All the -isms
(Redirected from All the isms)
position | era | |
---|---|---|
empiricism | Enlightenment | The only things that can be known are those composed of matter-energy in spacetime that are observable and measurable through the senses as extended by the instruments of science. Locke and Hume. |
rationalism | Enlightenment | Reason sets the boundaries to what can be believed. |
humanism | Renaissance | |
positivism | 19th and 20th century | |
linguistic criticism | 20th century | Better known as "linguistic analysis," but that doesn't fit the pigeonhole of "all the -isms." |
pietism | ||
Protestantism | ||
Catholicism | ||
modernism | 20th century | "The Church must conform to modernity." |
egalitarianism | ||
existentialism | ||
scientism | ||
evidentialism | ||
pragmatism | ||
scholasticism | ||
mathematicism | ||
idealism | ||
liberalism | ||
conservatism | ||
traditionalism | ||
Marxism | ||
Kantianism | ||
Thomism | ||
gnosticism | ||
agnosticism | ||
fideism | ||
fundamentalism | ||
literalism | ||
theism | ||
pantheism | ||
atheism | ||
historicism | ||
animism | ||
monism | ||
creationism | ||
biblical criticism | ||
terrorism | ||
quietism | ||
mysticism | ||
nominalism | ||
Jansenism | ||
perfectionism | ||
minimalism | ||
materialism | ||
spiritualism | ||
rubricism | ||
clericalism | Modernity | "The essence of clericalism is a certain mindset, a way of thinking about persons, relationships, and roles within church settings. The clericalist mindset assumes that priests (and, to a lesser degree, religious) are always the people in charge — the natural decision-makers, direction-setters, and initiators of action in the Church. Lay people make up a permanent ecclesiastical under-class. They are by nature passive and subservient, in need of clerical direction. ... [Clericalism] takes for granted that the clerical state is intrinsically superior to all others (i.e., the consecrated life, the married state, the single lay state in the world)."[1] |
Triumphalism | Nineteenth and twentieth centuries | Triumphalists wrongly attribute to themselves the glory of Jesus and the saints in Heaven. As a consequence, they fail to fight well in the battles that God has given them to fight. Their sin of presumption prevents them from preaching the gospel effectively. |