Individualist in a sentence as a noun

The mind of an individualist is a scary place.

When you think about it, an ideal education for an individualist social critic. Whose career can then be presented as 'eccentric' and thus the threat immunised.

Individual B is an individualist and holds no special affection for his group relative to any other. Will A be more vulnerable to stereotype thread than B?

The philosophical dimension of a weighted democracy doing better what kings and emperors through antiquity failed to do is a powerfully individualist statement. And there is so much more that has to be done.

Personally I think systems thinking needs to be more prevalent in business today, but we're still a very individualist society so it's very difficult to make the leap. Something to consider as well.

Note that you'll never see any posts on HN from me engaging in any flamewars about Apple, because as an individualist, I believe that my preferences are exactly that: my preferences. Others are allowed to have theirs.

The existence of rockstars provides fodder for individualist ideologies. Many people are more collectivist, so therefore feel the need to dispute the existence of rockstars.

It's easy to trumpet individual choice as all important, but reality is not an individualist pipe dream. The average person is not well informed about dietary science and never will be, and many children cannot make a choice at all, let alone an informed one.

Cultural differences as well like maybe there's some positive aspects to a more collectivits society vs an individualist society like America. It's hard to articulate how much impact living abroad had.

Every example you give is in terms of an individualist view point, and yet understanding what makes a "functioning society" requires some conception of a common good. It is impossible for any significant portion of society to be treated by the very best doctors, or to send their children to the very best schools.

Individualist in a sentence as an adjective

The collectivist/individualist conflict in this article is odd. On the one hand, she seems to be opposed to collective responsibility: Men supporting the notion that their female significant other can contribute as an equal partner financially or be the bread-winner of the household...

However, the individualist in me really likes being able to install my own software on my own hardware. The GPL license, specifically in the areas of a system needed to boot and minimally run, has successfully helped me do this several times in the past, by pushing vendors to deliver source for something that they probably wouldn't have otherwise.

A shorter version would be: Americans are generally individualist Protestant technologist capitalists. Like any other culture these defining traits bring inherent strengths, and unavoidable weaknesses.

My dad loved the Marine Corps, and loved America's capitalist, individualist culture; however, there is an inherent irony that the military's system is very different from the American system.

A few years ago I pulled up to a four-way stop on my Vespa Granturismo at the same time that there were 3 other Vespa riders pulled up to the other three sides and I thought to myself, "wow, just look at all of the quirky individualist non-conformists!"

At the end of the article, the author explains how "once a good developer recognizes his/her own value, [she turns] to either an individualist-mercenary mindset or a collectivist guild-like mindset." He elaborates on the "guild-like mindset": > The other kind of developer turns to guild-like structures, which serve as centers of balance-of-power politics in the constant wars against the developer-capitalists.

Classical liberalism is decidedly anti-collectivist and modern conservatives are much more collectivist than individualist: "support our troops", faith-based education, corporations as people. Classical liberal ideology predates the modern conservative and liberal thought that grew from it and you can't just decide to associate him with modern ideology.

Sure, for a rugged individualist who wants nothing to do with broader society, America might be better, but this is really a romantic fringe case, and most of rural or inner- America suffers from widespread poverty, high unemployment, drug abuse, etc. And it's less relevant as jobs and people continue to concentrate into large cities.

Americans are extraordinarily individualist. Asians are extraordinarily communitarian.

The problems are not going to be solved until culturally we come to a common understanding about what the concentration of wealth is actually doing to the country, so the zeitgeist can move past this sort of ra-ra Fox News pro-corporate anti-socialist propaganda that millions of people believe on principle because it appeals emotionally to their rugged individualist values, but actually only serves as an idealogical wedge to distract the proletariat while the oligarchs continue with business as usual lining their pockets behind the scenes.

Individualist definitions

noun

a person who pursues independent thought or action

adjective

marked by or expressing individuality; "an individualistic way of dressing"

See also: individualistic