of ‘strangers in the tower’; that is, it pulls from a variety of scholars without universalizing the experience of any.
    • Can I universalize this, willing it to govern people in general?
    • Within the space of this typology, which objectifies and universalizes the sublime experience, there is a discontinuity between the first-person spectator and the third-person protagonist.
    • Our own historical moment offers any number of cases where the product of history is universalized as the human condition.
    • The categorical imperative supports active euthanasia since no one would willfully universalize a rule which condemns people to unbearable pain before death.
    • Here likenesses are employed by Van Helsing to severely diminish the assimilative potential of an Eastern culture, seen as incapable of the abstractions that universalize Western knowledge.
    • The discussion invokes the ethics of impartiality; those who believe in a universal code of ethics argue that a self-serving action that cannot be universalized is immoral.
    • Phenomenology tends to universalise spatial constructs which a materialist history of spatial production such as Henri Lefebvre's The Production of Space would identify with a specific epoch and mode of production.
    • It universalises all our human experience of grief.
    • But gender relations cannot be universalized, and race relations also lack transhistorical necessity, so neither the standpoint of women nor of black women can claim epistemic privilege.
    • The question to be pressed, though, is whether those experiences can be universalized.
    • The use of the third person throughout each piece universalizes the experience in itself; there is no need for a conclusion that seems to deviate from the rest of the piece.
    • This article does not seek to universalize the Japanese experience, but neither does it attempt to pigeonhole the case as representing a unique set of properties that are attributable to the specificities of Japanese political economy.
    • When we generalize from our ability to make the latter sort of decisions, we must value not only the ability to weigh options and universalize them but also the ability to engage the right affect, emotion, etc.
    • I think your question is completely irrelevant unless we define some terms and desist from universalising the experiences of ‘us’ ‘here’ as something important or even philosophically interesting.
    Synonyms
    give currency to, spread, propagate, give credence to, generalize
    1. 1.1 Bring into universal use; make available for all.
      使世界化;使普遍化
      attempts to universalize basic education

      使基础教育普及化的尝试。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • It has been shown through research the world over that there are huge social benefits from universalizing elementary education.
      • Kalam announced that a cess would be proposed on all central taxes to finance the commitment to universalise access to basic education.
      • Suppose you tried to universalize college education - how many people would actually go for it?
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