"dialecticalization" meaning in All languages combined

See dialecticalization on Wiktionary

Noun [English]

Forms: dialecticalizations [plural]
Etymology: From dialectical + -ization. Etymology templates: {{suffix|en|dialectical|ization}} dialectical + -ization Head templates: {{en-noun|~}} dialecticalization (countable and uncountable, plural dialecticalizations)
  1. The act or process of making dialectical.
    The process of (a language) separating into dialects.
    Tags: countable, uncountable
    Sense id: en-dialecticalization-en-noun-kzv8DcYY Categories (other): English entries with incorrect language header, English terms suffixed with -ization Disambiguation of English entries with incorrect language header: 70 24 6 Disambiguation of English terms suffixed with -ization: 67 21 12
  2. The act or process of making dialectical.
    The introduction of a dialectic (exchange of arguments or contradiction of ideas) to explore an idea or topic.
    Tags: countable, uncountable
    Sense id: en-dialecticalization-en-noun-X819W3d3
  3. The act or process of making dialectical.
    (Marxism) The initiation of dialectic (conflict), especially class conflict.
    Tags: Marxism, countable, uncountable Categories (topical): Marxism
    Sense id: en-dialecticalization-en-noun-Oout4f6S
The following are not (yet) sense-disambiguated
Synonyms: dialecticalisation

Inflected forms

Alternative forms

Download JSON data for dialecticalization meaning in All languages combined (11.2kB)

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          "ref": "1982, The American Association of Teachers of French, The French Review, page 279",
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          "ref": "1986, Soviet Studies in Philosophy, M. E. Sharpe, page 31",
          "text": "[…] presupposes, on the one hand, the conscious aspiration to more profound “dialecticalization” of historical materialism, i.e., to a more profound philosophical grasping of the formational logic of history from the standpoint of the contemporary level of the development of the theory of dialectics.",
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          "ref": "1988 [1983], Georges Van Den Abbeele, transl., The Differend: Phrases in Dispute, University of Minnesota Press, translation of Le Différend by Lyotard, Jean-François, in Paris: Les Éditions de Minuit, pages 90, 97",
          "text": "What ought to be surprising, rather, is that the opposition should have been made at all and that it should be maintained apart from its own dialecticalization, like a concession made on the side, through on a major point, to the understanding. […] A prescription like Equivocate (or: Dialecticalize) every phrase, including the present one signifies that the operators of equivocacy and of dialectics must be applied to the prescription itself. To state it otherwise, in philosophical discourse, every phrase that presents itself as the rule of this discourse must be submitted to equivocation and dialecticalization and be put back into play. This self-mocking prescription corresponds to scepticism.",
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          "ref": "2004 August 16 [2000], Paul Ricœur, “II. History, Epistemology”, in Kathleen Blamey, David Pellauer, transl., Memory, History, Forgetting, Chicago & London: The University of Chicago Press, translation of La mémoire, l'histoire, l'oubli (in French), 2. Explanation/Understanding; Some Advocates of Rigor: Michel Foucault, Michel de Certeau, Norbert Elias, page 209",
          "text": "I have said enough to indicate the points where Elias’s analyses lend themselves to a dialecticalization of the described processes that he describes in a unilinear fashion from the top to the bottom of the scale.⁵⁴ Below, we shall examine in what way the theme of appropriation may balance that of constraint. Elias himself opens the way to a parallel dialecticalization in one passage where, after having emphasized the nonrational character (in the sense indicated earlier) of the formation of habits, he comments: “But it is by no means impossible that we can make out of it [civilization] something more ‘reasonable,’ something that functions in terms of our needs and purposes.",
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          "text": "What ought to be surprising, rather, is that the opposition should have been made at all and that it should be maintained apart from its own dialecticalization, like a concession made on the side, through on a major point, to the understanding. […] A prescription like Equivocate (or: Dialecticalize) every phrase, including the present one signifies that the operators of equivocacy and of dialectics must be applied to the prescription itself. To state it otherwise, in philosophical discourse, every phrase that presents itself as the rule of this discourse must be submitted to equivocation and dialecticalization and be put back into play. This self-mocking prescription corresponds to scepticism.",
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