(verb) to make faulty or defective; impair / (verb) to debase in moral or aesthetic status / (verb) to make ineffective
This was not Marx’s meaning, in his own historical writing, yet the error vitiates much latter-day ‘Marxist’ writing
This was not Marx’s meaning, in his own historical writing, yet the error vitiates much latter-day ‘Marxist’ writing
(adj) another term for millenarian (the religious doctrine of a thousand-year period of peace and prosperity)
Moreover, abject ‘adjustment’ to suffering and want at times may indicate a sense of reality as impaired as that of the chiliast.
Moreover, abject ‘adjustment’ to suffering and want at times may indicate a sense of reality as impaired as that of the chiliast.
(noun) a usually short sermon / (noun) a lecture or discourse on or of a moral theme / (noun) an inspirational catchphrase or platitude. homiletic: the art of preaching or writing sermons
with an eye for Brechtian values – the fatalism, the irony in the face of Establishment homilies, the tenacity of self-preservation.
with an eye for Brechtian values – the fatalism, the irony in the face of Establishment homilies, the tenacity of self-preservation.
(adjective) dear treasured / (adjective) ; discreetly cautious; as / (adjective) hesitant and vigilant about dangers and risks / (adjective) slow to grant, accept, or expend
Luddism [...] was a form of direct action which arose in specific conditions, which was often highly organized and under the protection of the local community, and as to which we should be chary of generalization.
Luddism [...] was a form of direct action which arose in specific conditions, which was often highly organized and under the protection of the local community, and as to which we should be chary of generalization.
(noun) a lapse in succession during which there is no person in whom a title is vested / (noun) temporary inactivity; suspension
freedom of the press, of public meeting, of trade union organization, of political organization and of election, were either severely limited or in abeyance
freedom of the press, of public meeting, of trade union organization, of political organization and of election, were either severely limited or in abeyance
(verb) to catch or hold in or as if in a net; enmesh / (verb) to prevent or impede the free play of; confine
To the founding fathers of the United States, breaking free from the trammels of precedent, it seemed sufficient to find certain truths ‘self-evident’.
To the founding fathers of the United States, breaking free from the trammels of precedent, it seemed sufficient to find certain truths ‘self-evident’.
eager or quick to argue or fight; aggressively defiant
even before Paine had adopted so truculent a tone, his writings had served as a touchstone to distinguish different emphases among reformers
even before Paine had adopted so truculent a tone, his writings had served as a touchstone to distinguish different emphases among reformers
(verb) to invoke evil on; curse / (verb) to utter curses
It is sometimes less an argument than an affirmation, an imprecation, a leap of feeling.
It is sometimes less an argument than an affirmation, an imprecation, a leap of feeling.
(noun) a usually short sermon / (noun) a lecture or discourse on or of a moral theme / (noun) an inspirational catchphrase or platitude. homiletic: the art of preaching or writing sermons
They offered a direct negative to the homilies of ‘supply-and-demand’.
They offered a direct negative to the homilies of ‘supply-and-demand’.
(verb) to make faulty or defective; impair / (verb) to debase in moral or aesthetic status / (verb) to make ineffective
‘There is the great mistake’ – weavers, who wove cloth when they themselves were in rags, were forcibly educated in the vitiating error of the orthodox political economy.
‘There is the great mistake’ – weavers, who wove cloth when they themselves were in rags, were forcibly educated in the vitiating error of the orthodox political economy.