idealism

[ ahy-dee-uh-liz-uh m ]
/ aɪˈdi əˌlɪz əm /

noun

the cherishing or pursuit of high or noble principles, purposes, goals, etc.
the practice of idealizing.
something idealized; an ideal representation.
Fine Arts. treatment of subject matter in a work of art in which a mental conception of beauty or form is stressed, characterized usually by the selection of particular features of various models and their combination into a whole according to a standard of perfection. Compare naturalism(def 2), realism(def 3a).
Philosophy.
  1. any system or theory that maintains that the real is of the nature of thought or that the object of external perception consists of ideas.
  2. the tendency to represent things in an ideal form, or as they might or should be rather than as they are, with emphasis on values.

Origin of idealism

1790–1800; ideal + -ism, probably modeled on German Idealismus

OTHER WORDS FROM idealism

an·ti-i·de·al·ism, noun o·ver·i·de·al·ism, noun

British Dictionary definitions for anti-idealism

idealism
/ (aɪˈdɪəˌlɪzəm) /

noun

belief in or pursuance of ideals
the tendency to represent things in their ideal forms, rather than as they are
any of a group of philosophical doctrines that share the monistic view that material objects and the external world do not exist in reality independently of the human mind but are variously creations of the mind or constructs of ideas Compare materialism (def. 2), dualism (def. 2)

Derived forms of idealism

idealist, noun idealistic, adjective idealistically, adverb

Cultural definitions for anti-idealism

idealism

An approach to philosophy that regards mind, spirit, or ideas as the most fundamental kinds of reality, or at least as governing our experience of the ordinary objects in the world. Idealism is opposed to materialism, naturalism, and realism. Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel was an idealist; so was Immanuel Kant.