(noun.) the doctrine that reality consists of two basic opposing elements, often taken to be mind and matter (or mind and body), or good and evil.
编辑:桑德拉
双语例句
This division is a culmination of the dualism of mind and the world, soul and body, end and means, which we have so frequently noted. 约翰·杜威.民主与教育.
This separation is the root of the dualism of method and subject matter. 约翰·杜威.民主与教育.
The argument for immortality seems to rest on the absolute dualism of soul and body. 柏拉图.理想国.
Locke's statements fitted well into the dualism of his day. 约翰·杜威.民主与教育.
Continuity versus Dualism. 约翰·杜威.民主与教育.
The separation, often touched upon, between subject matter and method is the educational equivalent of this dualism. 约翰·杜威.民主与教育.
This dualism is not characteristic (as were the others which we have noted) of Greek thought. 约翰·杜威.民主与教育.
It would be impossible to state adequately the evil results which have flowed from this dualism of mind and body, much less to exaggerate them. 约翰·杜威.民主与教育.
Another dualism is that of activity and passivity in knowing. 约翰·杜威.民主与教育.
The latter assumes continuity; the former state or imply certain basic divisions, separations, or antitheses, technically called dualisms. 约翰·杜威.民主与教育.
Since morality is concerned with conduct, any dualisms which are set up between mind and activity must reflect themselves in the theory of morals. 约翰·杜威.民主与教育.
Upon the philosophical side, these various dualisms culminate in a sharp demarcation of individual minds from the world, and hence from one another. 约翰·杜威.民主与教育.
This scheme denotes, of course, simply a perpetuation of the older social division, with its counterpart intellectual and moral dualisms. 约翰·杜威.民主与教育.