释义 |
falsism|ˈfɔːlsɪz(ə)m, ˈfɒlsɪz(ə)m| [f. false a. + -ism.] 1. a. ‘An assertion or statement, the falsity of which is plainly apparent’ (W.). b. A platitude that has not even the merit of being true. The word owes its meaning to the antithesis with truism; hence the two-fold application.
1835J. S. Mill Diss. & Disc. (1859) I. 109 This dictum..is, as Coleridge would say, a falsism. 1840Ibid. 209 Books like Mr. Colton's ‘Lacon’—centos of trite truisms and trite falsisms pinched into epigrams. 1847Lewes Hist. Philos. (1853) 160 If so, it is a truism, if not, a falsism. 1855― Goethe II. vi. vii. 313 The ideas are no longer novel; they appear truisms or perhaps falsisms. 2. nonce-use. Falsity of representation, conceived as erected into a systematic principle of art.
1883M. Blind Life Geo. Eliot 68 Realism is thus the basis of all Art, and its antithesis is not Idealism but Falsism. |