Idealisation in a sentence as a noun

When listing pros and cons of doctor led care, we get an idealisation.

The article is - sadly - a lie. There's an idealisation of productivity, which has somehow become correlated with IQ.

By Amdahl's law, that idealisation assumes that your program is totally parallelisable.

Even at 100 samples its obvious that our idealisation of percentage and what happens in reality do not marry up neatly...to make a very crude software analogy what about those 1 in 10,000 bugs?

" There is no more radical cure than Thucydides for the lamentably rose-coloured idealisation of the Greeks which the "classically-cultured" stripling bears with him into life, as a reward for his public school training.

I speculate this is related to messaging and disinformation campaigns from entrenched interests, but maybe youthful idealisation and generalized ignorance is a larger contributor...

When constructing a model, the following idealisation is made: certain facts which are only known with a certain degree of probability or with a certain degree of accuracy, are considered to be "absolutely" correct and are accepted as "axioms".

“The moving sofa problem or sofa problem is a two-dimensional idealisation of real-life furniture-moving problems and asks for the rigid two-dimensional shape of largest area A that can be maneuvered through an L-shaped planar region with legs of unit width.

Idealisation definitions

noun

(psychiatry) a defense mechanism that splits something you are ambivalent about into two representations--one good and one bad

See also: idealization

noun

something that exists only as an idea

See also: idealization

noun

a portrayal of something as ideal; "the idealization of rural life was very misleading"

See also: idealization glorification